Slipknot - Antennas To Hell-the Best Of Slipkno... Apr 2026
The inclusion of "Duality" and "Psychosocial" is mandatory. These tracks represent Slipknot at their most anthemic—where Corey Taylor’s hook-writing prowess matches the percussion battery of Chris Fehn and Shawn Crahan.
"People = Shit," "Vermilion Pt. 2," "The Heretic Anthem," "Left Behind." Skip If: You prefer the atmospheric dread of Iowa over the radio singles. Buy the full albums instead.
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The liner notes and artwork by M. Shawn Crahan (Clown) are also worth the price of admission. The imagery is grotesque, chaotic, and deeply personal—a reminder that even in a "greatest hits" context, Slipknot refuses to be sterile. Antennas to Hell is not for the veteran Maggot. If you already own Iowa and Vol. 3 , you will find this compilation redundant and frustratingly incomplete. You will lament the absence of deep cuts like "Gently" or "Metabolic."
The title itself is a signature Slipknot non-sequitur: absurd, violent, and strangely poetic. It suggests a broadcast of aggression sent directly to the listener’s nervous system, bypassing the skull. Any greatest-hits album is a battle of omissions, and Antennas to Hell fights a losing one. The tracklist is undeniably powerful, but it plays it surprisingly safe. Slipknot - Antennas To Hell-The Best Of Slipkno...
However, as a party record or a workout playlist, this flattening works. The tracks flow into each other with a relentless, almost numbing intensity. You don't listen to Antennas to Hell for the nuances of Joey Jordison’s drum fills; you listen to feel the weight of nine men hitting you at once. Where the CD falters sonically, the physical packaging (and the accompanying DVD) excels. The deluxe edition of Antennas to Hell includes a DVD featuring the band’s complete music video catalog up to that point. Watching the evolution from the grimy, guerrilla-style "Spit It Out" to the cinematic horror of "Dead Memories" is a masterclass in branding. Slipknot understood that the mask is not a gimmick; it is the filter through which the music must be seen.
Antennas to Hell is a blunt instrument. It lacks the scalpel-like precision of a career-spanning retrospective, but it delivers exactly what it promises: a straight shot of the most potent, radio-friendly venom from the nine masked men of Iowa. It is a flawed greatest-hits album, but for a band built on chaos, perhaps that is exactly the point. The inclusion of "Duality" and "Psychosocial" is mandatory
For the devoted Maggot (Slipknot’s fanbase), the exclusions are glaring. Where is "Scissors"? The terrifying 19-minute closer from their debut? Where is "The Shape" from Iowa ? Most egregiously, the band’s most devastating emotional statement, "Snuff"—a bare, acoustic ballad about loss that became a posthumous tribute to Paul Gray—is absent. This omission is baffling, as "Snuff" was a top-10 hit on the US Rock charts in 2009.
The album opens with the percussive assault of "(sic)" and the iconic "Eyeless," immediately establishing the pummeling, sample-laden fury of their debut. It correctly includes the crossover anthems that transcended metal: the melodic rage of "Wait and Bleed," the terrifying slow-burn of "People = Shit," the weirdly acoustic "Vermilion Pt. 2," and the stadium-filling "Before I Forget" (which won them a Grammy in 2005). 2," "The Heretic Anthem," "Left Behind
However, for the curious rock fan in 2012—the one who knew "Duality" from Guitar Hero but had never heard "Disasterpiece"—this album was a revelation. It is a survey course in modern heaviness. It demonstrates that Slipknot was never just "a nu-metal band." They were a performance art collective, a trauma support group, and a percussion ensemble disguised as a metal act.