Korn – Untouchables album cover

Korn – Untouchables

Album 2002

The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 2002 album Untouchables.

Music from Untouchables

Gear Used On Untouchables

Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Korn – Untouchables (2002). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.

Guitars used by James "Munky" Shaffer on Untouchables

Solid Body Electric Guitars

Ibanez K-7

Avg price: $3,065.67

Esta guitarra fue usada por Munky para grabar el album Untouchables y para hacer el Tour de ese mismo disco pero la usaba muy poco. No encontre ningun video donde Munky salga tocando en vivo con su K-7, asi que puse de video la cancion Alone I Break donde Munky en el minuto 1:15 se ve la guitarra.

Effects Pedals used by James "Munky" Shaffer on Untouchables

Phaser Effects Pedals

Ibanez Tone-Lok Phaser PH-7

Avg price: $45.00

Este pedal fue usado por Munky en una parte de la gira de el album Untouchables, en el año 2002, no encontre ningun video asi que puse una imagen de la pedalboard de Munky del año 2002.

Phaser Effects Pedals

Roland AP-7 Jet Phaser

Avg price: $399.00

Used by Munky in the mid-1990's, but it is unknown on which song he used it.

Studio Gear used by Jonathan Davis on Untouchables

Preamps

AMS Neve 1081 Mic Preamp & Equalizer

Avg price: $6,964.85

For vocals, the idea was to get Jonathan to fit and hold his own against a really intense wall of sound. I had consistently used Neve 1073's, but Frank Filipetti suggested we try a Tube Tech MP1A. We did a shoot out with every pre in the room and subsequently, I never went back to Neve's again. After the MP1A, we had a Rev D 1176 LN, then a MASSENBURG 8200 and, I'm pretty sure an inline1081 from the console at Village Recorder. Later, we added a DBX160SL on the back end of that chain because it seemed to add nice presence and top end.

Microphones used by Jonathan Davis on Untouchables

Condenser Microphones

Neumann M49

Avg price: $10,385.57

Used on Untouchables, as stated by engineer Frank Filipetti in this transcribed March 2005 interview.

KORN

"I Did My Time"

Producer: Jonathan Davis of Korn

Engineer: Frank Filipetti

"It's about clarity," says Korn frontman/producer Jonathan Davis, "especially with my stuff cause there's so much low-end and sh-t going on. A lot of mixes can come out not really that clear, and that's one of the reasons I love Frank, because he records great vocals. So any vocals that I do or produce, it has to be about clarity. I have a couple mics that I really like to use; the Sanken is one of my main ones. It's all about not f--kin' with it - just a little bit of compression, that's it."

Signal Path: Tracking

"I was out on the road at the time writing the lyrics," says Jonathan. "I sang a verse in New Orleans and shipped it off to Frank on Pro Tools, so actually we used two different mics when I recorded that. The first was a [Neumann] U 47 with my chain, my preamp [Tube-Tech MP 1A], and the stuff I did at the house [ElemenTree Studios] with Frank was a different process. We used the Sanken [CMU-44]. But with Frank, he totally knows. I listen to it and I really don't have to say anything, 'cause Frank knows me."

"The vocal signal path I used for Jonathan is a Sanken CMU-44, into a TUBE-TECH MP-1A mic pre," adds Filipetti. "From there it went to a Neve 1073, then into the [Universal Audio] 1176, and from there to a GML EQ. Then I brought it into the tape monitor on the SSL 6000, then to the Euphonix R-1. We also used the DBX 160SL on the return on playback to vary the levels slightly, but we didn't record with it. That was part of the chain as well. It's about 85% of what we came up with on the last record with some slight modifications. It's a different console to begin with and a different microphone. The mic we used the last time was an M 49. We chose the Sanken because it just has the best overall combination of lows and highs.

"Jonathan has a very powerful voice," he continues, "especially when he starts to get into it. Some mics pick up the low level detail very well and some mics can hold themselves with screaming really well, but this seemed to have a good combination of both. We were able to get a nice quality between Jonathan singing softly and Jonathan screaming out full-bore. After comparing a lot of other mics, we ended up with the Sanken. In fact the top two mics were the Sanken and the [Audio-Technica] AT4060."

As for the other key components in the chain, Filipetti explains: "The Tube-Tech provides the presence. It has more presence than any other mic pre that I've used and it has an incredible midrange. The 1073 was there just to add a little bit of that Neve crunch - we ran it pretty hot. And I also used a tiny bit of the low frequency and the high frequency EQ. Then I went to the 1176; after trying out a bunch of compressors on Jonathan's voice, the 1176 worked out best. It just seemed to hit him properly. We used that real high-end stuff on the GML, which added that over-end air, which it does incredibly well, and then brought it into the console. On some tracks at the end of the chain we added a DBX 160SL. On a couple tracks that just added a punch that worked out really nicely."

Vocal Philosophy

"My objective with Jonathan is what it is with everybody," says Filipetti. "Basically, the song lives and dies with the vocal. I tend to gravitate toward and work with singers who have real personality. I'm not looking for dancers who are singers. My approach is to make sure that all of that personality comes out; I don't want anything to get lost. I'm looking for all the little quirks and the harmonic things in their voice that make them special, and I look to bring that out. Sometimes it's a matter of just putting the proper mic in front of them. Sometimes it's a matter of adding more things in the chain, but basically, like I do with everyone, I always listen in the room to the singer and then try to capture as much of that as I can through the vocal chain."

Guitars used by Brian "Head" Welch on Untouchables

Solid Body Electric Guitars

Ibanez K-7

Avg price: $6,000.00

According to the Ibanez Wiki, Brian "Head" Welch is confirmed to use the Ibanez K-7 guitar, as mentioned in their detailed explanation of K-7 guitars. This information is further supported by its appearance in annual catalogues of Ibanez.

Effects Pedals used by Brian Welch on Untouchables

Harmonizer & Octave Effects Pedals

Boss OC-2 Octaver

Avg price: $147.00

munky says in an interview Head used the Boss OC-2 in Here To Stay