Korn - Falling Away From Me
Hey Yeah...I'm feeling tired
My time, is gone today
You flirt with suicide
Sometimes, that's ok
Do what others say
I'm here, standing hollow
Falling away from me
Falling away from me
Today...It's still fading
That's when I'm enslaved
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)
Slow it 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
Fears in me
They won't go away
So I pray
Go away
Life's falling away from me
It's falling away from me
Life's falling away from me
Fuck!
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...
(Falling away from me)
Beating me...Beating me down...Down...
(Falling away from me)
Into the ground
(Falling away from me)
Screaming so sound...
Beating me...Beating me down...Down...
(Falling away from me)
Into the ground
"Falling Away from Me" is a song by American rock band Korn. It was released as the first single from their fourth album Issues, where it appeared in an episode of Comedy Central's animated series, South Park, entitled "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery". The song went on to become one of Korn's most popular singles, with an anti-domestic abuse themed video topping MTV's Total Request Live for ten days. Songfacts: KoRn lead singer Jonathan Davis said of this: "The song is about domestic abuse and that there are ways to get help. Whether it's telling someone or calling a help line, there are ways to get out of those situations. No one has to be treated like that." This was the first hit off of their fourth CD, Issues. The CD came with four different covers. The most common one had a voodoo doll on the cover. A second cover was a chalk design on a playground of a girl and a boy, a third had the band as dummies with fake hair and zipped-up mouths, and the fourth showed a bunch of newspaper headlines glued to a wall and in the middle was a picture of someone laying down in a dark room with a shadow behind him. At the end of the video when the room starts lighting up, if you look close enough you can see Fred Durst's face for a split second. An animated version of Korn appeared on the Comedy Central show South Park and sang this during the episode "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery."