The album famously begins with 12 tracks of silence—each lasting five seconds—adding up to one minute of silence. This was done partly out of superstition to avoid ending the album on track 13, and partly as a tribute to a young fan named Justin who passed away from cancer.
This number's significance is twofold and a point of fascination for collectors:
To help me tailor any future music history or audiophile content, let me know:
For listeners hunting down a (Free Lossless Audio Codec) rip of Follow The Leader , the benefits over standard compressed audio (like MP3s) are monumental. In FLAC format, the audio is a bit-for-bit replica of the original studio master. Why does this matter for Korn?
The album famously begins with 12 tracks of silence—each lasting five seconds—adding up to one minute of silence. This was done partly out of superstition to avoid ending the album on track 13, and partly as a tribute to a young fan named Justin who passed away from cancer.
This number's significance is twofold and a point of fascination for collectors: Korn - Follow The Leader -1998- -FLAC- 88
To help me tailor any future music history or audiophile content, let me know: The album famously begins with 12 tracks of
For listeners hunting down a (Free Lossless Audio Codec) rip of Follow The Leader , the benefits over standard compressed audio (like MP3s) are monumental. In FLAC format, the audio is a bit-for-bit replica of the original studio master. Why does this matter for Korn? Korn - Follow The Leader -1998- -FLAC- 88