"The only plan right now is to kill everybody" Joey Jordison, drummerIgnoring every rule in the book and more besides, Slipknot are a notoriously controversial band who combine a talent for outrage with their music. Reminiscent of the outlandishness of punk, 'nu metal' has become the fastest growing area in rock, with Slipknot selling over 2 million copies of their debut album. And yet Slipknot spit, swear and risk injury night after night in their extraordinary live performances. Incredibly, their apparel of masks and boiler suits, which they refuse to remove, means that their fans still do not know what they look like. Jason Arnopp, the first British journalist to interview Slipknot face to mask, describes the transformation of the Des Moines crew into unorthodox mega stars. Featuring an introduction by the legendary Gene Simmons of Kiss, this biography will be the first published on the band either in the UK or America and will include exclusive interviews and in-depth information on the mysterious nine masked men.
Jason Arnopp is the author of the chiller-thriller novels Ghoster (2019) and The Last Days Of Jack Sparks (2016). He is also the co-author of Inside Black Mirror with Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones.
Arnopp wrote the Lionsgate horror feature film Stormhouse, the New Line Cinema novel Friday The 13th: Hate-Kill-Repeat, various official Doctor Who works of fiction (including the BBC audiobook Doctor Who: The Gemini Contagion) and script-edited the 2012 Peter Mullan film The Man Inside.
Surprisingly well written and an entertaining account of the band upto the recording of Iowa. Shame the author couldn’t be bothered to research his literature/movie references as well, as one point referring to Danny Torrance from The Shining somewhat inexplicably as “Adam”. 😂
Interesting anecdotes but the layout was odd; jumping around topic and time without much sense. Feels a little like a teenage hard-core Slipknot fan writing a Wikipedia entry on the band rather than a biography.
pretty underwhelming? maybe it's because i knew a lot of the things in it but it just didn't live to the hype. it was boring and dragged out to me, i could only get up to chapter 4? not a horrible book, pretty decent but just not much of a wow factor that pulls you in
The author goes really out of his way to describe how "awesome" slipknot is. Sounds like it was written by a 14 year old boy who is trying to sound older.
great book, i learned alot about the band. the book gives a look into the bands early days and features (mainly joey and clowns) perspectives throughout