"Psychosocial" | ||||||||
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Single by Slipknot | ||||||||
from the album All Hope Is Gone | ||||||||
B-side | "All Hope Is Gone" | |||||||
Released | July 7, 2008 | |||||||
Format | CD 5", Digital single | |||||||
Recorded | February 2008–June 2008 at Sound Farm in Jamaica, Iowa | |||||||
Genre | Heavy metal, Groove Metal | |||||||
Length | 4:45 (Album Version) 3:57 (Radio Edit) |
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Label | Roadrunner, Nuclear Blast | |||||||
Writer(s) | Corey Taylor, Paul Gray | |||||||
Producer | Dave Fortman | |||||||
Slipknot singles chronology | ||||||||
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"Psychosocial" is a song by American metal band Slipknot. It is released as the second single and fourth track from their fourth studio album, All Hope Is Gone. The song entered airplay on June 26, 2008 and was originally planned for release as a digital single on July 1 but was delayed and released on July 8.[1][2] Slipknot performed "Psychosocial" live for the first time on July 9, 2008, at the White River Amphitheatre in Auburn, Washington.[3] In 2008 the track was featured on the soundtrack to Punisher: War Zone.[4] The song was also nominated for 'Best Metal Performance' for the 51st Grammy Awards,[5] but lost to Metallica's "My Apocalypse".
"Psychosocial", along with two other Slipknot songs, "Duality" and "Sulfur," was released as downloadable content for Rock Band and Rock Band 2 on December 8, 2009.[6] It is also featured as a playable track in Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock and appears in Madden NFL 11.
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Percussionist Shawn Crahan told The Pulse of Radio what he could regarding "Psychosocial", saying, "One thing I can feel is like that song has got a lot of, I would say social anxiety. It's got a real good tempo. It's really fun and it's different. I think most of the stuff that we have is different."[7]
Rolling Stone praised the song, saying that it "slows down the tempo to bludgeon with a steady, pounding groove instead of all-out thrash in a manner reminiscent of the band's more slow-burning but still malicious second album, Iowa." They went on to explain, "That track is capped off with a time-signature shattering guitar/drum breakdown that will leave the best air-instrumentalists stumped."[8] This is actually an erroneous statement, because while the instruments do display syncopation, the time signature is still 4/4 throughout. The song also has a similar layout to Welcome to the Jungle by Guns N' Roses.
The music video for "Psychosocial" was shot at Sound Farm studios in Jamaica, Iowa on June 30, 2008.[9] The shoot was delayed due to an unrelated head injury sustained by turntablist Sid Wilson before the shoot, who was subsequently hospitalized.[10] On July 18, 2008 the video premiered on MTV's FNMTV show,[11] hosted by Pete Wentz. The video, which was directed by Paul Brown,[12] was shot using high-end cameras which shoot 1,000 frames per second and are contrasted with traditional 35 mm hand crank camera equipment.[9] Percussionist Shawn Crahan explains; "we have the most extreme on both ends, with nothing in the middle. That's what the video is, and nobody does that. There's an art form behind it."[9]
During an interview with Kerrang!, guitarist Jim Root revealed that the video features the burning of the purgatory masks adorned by the band members in the splash teaser photos shown on Slipknot's website, reportedly because the masks represent the band's ego.[13]
There are two versions of the video. One uses the album version of the song, whilst the other uses a much shorter version of the song; excluding the "Limits of the Dead!" lines. The video was nominated to Best Rock Video at the VMA's 2008.[14] On YouTube the video of the song had gained over 22 million views, before it was removed in December due to a dispute between Roadrunner Records' distributor, Warner Music Group, and YouTube.[15]
The song regained some attention when Steven Nguyen also known by his stage name "Isosine" created a mashup of Psychosocial with the song Baby by Justin Bieber, resulting the song entitled "Psychosocial Baby" received a lot of attention on the video sharing site YouTube. Corey Taylor, has commented in an interview that he finds the mashup "amusing" and even going out of his way to say it was "genius", but also comments that a lot of Slipknot fans are showing hatred towards the mashup. As of September 2011, the song has about 8 million views,[16][17] while original single has been watched over 34 million views.
Chart (2008) | Peak position |
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U.S. Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks | 7[18] |
U.S. Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks | 20[19] |
U.S. Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles | 2[20] |
U.S. Billboard Hot Digital Songs | 66[21] |
Canadian Hot 100 | 75[22] |
Austrian Singles Chart | 65[23] |
France Singles Top 100 | 100[24] |
German Singles Chart | 31[25] |
Swedish Singles Chart | 28[26] |
UK Singles Chart | 67[27] |
New Zealand RIANZ Top 40 Music Chart | 35[28] |
All lyrics and music composed by Slipknot.
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