"In Between Days" is from The Head on the Doorĭavis/Shaffer/Arvizu/Silveria/The Matrix/Ross The Cure)ĭavis/Welch/Shaffer/Arvizu/Silveria, Smith " Make Me Bad" / " In Between Days" (feat. Greenwood/ O'Brien/ Selway/ Yorkeĭavis/Shaffer/Arvizu/Silveria/ The Matrix/ Atticus Ross Shuck/ Shin/ Davis/ Welch/ Shaffer/ Arvizu/ Silveria
Korn unplugged youtube plus#
Plus The Cure sat in for a mashup and Amy Lee (from Evanescence) sang along on Freak on a Leash. For this project I added four celli, two basses, two cimbassos, two bass/ contrabass trombonists, a saw player, a glass harmonica player, choir bells, and a six person taiko ensemble to Korn. We videotaped at MTV's studios in Times Square two weeks ago and we are currently mixing that CD as well here at the Woodshed, yours truly at the producing helm again. "About a month or so ago my pal Jonathan (Davis) asked me to music direct/arrange Korn's appearance on MTV Unplugged. On December 24, 2006, Richard Gibbs made following statement on his message board: Billboard 200 at #9, with about 51,000 copies sold in its first week, and experienced 55% decline in sales in the following week. Additionally, Korn were joined by an array of instrumentalists and touring musicians, including guitarist Rob Patterson, backup vocalist Kalen Chase, keyboardist Zac Baird, and percussionist Michael Jochum. The exclusive acoustic set had the participation of other big-name artists including the Cure and Amy Lee. The show was broadcast online on MTV.com on February 23, 2007, and was broadcast on television networks in America, Europe and Asia from March 2, 2007. The MTV concert was Korn's second televised acoustic performance, after appearing on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on July 18, 2006. It was the band's first and only live album recorded as a three piece band since drummer David Silveria departed the group earlier that month. The performance, part of the MTV Unplugged series, took place in MTV studios in Times Square, New York City on December 9, 2006, in front of a crowd of approximately fifty people.