

While the 2000s were marked with a brief departure by Borland and a band hiatus between 20, the group rolled into the 2010s as ferocious as ever with 2011’s Gold Cobra, plus regular festival appearances that would continue to prove Limp Bizkit’s impressive staying power and canny way of turning caustic noise into irresistible hooks.

Those compositions became Limp Bizkit’s landmarks, while the album took a significant place in the rockers’ discography. It included such famous songs as My Generation, Rollin (Air Raid Vehicle), Take A Look Around and others. Both albums highlighted Durst’s cocksure jumble of raging rhymes, Borland’s crunchy metal riffs, DJ Lethal’s skittery samples and breaks, and Tool-indebted rhythms on chart hits like “Rollin’,” “Nookie,” and “Break Stuff,” the latter serving as the unofficial theme for Woodstock ‘99 and Limp Bizkit’s infamous, violence-inciting performance. One of the band’s strongest records, Chocolate Starfish And The Hot Dog Flavored Water, was released in 2000. Mixing heavy doses of rock, rap, and punk, the Florida band began churning out bold, brazen, house-destroying tracks built on pure testosterone-fuelled escapism with 1999’s Significant Other and 2000’s Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water. Method Man, Redman And DMX PERFORMER Limp Bizkit. Coming together in 1994 in Jacksonville, Florida, vocalist Fred Durst, guitarist Wes Borland, bassist Sam Rivers, and drummer John Otto grew a following in the local punk scene with loud, rafter-rattling performances, highlighted by a scratchy, screamy cover of George Michael’s “Faith.” That track would eventually land on their 1997 debut album, Three Dollar Bill, Y’All, which also included newest member: turntablist DJ Lethal of House of Pain fame. PERFORMER Limp Bizkit INDEX 01 41:01:32 TRACK 12 AUDIO TITLE Boiler PERFORMER Limp Bizkit INDEX 01 46:07:50 TRACK 13 AUDIO TITLE Hold On PERFORMER Limp Bizkit INDEX 00 51:55:01 INDEX 01 53:07:70 TRACK 14 AUDIO TITLE Rollin’ (Urban Assault Vehicle) Feat.

Nu-metal pioneers Limp Bizkit have always been far more clever than they let on-but that’s a large part of their allure.
