Fifteen years later (and now looking toward the 25th anniversary), the Slipknot 10th anniversary remains the definitive celebration of the band’s legacy. It captures them at their most confident and most dangerous. Before the tragedy, before the lineup changes, before the world caught up to their speed, there was 1999. And in 2009, Slipknot proved that the fire still burns—louder, faster, and heavier than ever.

By 2001, Iowa pushed the boundaries of sanity. In 2004, Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses) showed a melodic maturity that alienated some purists but expanded their reach to arenas. Then came the darkest chapter: the sudden passing of bassist Paul Gray in May 2010. However, as the calendar flipped to 2009, Paul was still alive. The band was still a cohesive (if volatile) unit of nine. This timing made the tour a fragile, beautiful window of camaraderie before the storm. The 2009 Tour: A Setlist Born in Hell The centerpiece of the Slipknot 10th anniversary celebration was the touring cycle that began in the summer of 2009, most notably the "Mayhem Festival" and subsequent headline runs. For the first time in a decade, the band did something radical: they played the entire debut album from front to back, cover to cover.

These masks told a story: we are older, we are scarred, but we are still angry. The jumpsuits were tattered, faded from black to gray, symbolizing the laundry cycle of a decade on the road. It was a reminder that the wasn't about looking pretty; it was about surviving the wreckage. The Re-Release: "Slipknot 10th Anniversary Edition" Beyond the stage, the Slipknot 10th anniversary was immortalized in plastic and disc. On September 15, 2009, the band released the Slipknot (10th Anniversary Edition) via Roadrunner Records. This wasn't just a remaster; it was an archaeological dig.