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Biography
It only looks easy. Not every band sells 1.5 million copies of their
        debut record, and shares stages with the hottest acts in the
        world while amassing a gigantic international fan-base long before
        radio and -- yes, you, dear press folk -- woke up and smelled the
        concrete. But Limp Bizkit rose out of their hometown of
        Jacksonville, FL, on the backs of their friends and allies around the
        globe. Through ceaseless touring and a dynamic live show, the
        little group with the curious name found themselves in heady
        company indeed.They're that band with the DJ from House of
        Pain, you're thinking. The ones that got where they are because
        they inked tattoos on their friends in Korn, those guys with the
        George Michael song. Yeah, yeah, yeah... Limp Bizkit have heard
        it all before. Here's the scoop: Significant Other, the band's
        second album for Flip/Interscope Records, shatters the sophomore
        jinx. Yes, they toured incessantly last year, scoring an impressive trifecta by appearing on the
        1998 Warped and Ozzfest excursions, as well as the inaugural edition of the groundbreaking
        Family Values tour. This is the band that also threw a traveling party of their very own called
        "Ladies Night in Cambodia" for two solid months, which provided free admission for the first 200
        women to attend each night. They had a massive hit on their hands with their inimitable cover of
        George Michael's "Faith," and they watched sales of their album fly past Platinum certification.
        Worthy and respectable efforts, all. "I think we've successfully set a landmark for this type of
        music," he states. "Other bands have combined singing and heavy rock and rap, but no one's
        done it all to the extent where the rap is totally hip-hop credible, the heavy parts can move
        100,000 people at a time in an arena, and the melodies can make the whole world sing. That
        crash you just heard was the gauntlet hitting the ground. For the band - including guitarist Wes
        Borland, drummer John Otto, bassist Sam Rivers, and turntable-man DJ Lethal -- Significant
        Other is the album that will dispel the doubters and silence the skeptical. It's a collection of
        songs that Limp Bizkit say that they learned to write from playing to audiences around the world,
        watching their fans in action. "The title refers to male-female relationships, of course," says Wes
        Borland. "But it also refers to this record as our 'significant other'. This is the record that we've
        wanted to make since we started this band." Co-produced by the band with famed noise
        technician Terry Date (Pantera, White Zombie, Staind) and mixed by Brendan O'Brien (Pearl Jam,
        Stone Temple Pilots), Significant Other's incisive tracks range from the corrosive fury of "Break
        Stuff" and "Nookie" (the album's first video and radio track) to the more measured and tuneful
        "No Sex" and "Rearranged." "It's a record about betrayal," Fred says. "I guess I ask for it
        sometimes. The way I get treated by back-stabbing friends and girls, it's probably due to my
        own actions." His trauma is captured in the record's rich sonic experimentation, such as the
                        orchestral flourishes that creep into the dramatic "Don't Go Off Wandering."
                        Or the slinky, phat beats of the landmark hip-hop jam, "N2gether," which
                        pairs the band with Method Man from the Wu-Tang Clan and features
                        production by DJ Premier of Gang Starr. Further adding to the excitement are
                        the appearances of a host of luminaries, including the unlikely alliance of
                        Korn's Jonathan Davis and Stone Temple Pilots' Scott Weiland on the dynamic
                        "Nobody Like You." In a humorous interlude, you can hear MTV veejay Matt
                        Pinfield vent his spleen on the state of today's gutless rock environment. And
                        Fred Durst's own mom even makes a cameo! Ever since they formed in late
                        1994, Limp Bizkit have blazed a trail for themselves like few other bands of
                        the 1990s. Armed with their Three Dollar Bill, Y'all$ debut, the band were
                        unafraid to perform for any crowd, anywhere, at any time. The band could be
                        seen on MTV, rocking the beach on the network's "Spring Break" edition of
        Fashionably Loud. And there they were again on the channel come New Year's Eve, effortlessly
        grooving with ex-House of Pain rapper Everlast and Kid Rock, and getting props from teen queen
        Jennifer Love Hewitt. Aided in their quest by their overactive imaginations, Limp Bizkit began their
        Ozzfest sets by emerging from a gigantic, filthy toilet, and brought down the house on the Family
        Values tour, armed with a troupe of break-dancers and a science fiction-themed stage straight
        out of Mars Attacks. In the meantime, one-time tattoo artist Fred Durst has proven himself one
        of the hardest-working men in show business. He's acted as an A&R rep for Flip Records (signing
        the band Staind and producing the upcoming second album from Jacksonville homies Cold); he's
        been a guest on records from such notables as Korn, Videodrone and Soulfly; and he directed
        the heavily-rotated video for "Faith" as well as the video for "Nookie." The singer helped design
        and create the outlandish above-described stages. He's even writing a screenplay! "Look at
        George Lucas!" laughs Fred, when asked about his energy and unflagging attention to detail.
        "That motherfucker, he don't stop, dude! If we do enough amazing things - films, videos, songs,
        music - you become legends, and a whole new generation becomes tripped-out to work with
        you." With a headlining spot secured on the second Family Values tour, and tentative plans to
        return yet again to the studio late this year, Limp Bizkit might appear to have their hands full
        dealing with all the attention they're certain to receive. Fred Durst is unconcerned. "I've never
        been so confident about our focus until right now," he grins. "I cannot wait to go on tour, and
        I'm usually the one who can't wait to go home!"
 
Biography collected from Limp-Bizkit.com