Hey, I'm feeling tired
My times come today
I flirt with suicide
Sometimes that's ok
Hear what others say
I'm here standing hollow
Falling away from me
Falling away from me

Day is here fading
That's when I would say
I flirt with suicide
Sometimes kill the pain
I can always say
It's gonna be better tomorrow
Falling away from me
Falling away from me

Beating me down
Beating me beating me down
Down
Into the ground
Screaming so sound
Beating me, beating me down
Down into the ground
Falling away from me
It's spinning round and round
Falling away from me
It's lost and can't be found
Falling away from me
It's spinning round and round
Falling away from me
So down

Beating me down
Beating me, beating me down
Down
Into the ground
Screaming so sound
Beating me, beating me down
Down
Into the ground

Pressing me
They won't go away
So I pray
Go away
It's falling away from me
It's falling away from me
It's falling away from me

Beating me down
Beating me, beating me down
Down
Into the ground
Screaming so sound
Beating me, beating me down
Down
Into the ground
Beating me down
Beating me, beating me down
Down
Into the ground
Screaming so sound
Beating me, beating me Down
Down
Into the ground

Korn

Bakersfield friends James “Munky” Shaffer, Reginald “Fieldy” Arvizu and David Silveria formed the funk-rock band LAPD in 1989 and moved to Los Angeles with another friend Brian “Head” Welch as their roadie. Later, with Welch as second guitarist, the band named themselves Creep and recorded a demo with pal Ross Robinson.

However, when Shaffer and Welch visited family in Bakersfield, they met Jonathan Davis who added a darker, goth-tinged edge to the band’s heavy groove. Robinson

The band wasn’t dark yet; it had, like, killer grooves and good riffs, but there was some happy edge to it. And when (Davis) walked into the room, it went dark and goth. Basically, during the first song, to audition in the rehearsal room, he started freaking the hell out [laughs]. You couldn’t hear his voice, but you felt chills all over your body, and it was instantly like, “Oh my God, yeah – he’s the one.”