The Nameless (song)


"The Nameless" is a song by American heavy metal band Slipknot. The song was released as the only single from their first live album, ', while it is also included on their third studio album, '. A music video was released for the single in late 2005 and also was featured on MTV's Rock Top 10 as number two.

Musical structure

The Nameless is four minutes and 28 seconds long. The song begins with a high-noted guitar riff, with mixed in samples, leading to the guitar notes getting lower, and lead vocalist Corey Taylor starting the lyrics with a scream. This eventually leads to low noted riffs with minor scales associated in. The song has a "basic minor-key riff," along with "thrash" riffs, and interludes that are much softer. The chorus is slow, emotional and epic. The song is in B minor, like many other Slipknot songs.

Music video

The accompanying music video was directed by band member Shawn Crahan, who has also created and assisted with several of Slipknot's other videos. The video was featured on their video album '.
The music video depicts Slipknot performing live on their second headline tour The Subliminal Verses World Tour. The videos features various clips and shots of their fans during the concert. The video was directed by the band's co-founder and custom percussionist Shawn 'Clown' Crahan, and was featured on
', the band's third video album that received a platinum in the US. Many of the photos featured in are seen in the video. At the end of the video, a caption says "Dedicated to all the Maggots everywhere".

Promotion of ''9.0: Live''

Before the 's release, a sample from the live recording of "The Nameless" was made available on the Internet through the band's record label. A music video featuring the live recording of "The Nameless" was created to promote the album.

Critical reception

Blender commented that "Relief from 'Prelude ' arrives quickly in the basic minor-key riffs and grooves of... 'The Nameless'..." Dan Silver from NME said "'The Nameless' intercuts thrash riffs with softly-strummed interludes". Robert Cherry of Rolling Stone said it "splices a cooing boy-band chorus onto a g-g-gunky speed metal verse". Yahoo!s Chris Heath said the song "confusingly stitches both extremes together – the ludicrously vicous and ridiculously placid – into one track that simply feels awkward, wrong even".

Appearances on other albums

Chart positions