In Autumn of 1999, we travelled together to Des Moines, Iowa together to meet this new band called Slipknot. That was a big moment. Kerrang! were the first UK magazine to feature Corey Taylor and the boys on their cover, but I remember how, already, Michelle and I understood that we were witnessing the start of something truly special. We’d seen bands in masks before but, frankly, they were normally a bit disappointing. Michelle could see how this was the cutting-edge of a whole new sound and how they had this bigger vision for everything they wanted to achieve.
Slipknot would go on to be massive, and to become an incredibly important part of my career. I’ve had countless photoshoots with them between that point and this, and Michelle was behind every one. I think she was there with me for all but one, organising times and locations, managing the unenviable task of getting those nine guys in the same place at the same time. I’ll never forget hanging out with her during a quiet moment in the Duality video shoot on a K! exclusive in 2004 when Joey Jordison ran over to us and told me to grab my camera. Then he just started pissing himself. Michelle was just like, ‘Oh, okay, that’s Joey…’ Or when we were out there for the Psychosocial video shoot in 2008 when we were left hanging out in that cornfield because Sid Wilson was in hospital having cut his head open doing something in his basement.
Michelle stuck by those guys through everything.
She wasn’t afraid to get her hands dirty, either. I posted a photo to my Instagram on Sunday, after I got the dreadful news, of her handling goat skulls from a butchers during a Slipknot shoot in 2011. Clown told us that he wanted to do something with the eyeballs. Michelle just said, ‘Give me a spoon,’ and got stuck in alongside then-K! Picture Editor Scarlet Borg to scoop them out. I’ve worked with a lot of great PRs through the years, but I don’t think many would’ve done that.