As a key member of the band, what do you attribute the longevity of Korn to?
We started out with a strong foundation. We were friends before any of the success. In any relationship, it takes going through something really bad to see if they are really your friends. I think that we have been given every test that you could possibly come up against at this point. I don’t think that there is anything left! [laughs] I think every relationship needs to go through that and that is what has given us longevity. As an artist, how do you think you have evolved from the first record all the way to the release of ‘Korn III – Remember Who You Are”? I guess with the first record, we were laying the groundwork for who were were. I guess at the time we were kinda making what we felt. Over the years, we started experimenting and trying to make these big, epic songs and trying to show our musicianship skills. With this new record, we wanted to go back to the beginning of how we were writing those on fire, bangin’, poppin’ riff songs and we kinda just went back to that. What was