: Albums like Korn III: Remember Who You Are , The Path of Totality , and See You on the Other Side have had multitracks or high-quality instrumental versions officially distributed or leaked over time. Top Available Tracks Track Title Source Type Key Elements Freak on a Leash Guitar Hero / Rock Band Features the famous "scat" vocals and Fieldy's clicky bass Coming Undone Masterpost / Game Heavy industrial rhythm; great for drum processing practice Twisted Transistor Masterpost

Reginald "Fieldy" Arvizu plays the bass like a percussionist. His tone is all clank, distortion, and muted strings. In a full mix, it sounds like a chain rattling inside a washing machine. However, when you isolate the , you hear the genius: a clean DI signal blended with a distorted high-pass. Without the multitracks, young bassists spend years trying to replicate that "click." With the stems, you realize he is basically playing a low-tuned guitar with drum sticks in his fingers.

Observe how the guitars are often high-passed to leave room for the sub-heavy bass.

Here's a spreadsheet for songs that don't have fully isolated stems

For musicians, producers, and die-hard fans, (often referred to as "stems") represent the holy grail of nu-metal production. These isolated audio files—separating Jonathan Davis’s visceral vocals, the clattering field of Fieldy’s bass, and the down-tuned grime of Head and Munky’s guitars—offer an unprecedented look at how the Bakersfield quintet redefined heavy music.

A typical Korn song might consist of:

: Isolated vocals and full multitracks have appeared in various archives. "Word Up!" "Kidnap the Sandy Claws"

: Aspiring engineers use these files to practice balancing the heavy, low-tuned guitars of James "Munky" Shaffer and Brian "Head" Welch against Reginald "Fieldy" Arvizu’s percussive bass style. : The availability of electronic-heavy stems from The Path of Totality has led to numerous fan-made EDM and industrial remixes. Educational Analysis