A direct attack on the music industry, this song is pure, high-octane rebellion. 6. "Alone I Break"

A high-energy, tongue-in-cheek cover that showcased the band’s versatility and willingness to experiment with funk-metal crossovers. Final Thoughts

This volume covers Korn's peak "nu-metal" era (1994–2004) and includes two exclusive covers recorded specifically for this release: Go to product viewer dialog for this item. Korn - Greatest Hits Vol. 1

Korn's cover of the Cameo funk classic is a highlight of this compilation. It showcases the band’s ability to inject heavy, downtuned guitars and intense energy into a pop-funk structure, making it a unique addition to their catalog.

The compilation is a comprehensive retrospective featuring definitive tracks from their catalog:

: Available at Walmart for ~$7.99 and Best Buy for ~$15.78.

Korn Classics: The Top 10 Songs from Their Career - Impericon

When looking at releases labeled , the numbers and terms have specific meanings for audio fidelity:

: This refers to the sampling rate of a high-resolution audio file. While standard Red Book CDs are mastered at 44.1 kHz / 16-bit, high-resolution releases (often sourced from SACD, DVD-Audio, or original studio master tapes) utilize 88.2 kHz or 96 kHz at 24-bit depth.

It started as a midnight rip from a scratched CD: a tinny, impatient attempt to capture a band that always sounded better lived and loud. Months later, in a cramped apartment lined with band posters and soda cans, Marcus finally heard what he’d been chasing — a clean, weighty FLAC rip labeled "Korn - Greatest Hits - Volume 1 - 2004 - FLAC - 88." The filename promised fidelity and heft; the music delivered a memory he hadn’t yet lived.

Choosing the rate instead of 96 kHz is also mathematically perfect for music recorded for CD. Because 88.2 is an exact multiple of 44.1 (the CD standard), converting the file down to CD quality for a car stereo or portable player can be done with a simpler, more integer-based calculation that avoids introducing rounding errors in the audio signal.

: Free Lossless Audio Codec. It compresses file sizes by roughly 50-60% compared to uncompressed WAV files without losing a single bit of audio data.

Probably not. The limitations of your playback gear (Bluetooth codecs, consumer earbuds) will negate the benefits.