Down with the Sickness explained

Down with the Sickness
Cover:disturbed_down_with_the_sickness.png
Type:single
Artist:Disturbed
Album:The Sickness
Released:October 31, 2000[1]
Recorded:1999
Genre:Nu metal
Label:Giant
Producer:Johnny K
Prev Title:Stupify
Prev Year:2000
Next Title:Voices
Next Year:2000

"Down with the Sickness" is a song by American heavy metal band Disturbed. It was recorded in 1999 and released as the second single from the band's debut studio album, The Sickness. "Down with the Sickness" is one of Disturbed's best-known songs and is a concert staple, usually played as the last song. This was Disturbed's first single to be certified platinum in the United States by the Recording Industry Association of America.

Music and composition

"Down With the Sickness" is a nu metal song[2] [3] [4] that features an unusual "ooh-wah-ah-ah-ah" staccato noise from Disturbed's singer David Draiman at the end of the intro, which reappears before the last chorus.[5] Draiman has stated the sound was made possible by effects on his vocal cords after receiving surgery for acid reflux, but he has dismissed the rumor the noise was actually caused by heartburn, further explaining, "I mean the song originally was written and just had a pause. Mikey's beat is just so tribal and you know it just made me feel like an animal... [The noise] came out one day."[6]

Guitarist Dan Donegan has mentioned that the tuning for the guitar "is drop C-sharp... your bottom five strings are half a step down and your low string will be dropped to C-sharp."[7] This is sometimes referred to as "E Drop D", the most common drop tuning for bands who play generally in E standard instead of E standard.

Lyrics

A spoken segment near the end of the song describes a child who is physically abused by his mother and who ultimately retaliates. This segment is somewhat controversial and music critics sometimes express a negative opinion of its inclusion in the song. For example, Leor Galil of the Chicago Reader opined, "Yet I still find it hard to believe that the megasingle 'Down With the Sickness,' with its vocal breakdown in which front man David Draiman crudely describes being beaten by his mom (and vice versa), guided the band on to a path that's resulted in four albums topping the Billboard 200."[8]

However, the band has disavowed that this song is about literal child abuse, and that it is instead about a metaphoric abuse. Lead singer David Draiman explained to the Phoenix New Times:

...the screamed psychodramas in metal hits like "Down With The Sickness" ... are merely inspired by personal history, not a literal journal of his own tortured upbringing. "I'm really talking about the conflict between the mother culture of society, who's beating down the child yearning for independence and individuality, and the submission of the child."[9]

The "abuse" segment is not included in the radio edit or the music video.

Music video

A music video composed of live concert footage was produced for the song. The song is known for its segment which features a boy being attacked and abused by his mother,[10] which was not featured in the music video. The music video was recorded at the "Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre" (at the time the Tweeter Center) in Tinley Park, Illinois, during Q101's Jamboree 2001.[11]

In other media

Accolades

RegionYearPublicationAccoladeRank
United States2015Loudwire10 Best Metal Riffs of the 2000s[14] align=3
United States2016LoudwireBest Metal Song of the 21st Century[15] align=Won

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Disturbed song 'Down with the Sickness' surging in sales due to coronavirus - National | Globalnews.ca.
  2. Web site: Paolo Gregoletto: Nu-Metal – Revered or Reviled? The Top Ten . All Axess. (January 5th, 2015). Retrieved on September 23rd, 2015
  3. Web site: 10 nu metal songs that still hold up on CBC music . CBC Music . Shumka . Dave. (February 14th, 2013)
  4. Web site: Disturbed – Immortalized . . Jon Hadusek . August 20, 2015.
  5. Web site: 10 Best Metal Riffs of the 2000s . Loudwire. (December 26th, 2013). Retrieved on October 1st, 2015
  6. Web site: Behind the Ball with Disturbed: Dispelling the Rumor Behind the Sickness . https://web.archive.org/web/20090221023044/http://www.mtv.com/videos/misc/183836/behind-the-ball-with-disturbed-dispelling-the-rumor-behind-the-sickness.jhtml . dead . February 21, 2009 . mtv.com . . 12 November 2015 .
  7. Web site: "Disturbed – Learn to play "Down with the Sickness" . 22 Sep 2010 . YouTube .
  8. Web site: Disturbed – House of Blues . Galil . Leor . 20 Aug 2015 . Chicago Reader . Sun-Times Media, LLC . 5 November 2015.
  9. Web site: Disturbed & Disturberer . Magahern . Jimmy . 26 June 2003 . Phoenix New Times . NT Media LLC . 4 November 2015.
  10. Rolling Stone Review of The Sickness, Mudvayne's L.D. 50, Relative Ash's Our Time With You, and Soulfly's Primitive . Ratliff . Ben . . https://web.archive.org/web/20070510092405/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/disturbed/albums/album/147845/review/6067460/the_sickness . May 10, 2007 . dead. (September 28th, 2000). Retrieved on October 1st, 2015
  11. Web site: Q101 Jamboree 2001 Setlists. 2015-05-20. setlist.fm.
  12. Web site: Breihan . Tom . Disturbed Respond To Phoebe Bridgers’ “Down With The Sickness” Entrance On Taylor Swift Tour . Stereogum . Stereogum Media . 10 May 2023.
  13. Web site: KFC’s vertically gifted Tower Burger is too tall for TV. The Drum. Houston. Amy. February 5, 2024. March 6, 2024.
  14. Web site: 10 Best Metal Riffs of the 2000s . Loudwire .
  15. Web site: Disturbed's 'Down With the Sickness' Wins Best Metal Song of the 21st Century in March Metal Madness 2016 . Loudwire .
  16. Web site: Official Rock & Metal Singles Chart. Official Charts Company. March 20, 2020. January 12, 2024.