Limp Bizkit is an American
metal band from Jacksonville
, Florida
. The
band achieved success with over 33 million albums sold
worldwide.
The members of the band include vocalist
Fred
Durst, guitarist
Wes Borland,
bassist
Sam Rivers,
drummer
John Otto and
DJ Lethal. The band's guitarist
Wes Borland departed in 2001 and was replaced by
Mike Smith for the band's
fourth release
Results May
Vary. Borland rejoined for
The Unquestionable
Truth only to quit once again in 2006. February 2009 saw
the confirmation of all five members reuniting for a world tour and
new album. Their first full-length album in six years, "Gold
Cobra," is set for a 2010 release.
History
Early years
Limp
Bizkit was formed in 1994 in Jacksonville
, after Fred Durst met
Sam Rivers. Rivers
introduced Durst to his cousin,
John Otto,
a drummer in Keystone Heights, FL. The three got together for a jam
session, and soon after started an early version of the band. The
trio soon recruited guitarist Rob Waters and Limp Bizkit was
established. The band's first four-track demo, entitled
Mental Aquaducts, (which
were remakes of previously written songs from Fred's previous bands
Split 26 and 10Ft Shindig) was recorded with him but soon after he
left the band. Otto suggested the group to consider
Wes Borland, whom he had gone to school with,
for the now vacant position. Durst noticed him playing in clubs and
wanted to recruit him.
Durst went to Philadelphia
, and he instructed the other members to talk to Wes
and see if he'd join the band. Wes accepted, and the very
night Fred came back to Jacksonville, a show was scheduled. Fred
and Wes met for the first time, practiced for a half hour, and then
went and played the show.
The band continued to play various shows, their most popular venue
being at the Milkbar in Jacksonville. In 1995, Fred Durst met and
talked to members of the band
KoRn when they
played a show in the Jacksonville area. Durst, a
tattoo artist, gave Korn lead guitarist
Brian "Head" Welch several tattoos and
the two became friends. Durst gave Korn the band's first demo tape
with
Rob Waters, and they shrugged it off
as nothing special. Later, with Borland, a second demo was recorded
and this time Korn were impressed. The demo included the tracks
"
Counterfeit", "Stuck",
"Stalemate", and "Pollution", all of which would end up on the
band's debut album
Three
Dollar Bill, Yall$. The demo tape was passed onto
Ross Robinson, who produced for Korn, and was
impressed. Ross contacted Limp Bizkit, and stated his intent to
produce for the band. At a
Garbage
concert, Durst had met Jordan Schur and played his demo tape for
him in Schur's car. He was impressed, and wanted to sign Limp
Bizkit to his label,
Flip Records.
Around this time, the band was booked to tour with the bands
Deftones and
House
of Pain, whose member
DJ Lethal later
joined Limp Bizkit. Limp Bizkit later signed with
Mojo Records, but was later bought out by Schur
and subsequently signed with Flip Records.
Three Dollar Bill, Y'all$ (1997–1998)
The band's first full length recording,
Three Dollar Bill, Yall$, was
released in 1997 on
Interscope. The album
fared poorly on the
Billboard 200 at
the time of its release, although it did sell steadily over time
due to a huge amount of obsessive touring. It wasn't until the
Family Values Tour, the Trail of
Tears, and
Ozzfest, which helped the album
to peak at number 22 on the chart. At Ozzfest in particular, the
band made a memorable impression on viewers due to the original set
they played on, which consisted of a giant toilet. The band climbed
out from the toilet at the beginning of the show, with Durst saying
lines during the show such as
"We're coming straight to you
from the sewer" and
"I am a piece of shit, and my band is
a piece of shit". Borland's outlandish makeup started making
impressions on fans as well. Although their first released single
was
"Counterfeit", they
rose to fame through a cover of
George
Michael's
"Faith". The song appeared
on the soundtrack of
Peter Berg's 1998
movie
"Very Bad Things"
starring
Cameron Diaz,
Christian Slater and
Jeremy Piven. Later that year, Fred lent his
vocals to Korn's third album on the song
All in the
Family, a rap-battle of sorts. The album featured a second
disc, with four remixes of the demo for the song and multimedia
featuring interviews between Durst, Borland and the rest of
KoRn.
Another unique idea the band came up with was the
Ladies Night
in Cambodia tour. Fred had noticed that mostly young males
went to their concerts, and wanted more women to come, so they let
women in for free at this tour. The tour was a huge success, and
many more women would appear at their later concerts.
Shortly here after Limp Bizkit was sued by Rob Waters for using
songs he helped co-write. Waters won and was rewarded with a high
six figure sum.
Terry Balsamo
(
Cold,
Evanescence)
decided not to pursue in the lawsuit even though he helped write
material as well.
Significant Other (1999–2000)
In 1999, Limp Bizkit found major worldwide success with their
second album
Significant
Other, which debuted at number 1 on the Billboard 200 and
received somewhat positive reviews. The album sold 834,000 copies
in its first week and has sold over 16 million copies worldwide.
The first single "
Nookie", was an
enormous hit on rock radio, reaching the top 10 in both rock and
rap charts. The band followed-up the single with three
simultaneously released singles - "
Break
Stuff", "
Re-Arranged" and "
N 2 Gether Now" (featuring hip-hop artist
Method Man). "N 2 Gether Now" has been
cited as an example of Fred Durst's attempt to work for
unity rather than rivalry between rock and
hip-hop, blurring the distinction between the two
genres of music. The album features the songs "Nobody Like You"
with vocals by
Jonathan Davis of
KoRn and
Scott
Weiland of
Stone Temple
Pilots and "No Sex" with vocals by
Aaron
Lewis of
Staind.
Controversies
In the summer of 1999, Limp Bizkit played at the highly anticipated
Woodstock '99 show in front of
approximately 200,000 people. Then violent action sprang up during
and after their performance, including fans tearing plywood from
the walls during a rendition of the band's single "
Break Stuff". Several rapes and sexual assaults
were reported in the aftermath of the concert, some examples of the
latter being caught on tape, resulting in deliberately lit fires
and looting when the
Red Hot Chili
Peppers played the next day. Some have blamed the band for this
outbreak, although Fred Durst claimed that none of the instigations
he had made at the concert were intended to cause damage.
Along with this episode, controversies involving the band's members
began to arise. Durst particularly became involved in feuds with
the metal band Slipknot,
Ozzy
Osbourne's guitarist
Zakk Wylde and
engaged in physical violence with
Creed
frontman
Scott Stapp. The band feuded
with rapper
Eminem.
Taproot released on their website an
answering machine message that Durst had left on the lead singer's
phone as "revenge" for ending their record company contract with
his record label.
Chocolate Starfish (2000–2001)
Fifteen months later,
Chocolate
Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water was released on
October 17, 2000. In an interview with Guitar World, guitarist Wes
Borland explained the meaning of the album's strange title. He said
that Fred was frequently referred to as an asshole, or a "chocolate
starfish," and the hot dog flavored water came from an inside joke
about a gas station the band visited while on the road that had
every flavor of water imaginable (except hot dog flavored). The
album set a record for highest week-one sales of a rock album with
just over one million copies sold in the U.S. in its first week of
release . "Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water" was
certified Gold, Platinum and six times Multi-Platinum.. The first
two singles "
My
Generation" and "
Rollin' " were released at the
same time in promotion of the album. "
Take a Look Around" was later
added to the list as the theme song to the movie
Mission: Impossible 2. A
remix, "Rollin' (Urban Assault Vehicle)" featuring
Method Man,
Redman and
DMX
was a minor club hit and was featured in the movie
The Fast and the
Furious. The fourth single
"My Way" was commissioned as
the opening theme for the
World Wrestling
Entertainment's
WrestleMania
X-Seven. The album received mediocre reviews from many
critics.
Controversies
Controversy continued with a death during a
2001 tour of Australia at the Big Day Out festival in Sydney
.
Teenager
Jessica Michalik died of
asphyxiation when fans rushed the stage
in the
mosh pit. It was claimed by security
and witnesses that Fred Durst was urging the crowd on in a possibly
violent manner, and that he failed to attempt to calm the crowd
after the accident. Michalik was later rushed to Sydney's Concord
Hospital where she died five days later.
Durst provided the courts with testimony. During the hearing he
claimed, via a video connection from the U.S., that he had warned
the concert's organizers Aaron Jackson, Will Pearce and Amar Tailor
and promoter Vivian Lees of the potential dangers of such minimal
security, even going so far as to say Limp Bizkit would “pull out”
if the issue wasn't properly addressed.
Big
Day Out attorneys attempted to pin the blame on Limp Bizkit
because the band did not stop playing when they received news of
the incident. Although the guitars, drums and bass ceased, DJ
Lethal played a quiet computer-generated loop. While admitting that
Lethal took it upon himself to play the
interlude, Durst claimed that the quiet melody did
have a soothing effect on the crowd.
The Coroner's Court decided the band 'could've been more helpful in
efforts to aid the girl'. The security practices employed by
festival organizers Creative Entertainment Australia bore the brunt
of the blame. After viewing videotapes and hearing witness
testimony, however, Milledge, the coroner, said it was evident that
the density of the crowd was dangerous at the time Limp Bizkit took
the stage- therefore they had to erect a cage around the
band.
Borland's first departure
In the fall of 2001, Wes Borland left Limp Bizkit for the first
time. Strained relations between him and Durst contributed to his
decision. His departure was interpreted as a major blow by fans and
critics to the band. He was often cited as a vital creative force
in the group, due in part to his eccentricity. The last known song
the band was working on with Wes was "Relax", a semi-cover take on
Frankie Goes to
Hollywood's song, due to be on the
Zoolander soundtrack.
Results May Vary (2002–2004)
With Borland's absence, Limp Bizkit began a nation-wide audition
for their new guitarist called
Put Your Guitar Where Your Mouth
Is in 2002. Durst announced at the outset that he was
interested in recruiting a female or more than one new member into
the band. Thousands of hopefuls were said entered. Some controversy
occurred when rumors surfaced that all contestants were required to
sign a document giving Limp Bizkit the full ownership of any
riffs they played. Each auditioner was allowed
only sixty seconds in the first round.
The final contestants
were Monte Pittman, Anoush Saboktakin and Jonas Anderson of
Fresno,
California
.
On March 30, 2003, Limp Bizkit performed live for the first time in
two years, at
World
Wrestling Entertainment's
WrestleMania XIX. They played "Crack
Addict" and "Rollin'" (
The
Undertaker's theme song) at the show. They signed up for
several live tours, despite their lack of a guitarist. It was
revealed that the guitarists for the
WrestleMania tour were
Head from
Korn and
Mike Smith from
Snot.
During this time, Durst spoke of many collaborations with
guitarists, with a few rap guests sprinkled in on songs for the
album. Among them were
Rivers Cuomo of
Weezer,
Page
Hamilton of
Helmet,
Al Jourgensen of
Ministry, and Head of Korn as well as
Jay-Z,
Bubba
Sparxxx, and
Snoop Dogg. None of the
songs with those guitarists would make it onto the album, except
"Build a Bridge", which was written with Welch, and "Red Light -
Green Light", which featured Snoop Dogg.
The finalists from the "Put Your Guitar Where Your Mouth Is"
contest were rejected in favor of former Snot guitarist Mike Smith.
The band changed its logo to limpbizkit to promote their change of
style.
The band had already recorded an album's worth of material for an
upcoming release. But with Mike Smith now in the band, it was
decided that they would go back in the studio and record another
album's worth of songs. The best of these tracks would make it onto
the final release. Fred refers to the tracks recorded during this
period that didn't make it to the album as the 'Off the Record'
tracks, as if it were an album in itself.
On September 23, 2003,
Results May
Vary, their fourth album, debuted at #3, breaking the
group's #1 spree on the Billboard 200. It received platinum
certification (1 million copies sold) in the United States in 2008,
almost 5 years after its release. In comparison, their previous
work
Chocolate
Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water sold one million
albums in its first week.
The album received almost uniformly poor reviews by critics.
Although
Rolling Stone's
review gave 3 out of 5 stars,
Playlouder called it 'fucking crap', and
Yahoo! Launch labeled it 'a frightening insight into the vacuous
state of 21st century culture'. Nevertheless, an acoustic cover of
The Who's "
Behind Blue Eyes" was a moderate hit on
mainstream radio, and its video featured actress
Halle Berry. "
Eat You
Alive" was released as the first single off the album, cracking
the top 20 of both American rock charts with an accompanying video
that features actress
Thora Birch being
berated and actor
Bill Paxton as her
father who is looking for her. The album's ballad "
Build a Bridge" was the official theme song
of WWE's
Survivor Series
pay-per-view event in November 2003,
although it was never released as an official single due to Mike
Smith's departure. Another song from the album, "
Almost Over", cracked the Rock Top 40. However
it was never released as a single or video.
In 2003, Limp Bizkit toured on the
Summer Sanitarium Tour
with headliners
Metallica, along with
Linkin Park,
Deftones and
Mudvayne to
promote Metallica's 2003 release,
St.
Anger.
At the tour's stop in Chicago, IL
, attendees of the concert threw items at and
heckled Durst from the moment he walked on stage. With the
crowd chanting "Fuck Fred Durst" and continuing their assault on
him, Durst threw the mic down after six songs and walked off stage,
but not before heckling the crowd back.
The Unquestionable Truth (Part 1), Greatest
Hitz, Borland's second departure, and hiatus (2004–2008)
Throughout July 2004, various rumors began circulating claiming
that
Wes Borland had been playing with
the band again.
By July 8, a fan site released an official
report that Borland was recording with the band in London
.
Photos appeared on the band's official website of him playing with
the band, and a live video of them playing a new song "
The Truth" in studio was posted
on the website.
Durst said of Borland's re-entry,
"We are very content with
Mike being gone. We are the type of people that stay true
to our family and our instincts and at any moment will act on
intuition as a whole. Mike wasn't the guy. We had
fun playing with him, but always knew, in the back of our minds,
that he wasn't where we needed him to be mentally." At this
stage, they reverted back to the use of their original logo.
The band returned to the studio with producer
Ross Robinson, who had worked with them on
Three Dollar Bill,
Yall$, to create a seven track EP titled
The Unquestionable
Truth . Drummer
John
Otto was only able to contribute to one track on the album due
to personal matters, with
Sammy
Siegler providing percussion on the remaining tracks. Durst
promised fans before its release that it would be a return to the
'rawer, more abrasive style' of their first album.
The Unquestionable
Truth was released as a 7-track EP internationally on May
3, 2005 with little fanfare or advertising, debuting at number 24
on the Billboard 200 and selling only 37,000 copies in its first
week. It has sold just slightly over 100,000 in the US. It received
mediocre reviews, with some critics thinking that Durst was trying
too hard to imitate
Rage
Against the Machine's lead singer
Zack de la Rocha.
Limp Bizkit's first greatest hits compilation, titled
Greatest Hitz, was released on November
8, 2005. It contained material from the band's first four albums
(the track "The Truth" was released in some countries). An
additional DVD, which was released in conjunction with the CD. The
album and DVD were barely promoted by the band's label, even to the
point where Durst claimed he was being forced to do interviews
about a compilation he wasn't very excited about. The promotion did
not pay off, with the album debuting at number 47. Wes Borland
stated that the CD was "a piece of shit and a waste of
money."
After the release of Greatest Hitz and the depature of Wes Borland
the band unofficially went into a hiatus. Durst began directing and
acting in movies (
Population 436,
The Longshots), Otto went into rehab
and collaborated with other bands and artists, as did the rest of
the band (Rivers, Lethal).
Rock im Park 2001 was released on
on March 31, 2008.
The live album and DVD, documented their 2001
performance at Rock im Park
in 2001. It documents the band at the height
of their popularity.
Reunion, Gold Cobra, and recent events (2008-present)
In mid-2008 rumors began to indicate that Limp Bizkit were planning
a comeback tour, these rumors were later confirmed. Interviews with
various members of the band had hinted that
Terry Balsamo was to replace Wes Borland, but
Balsamo was demanding a written contract, which the band was either
unable or unwilling to give. Despite no official confirmation from
the band, members of Limp Bizkit signed up on Twitter including
Wes, with DJ Lethal confirming the accounts to be real, making
Borland's rejoining seem less like a rumour. In late 2008, bassist
Sam Rivers hinted that the
group was in the early stages of writing new material for the fifth
full-length album, the bands first full-length album in 6
years.
On February 11, 2009, Durst posted on his Twitter account the
message "1am pacific time- limpbizkit.com tonight". The site was up
and running for the first time in years and confirmed the return of
Wes. Through a blog post on the homepage, Fred Durst and Wes
Borland issued a joint statement:
After the announcement, the band released two rehearsal videos of
"
Boiler" and "
Break Stuff" on their website, while they
updated one picture on their official website
limpbizkit.com and
MySpace page .
On May 20,
2009 the original lineup of Limp Bizkit performed together for the
first time in eight years, at their first show ever in Latvia
. The
band went on to play a European tour named
The Unicorns N'
Rainbows Tour.
They also played German festivals Rock Im Park
and Rock Am
Ring
on June 5th and 7th respectively, headlining the
latter. Five days later the band landed in the UK and played
at
Download Festival. On August
1st, the band took stage for a sold-out show in London's HMV Forum
as part of
Kerrang's Week of Rock. Limp
Bizkit was officially inducted into the Kerrang! Hall of Fame at
the
Kerrang! Awards, and the next day the band performed
at the
Sonisphere Festival, playing in
between
Machine Head and
Nine Inch Nails. Less than two weeks
later, Limp would again be playing alongside
Nine Inch Nails, but also
Keane in
ETPFest, Korea,
on August 15.
August 24th, 2009 marked the official first day of recording new
material, as well as the first time the entire band had recorded
together since 2003 (
Results May Vary without Wes Borland,
The Unquestionable Truth Part 1 without John Otto). Less
than one month later, a twitter update via Fred Durst informed
readers of the instrumental recording completion, along with the
first of two layers of vocals. October 25, 2009, again via Twitter,
Durst released the following statement:
On November 27, 2009, limpbizkit.com started to post t-shirts and
new merchandise on the website while Durst stated that more items
would come. Finally, on November 30, Durst revealed in a
Kerrang article, and later via
Twitter, that the new album would be called
Gold Cobra and would be released
early in 2010 via
Polydor/
Interscope.
Band members
- Fred Durst - vocals
(1995-present)
- Wes Borland - guitars (1995-2001,
2004-2006, 2009-present)
- Sam Rivers - bass
(1995-present)
- DJ Lethal - turntables, keyboards,
samples, programming, sound development (1996-present)
- John Otto - drums,
percussion (1995-present)
Former
Timeline
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Colors =
id:Vocals value:gray(0.5) legend:Lead vocals
id:Guitar value:green legend:Guitars
id:Bass value:purple legend:Bass
id:Drums value:blue legend:Drums
id:Turntables value:orange legend:Turntables
id:Lines value:black legend:Releases
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at:10/17/2000 color:black layer:back
at:09/23/2003 color:black layer:back
at:05/02/2005 color:black layer:back
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bar:Durst text:"Fred Durst"
bar:Borland text:"Wes Borland"
bar:Smith text:"Mike Smith"
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bar:Lethal text:"DJ Lethal"
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width:10 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(10,-4)
bar:Durst from:01/01/1995 till:end color:Vocals
bar:Borland from:01/01/1995 till:10/01/2001 color:Guitar
bar:Borland from:07/08/2004 till:07/08/2005 color:Guitar
bar:Borland from:02/11/2009 till:end color:Guitar
bar:Smith from:10/01/2002 till:07/07/2004 color:Guitar
bar:Rivers from:01/01/1995 till:end color:Bass
bar:Otto from:01/01/1995 till:end color:Drums
bar:Lethal from:01/01/1996 till:end color:Turntables
- Session
Awards and nominations
| Year |
Organization |
Nominated Work |
Award |
Result |
| 1998 |
Billboard Music Video Award |
"Nookie" |
Maximum Vision Award |
Won |
| 1999 |
American Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Favorite Alternative Group |
Nominated |
| 1999 |
MTV Music Video
Awards |
"Nookie" |
Best Group Video |
Nominated |
| 1999 |
MTV Music Video Awards |
"Nookie" |
Best Hard Rock Video |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
MTV Music Video Awards |
"N 2 Gether Now" |
Best Hip-Hop Video |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
Grammy Awards |
"Nookie" |
Hard Rock Performance |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
Grammy Awards |
Significant
Other |
Rock Album |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
American Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Favorite Alternative Group |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
MTV Music Video Awards |
"Break Stuff" |
Best Rock Video |
Won |
| 2000 |
Blockbuster Awards |
"Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Favorite Group (Rock) |
Won |
| 2000 |
MuchMusic Awards |
"Break Stuff" |
Best International Video |
Won |
| 2000 |
MuchMusic Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
People's Choice Favorite Int. Group |
Nominated |
| 2000 |
Billboard Music
Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best Rock Band |
Won |
| 2000 |
Orville J. Gibson Award |
Sam Rivers (Bassist) |
Best Bass Player |
Won |
| 2001 |
ECHO Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best International Metal Band |
Won |
| 2001 |
MTV Europe Music
Awards |
Chocolate
Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water |
Best Album |
Won |
| 2001 |
MTV Europe Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best Group |
Won |
| 2001 |
MTV Europe Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best Rock Act |
Nominated |
| 2001 |
MTV Europe Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Web Award |
Won |
| 2001 |
Grammy Awards |
"Take A Look Around" |
Best Hard Rock Performance |
Nominated |
| 2001 |
Billboard Music Video Awards |
"Rollin' " |
Best Hard Rock Clip of the Year |
Nominated |
| 2001 |
American Music Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Favorite Alternative Group |
Won |
| 2001 |
MTV Music Video Awards |
"Rollin' (Air Raid Vehicle)" |
Best Rock Video |
Won |
| 2001 |
MTV Music Video Awards |
"My Way" |
Viewer's Choice |
Nominated |
| 2001 |
Blockbuster Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best Group (Rock) |
Won |
| 2002 |
Juno Awards |
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water |
Best Selling Album |
Nominated |
| 2002 |
BRIT Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Best International Group |
Nominated |
| 2003 |
The K-Rock Awards |
"Behind Blue Eyes" |
Best Cover of the Year |
Won |
| 2009 |
Kerrang! Awards |
Limp Bizkit (Band) |
Hall Of Fame |
Won |
- MTV's TRL
Further expanding upon the group's achievements and popularity,
they were also the first group inducted into
MTV's
TRL "Hall of Fame" on May 26,
2001. The band accomplished this with 7 total videos making it into
"retirement" status. The qualifications to make retirement status
were to have fans vote your video onto the show for 65 consecutive
days. The following videos have been retired:
Non-musical album appearances
Discography
Studio albums
Compilations
Guest appearances in Limp Bizkit videos
- Sen Dog (Cypress
Hill), Thom Hazaert (President - Corporate Punishment Records) -
"Counterfeit"
- Chino Moreno - "Counterfeit [Lethal
Dose Mix]"
- Eminem, Dr. Dre,
Jonathan Davis, Snoop Dogg, Pauly
Shore, Seth Green, Flea & more - "Break Stuff"
- Ben Stiller, Stephen Dorff - "Rollin'"
- Bill Paxton, Thora Birch - "Eat You Alive"
- Halle Berry - "Behind Blue
Eyes"
- Jonathan Davis, Fieldy, Brian "Head" Welch,
Munky, Les
Claypool - "Faith", footage from the Family Values Tour.
- Matt Pinfield - "Re-Arranged"
- Method Man, Pauly Shore, Redman, DJ Premier
- "N 2 Gether Now"
- Bubba Sparxxx, Timbaland - "Re-Arranged (Timbaland Mix)"
Guest appearances in other videos
- Fred Durst - Lil' Bow Wow ft. Snoop Dogg, "Bow Wow "
- Fred Durst - Cold, "Give"
- Fred Durst - Eminem, "The Real
Slim Shady"
- Fred Durst - KoRn, "Falling Away from Me"
- Fred Durst - Soulfly ft. Fred Durst,
"Bleed"
- Fred Durst - Staind, "Outside (Live)"
- Fred Durst - Staind, "Just Go"
- Fred Durst - 8Ball, "Quit Playin
Games"
- Fred Durst - Artists Against AIDS Worldwide, "What's
Going On"
- Fred Durst - Kid Rock, "Bawitdaba"
- Mike Smith - Britney Spears, "I Love Rock & Roll"
- Mike Smith - Five for
Fighting, "Easy Tonight"
References
-
http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b99728_limp_bizkit_back_togetherdoes_anyone.html
-
http://www.chartattack.com/news/66149/original-limp-bizkit-lineup-reforms
- http://limpbizkit.com
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External links