Slipknot's masks through the years

The evolution of Slipknot's masks

Slipknot's Sid Wilson, Clown, Jim Root and Corey Taylor
Author: Scott ColothanPublished 2nd Feb 2024

Following their fifth headline appearance at Download Festival, Kerrang! Radio takes a look at how Slipknot's beloved masks have evolved over the decades; from their embryonic days in the late nineties through to present day.

In September 2021, Corey Taylor unveiled his fearsome new mask at Rocklahoma Festival after previously promising that it's so macabre, it's sure to scare children. Then just two months later, Jay Weinberg unleashed his new mask that scared his pet dog senseless.

Following suit, Slipknot's 'The Dying Song (Time To Sing)' video in July 2022 saw Clown, Tortilla Man and Sid Wilson unveil new guises. Then in 2023, both Jay Weinberg and Corey Taylor revealed newly tweaked masks.

Featuring the fearsome masks of Slipknot members past and present: Corey Taylor, Sid Wilson, Jim Root, Craig Jones, Shawn 'Clown' Crahan, the late-great Paul Gray, Chris Fehn, Mick Thomson, Alessandro Venturella, Jay Weinberg, the enigmatic 'Tortilla Man' and Joey Jordison, who sadly passed away at the age of 46 in July 2021.

What do Slipknot’s masks mean?

For Slipknot frontman Corey Taylor at least, Slipknot’s masks are a physical representation of the person inside. Appearing on the Corey Taylor Talks show back in 2014, Corey said of Slipknot’s ever-evolving masks: “People like me, Clown (Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan), Sid (Wilson) and a couple of others, we change ours drastically. Because, for me, the mask is a representation of the person on the inside, and nobody stays the same over time – that's my belief.

“With every album, my mask has evolved, so this one, specifically, is supposed to represent the person behind the mask, but then the person behind that person, which is one of the reasons why it's two pieces, and you can peel the one off, and it's still a representation. So it's almost like having two different faces, but it's the same person."

Why do Slipknot wear masks?

During their embryonic days in Iowa in the late nineties, Slipknot percussionist Shaun ‘Clown’ Crahan turned up to band rehearsals wearing a clown mask, which inspired his nickname. By 1997, Slipknot decided that every band member should wear a unique mask alongside a trademark jumpsuit.

Speaking about Slipknot’s look to Kerrang! Radio in February 2020, Corey Taylor said: “I give a lot of credit to Clown. His imagination, his vision in a lot of ways has helped shaped this for so many years.

“Obviously, we contribute and do our part but his unifying vision in a lot of ways has helped us maintain that risk, that look, that attention to detail. So even when we do big things like a reveal on the internet for new outfits, new masks and stuff, it’s still a big deal.

“Because we started from day one knowing we had to evolve, knowing that we had to stay relevant and one of the things we knew we had to do was find ways to look like a unit and do it in a way that didn’t feel forced.”

Slipknot's masks through the years:

Slipknot in 2000

Slipknot wearing trademark white boiler suits and their horrorshow masks in 2000

Slipknot 'Slipknot'

Slipknot on the sleeve of their fearsome, self-titled debut album in June 1999.

Slipknot's in 2000

Slipknot standing in a stairway in early 2000, obviously.

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan and Joey Jordison's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan and the late-great Joey Jordison in their fetching masks in 2000

Sid Wilson's mask

Slipknot's Sid Wilson in his gas mask in 2000

Corey Taylor's mask

Corey Taylor with his dreadlock mask in 2000 - a very different mask to his look today.

Jim Root's mask

Slipknot's Jim Root in 2000 in his Jester mask.

Craig Jones' mask

Slipknot's Craig Jones in his bizarre spiked helmet mask in 2000. This would soon evolve into a spiked gimp mask.

Mick Thomson's mask

Slipknot's formidable and towering Mick Thomson in 2000 in his horror hockey mask.

Paul Gray's mask

The late-great Paul Gray of Slipknot in his Pig Mask in 2000

Chris Fehn's mask

Slipknot's Chris Fehn in 2000. His pointy-nosed Pinocchio-esque mask has been a mainstay of his entire career with Slipknot. The mask is dubbed the Liar Mask.

Craig Jones' mask

Slipknot's Craig Jones in 2001. His part Hellraiser/part Gimp mask has also remained largely unchanged over the decades, except for the odd tweak.

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in 2001. Although all of his masks have been clown related, the percussionist has tweaked his mask more than any other Slipknot member.

Slipknot

Slipknot's masks in June 2001

Joey Jordison and Corey Taylor's masks

Slipknot's Joey Jordison and Corey Taylor in 2001

Sid Wilson's mask

Slipknot's Sid Wilson in June 2001. Another variant of his gas mask.

Jim Root's mask

Slipknot's Jim Root in 2001

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan up close

A close-up of Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in December 2001

Slipknot's evolving masks

Slipknot and their masks in December 2001

Chris Fehn's mask

Slipknot's Chris Fehn in his Liar Mask in 2002

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor in 2002. The dreadlocks still remain.

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in August 2002. This mask is more 'fairground clown' than his previous guises.

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor in May 2004. This delightful look is known as The Scab Mask.

Paul Gray's mask

Slipknot's Paul Gray in 2004. Not quite a pig mask but still animalistic.

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in June 2004. This time he adopted a bloody bandage mask.

Slipknot's evolving masks

Slipknot in May 2005. Sid Wilson had dropped the gas mask in favour of a skull mask.

Slipknot at the Grammy Awards

Slipknot on the 2006 Grammy Awards red carpet. Sid Wilson on the far right opted for a death mask, while Shawn Crahan wore a grey mask and eye-catching pink boiler suit.

Slipknot 'All Hope Is Gone'

Slipknot return with new masks for All Hope Is Gone in 2008, including, most notably, Joey Jordison's crucified Jesus mask. Corey Taylor wore a new Blank Face Mask.

Mick Thomson and Jim Root's masks

Slipknot's Mick Thomson and Jim Root in their masks in 2008.

Joey Jordison's 'All Hope Is Gone' Jesus crown of thorns mask

The late Joey Jordison's iconic crucified Jesus mask was brought in for the 'All Hope Is Gone' era in 2008. A crown of thorns and warped stitches were added to his Kabuki mask, whilst some truly off-putting twigs or branches seemed to grow out of his fingers in place of nails. One of the most creepy Slipknot looks of all time, as demonstrated in this incredible photo of Joey on stage at Hammersmith Apollo in London.

Slipknot's evolving masks

Slipknot's Paul Gray, Corey Taylor and Jim Root at the Kerrang! Awards in 2008.

Slipknot's evolving masks

Slipknot suited and booted in December 2008 at the MTV Video Awards.

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in May 2009. His long hair perfectly compliments his 'female mask'

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor pulling tongues in his Blank Face Mask in July 2009

Slipknot's evolving masks

Slipknot's Sid Wilson and Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in July 2011

Shawn 'Clown' Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in his Devil Clown Mask in July 2012

Mick Thomson's mask

Slipknot's Mick Thomson in August 2012

Jim Root's mask

Slipknot's Jim Root in his Jester Mask in 2013

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor at Download Festival 2013

Chris Fehn's mask

Slipknot's Chris Fehn in 2013 in his tradmark Liar Mask

Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in January 2014

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor in November 2014; the same year he debuted his new Skin Face Mask.

Mick Thomson's mask

Slipknot's Mick Thomson in November 2014. Formidable as always.

Sid Wilson's mask

Slipknot's Sid Wilson in his new Steampunk Gas Mask in 2015

Alessandro Venturella's mask

Slipknot's Alessandro Venturella in 2015. The bassist joined Slipknot in 2014 and adopted his chilling burlap mask.

Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in 2015. Since 2014 his guise has been various versions of his .5 Clown mask.

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor in 2015 in his Skin Face Mask.

Sid Wilson's mask

Slipknot's Sid Wilson in October 2015 in his slightly tweaked Steampunk Gas Mask.

Jay Weinberg's mask

Slipknot's Jay Weinberg in 2016. The drummer joined Slipknot two hours earlier and adopted an almost tribal burlap mask.

Corey Taylor's mask

Slipknot's Corey Taylor in 2016 in his slightly tweaked Skin Face Mask.

Chris Fehn's mask

Slipknot's Chris Fehn in July 2016. Fehn's Liar Mask is complimented by his long flowing locks.

Jay Weinberg's mask

Slipknot's Jay Weinberg flicking the V's in 2016

Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan's mask

Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in 2016

Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan's mask

Another mask worn by Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in 2016

Shawn ‘Clown’ Crahan's mask

Yet another mask adorned by Slipknot's Shawn 'Clown' Crahan in 2016

Slipknot's new masks for 2019

Slipknot unveiled their fearsome new masks for new album 'We Are Not Your Kind' on 16th May 2019.

Slipknot's 'Tortilla Man'

Slipknot's mystery new percussionist, strongly rumoured to be Michael Pfaff from Clown's side-project Dirty Little Rabbits, was dubbed Tortilla Man by maggots in 2019 because, you guessed it, his mask looks like a tortilla.

Corey Taylor's 2021 mask

Corey Taylor unveiled his nightmarish new mask at Rocklahoma Festival in September 2021 - the band's first concert in almost 19 months.

Jay Weinberg's 2021 mask

Jay Weinberg unveiled his fearsome new mask to maggots around the world at Knotfest Los Angeles in November 2021.

Sid Wilson's 2022 mask

Sid Wilson unveiled this freaky new look in the video for 'The Dying Song (Time To Sing)' in July 2022.

Clown's 2022 mask

Reflecting his love for disco music, Slipknot percussionist M. Shawn 'Clown' Crahan debuted this mirrorball mask in the video for 'The Dying Song (Time To Sing)'.

Tortilla Man's 2022 mask

Slipknot's newest band member went from Tortilla Man to Squashed Tortilla Man in July 2022.

Jay Weinberg's 2023 mask

In April 2023, Jay Weinberg revealed a striking new mask to coincide with the band's performance at Knotfest Japan. He wrote on Instagram: "It's an honour to collaborate with Japanese painter Solid Blackline for my mask this weekend, specially designed for Knotfest Japan. The organic, flowing shapes of his high-contrast designs evoke feelings of mysticism and beauty, balanced within the duality of chaos and order one feels as a visitor in this wondrous country."

Corey Taylor’s 2023 mask

In May 2023, Slipknot frontman Corey Taylor unveiled a slight tweak to his 'The End, So Far'-era mask. It features a crudely sawn-off cranium to expose Corey's luscious locks.

Slipknot masks Grammys 2024

Michael Pfaff, Alessandro Venturella, Michael Shawn Crahan and Sid Wilson debuted a fresh set of eery masks at the Grammy Award ceremony 2024.

Read more:

Everything you need to know about Slipknot

Slipknot, Ghost, Buckethead: Rock stars unmasked

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