| | Limp Bizkit Results May Vary CD - Import Limp Bizkit Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $39.99 CDFor Sale Limited Availability
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Japanese limited version featuring 2 bonus tracks, & a bonus DVD (format NTSC, region code 2).
Limp Bizkit: Fred Durst (vocals, guitar); Sam Rivers (guitar, bass); Mike Smith (guitar); Jon Otto (beats); DJ Lethal. Producers: Fred Durst, Rick Rubin, Terry Date, DJ Lethal. Japanese import has bonus tracks "Armbit" and "Let It Go." Also comes with an additional DVD disc. It took a long, long time for Limp Bizkit to get their follow-up to Chocolate Starfish and the Hotdog Flavored Water into the stores. First, guitarist Wes Borland, generally regarded as the band's musical force, up and left the band, and it took a long, long time to find a replacement guitarist. After a national talent search performed at Guitar Center stores, where candidates had to sign contracts that gave up their rights to anything original they played at their audition, Limp Bizkit settled on former Snot guitarist Mike Smith and recorded an album. Then scrapped it. Then they recorded another album. Then scrapped it. They were going through album titles, too -- it was called Bipolar and then, charmingly, Panty Sniffer. Finally, all the sessions and the turmoil were whittled down into one very long album called Results May Vary. Without Borland on the album, Limp Bizkit turns to frontman Fred Durst, who already dominated the band's personality and now must provide direction in addition to bravado. Durst doesn't come up with any new musical ideas, apart from slight hints of Staind and emo on the ballads, and he generally runs amuck, spewing bile at targets including Britney Spears, ranting about how she broke his heart. He complains about being picked on in high school and about radio and MTV playing the same old bands, and invokes icons like Kurt Cobain. Results May Vary would have been improved if the music had a fraction of Durst's anger (no matter how misguided it is) or had energy to match the clown jumping up and down and screaming in front. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine It took a long, long time for Limp Bizkit to get their follow-up to Chocolate Starfish and the Hotdog Flavored Water into the stores. First, guitarist Wes Borland, generally regarded as the band's musical force, up and left the band, and it took a long, long time to find a replacement guitarist. After a national talent search performed at Guitar Center stores, where candidates had to sign contracts that gave up their rights to anything original they played at their audition, Limp Bizkit settled on former Snot guitarist Mike Smith and recorded an album. Then scrapped it. Then they recorded another album. Then scrapped it. They were going through album titles, too -- it was called Bipolar then, charmingly, Panty Sniffer. Finally, all the sessions and the turmoil was whittled down into one very long, very bad album called Results May Vary. Part of its weakness stems from two perennial Limp Bizkit problems: for a metal band they sound, well, limp, and in Fred Durst they have the worst frontman in the history of rock. These two things plagued even their hits, but Borland at least gave the band some ideas. Without him, the band is left to flounder, and Durst, who already dominated the band's personality, not only has to provide the bravado, but he has to give it direction -- which is likely why it took so long for this mess to get released. Durst doesn't come up with any new musical ideas, apart from slight hints of Staind and emo on the ballads, but the album doesn't suffer from recycled musical ideas, since they were already doing that on Chocolate Starfish. No, it suffers from an utter lack of form and direction, from the riffs to the rhythms, and a surplus of stolen ideas. "The Only One" cops the opening of Steve Miller's "Take the Money and Run," "Gimme the Mic" plagiarizes the Beastie Boys' "Pass the Mic" down to rhyming "y'all" with "y'all" (but Durst adds a whole lotta "motherf*ckers"), while "Phenomenon" borrows from several rap songs, highlighted by Durst getting lyrics wrongQ (12/03, p.132) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...'Gimme The Mic' and 'Head For The Barricade' are the most thrilling rap/metal car crashes in recent memory..." Results May Vary Music Review Purchase Results May Vary CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Maximum Slipknot CD (Import)
Results May Vary
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| | Limp Bizkit Results May Vary CD (2003) (Import) Japan
Results May Vary
$31.55 Fourth studio album from Limp Bizkit & the follow-up to their 2000 release 'Chocolate Starfish & The Hot Dog Flavored Water'. Produced by Rick Rubin, 'Results May Vary' is the first album to feature ex-Snot guitarist Mike Smith who has replaced Wes Borland. Testosterone overloaded rap metal with ...
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| | Crown Deathrace King CD (2000)
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| | Live Phish 12: 08/13/96 Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, Indiana CDs (2002) Boxed Set
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$23.05 Phish: Trey Anastasio, Jon Fishman, Mike Gordon, Page McConnell. Though the performance is filled with rarities that will appeal to the band's longtime fans, Live Phish, Vol. 12 mostly shows the band in the malaise they entered following their last great year of barnstorming performances in 1995, but before they reinvented themselves as a consummate arena funk act in 1997. Much of the year was spent ...
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| | Golden Age Of American Rock 'N' Roll CD (2007)
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$14.75 The 11th volume of this venerated series is split about half between out-and-out classics from rock & roll's first decade and considerably lesser-known (and usually much lower-charting) items from the same period. The benefit of this approach is that it makes available quite a few tracks that rarely get reissued, or at least rarely anthologized on all-purpose rock & roll oldies collections, while putting in enough familiar staples to avoid being tagged as a rarities collection. The drawback, of course, is that those relatively little-known singles -- all Top 100 Billboard hits to some degree or another, though seldom played on oldies stations today -- simply aren't nearly as good or memorable as the big hits with which they share space on this CD. Collectors might get frustrated by all the big hits that they already have in their collection several times over; more general fans will find the quality of the disc erratic, owing to the presence of all those obscurities. Still, there's no arguing with the first-rate status of many of the big hits here, including great smashes by LaVern Baker ("Jim Dandy"), Dion ("Ruby Baby"), Mickey & Sylvia ("Love Is Strange"), Shirley & Lee ("Let ...
| | Jimmy Smith Hobo Flats CD (1963) Remastered; Digipak
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$8.15 Arranger: Oliver Nelson. When it comes to the classic jazz organ sound--based in a mingling of hard bop and influences of blues and gospel--Jimmy Smith was first among equals. Among many other musical virtues, his organ tone was simultaneously thick and yet highly nimble. While most of Smith's recordings find him in small-to-medium-sized groups, 1963's HOBO FLATS features big band arrangements by the great Oliver Nelson. As a counter to Smith's bluesy, funky style, Nelson's orchestrations exude sweeping, cinematic scope, giving the songs plenty of sentiment and drama. Playing piano-style single-note lines on his Hammond B-3 organ, Jimmy Smith revolutionized the use of the instrument in a jazz combo setting in the mid-'50s and early '60s with his recordings for Blue Note Records. After he moved to Verve Records, though, he began working in ...
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