| Product Summary | | Label: Uni/interscope | | UPC: 00606949036225 | | Release Date: 6/22/1999 | | Buy.com Sku: 60313650 | | Item#: MG2N4T | Format: CD |
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| Song Listing |  |
Disc 1
| | Song Title | Sample | | 1. Intro ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 2. Just Like This ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 3. Nookie ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 4. Break Stuff ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 5. Re-Arranged ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 6. I'm Broke ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 7. Nobody Like You ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 8. Don't Go Off Wandering ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 9. 9 Teen 90 Nine ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 10. N 2 Gether Now - (featuring Method Man) ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 11. Trust? ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 12. No Sex ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 13. Show Me What You Got ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 14. Lesson Learned ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 15. Outro ~ Limp Bizkit |  | | 16. (untitled) - (hidden track) ~ Limp Bizkit |  |
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| | Album Notes and Credits | Notes & Personnel Info |  | SIGNIFICANT OTHER is an Enhanced audio CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. |  | Limp Bizkit: Fred Durst (vocals); Wes Borland (guitar); Sam Rivers (bass); John Otto (drums); DJ Lethal (turntables). |  | Additional personnel includes: Method Man, Les Claypool, Matt Pinfield, Anita Durst, Mathematics (vocals); Scott Borland (keyboards); Jonathan Davis, Aaron Lewis (background vocals). |  | Producers: Limp Bizkit, Scott Weiland, Terry Date, D.J. Premier. |  | Recorded at NRG Recording Services, North Hollywood, California. |  | SIGNIFICANT OTHER was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Rock Album. "Nookie" was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance. |  | This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. |  | Limp Bizkit made their reputation through hard work, touring the hell out of their debut album Three Dollar Bill Y'All and thereby elevating themselves to the popularity status of their similarly rap-inflected, alt-metal mentors Korn. With their second album, Significant Other, they come close to reaching Korn's artistic level; at the very least, it's considerably more ambitious and multi-dimensional than Three Dollar Bill. Limp Bizkit, of course, hasn't abandoned their testosterone-overloaded signature sound, they've just built around it. There are flourishes of neo-psychedelia on pummeling metal numbers and there are swirls of strings, even crooning, at the most unexpected background. All of it simply enhances the force of their rap-metal attack, which can get a little tedious if it's unadorned. Not so coincidentally, the enlarged sonic palette also serves as emotional coloring for Fred Durst's lyrics. He broke up with his longtime girlfriend -- his Significant Other, if you will -- during the writing of the album, and his anguish is apparent throughout the record, as almost every song is infused with the guilt, anger, and regret that was churned up in the wake of separation. That, however, gives the impression that this is an alt-metal Blood on the Tracks. It's not. Nevertheless, it does have more emotional weight than Three Dollar Bill, along with more effective, adventurous music. More importantly, it balances these new concerns with trace elements of their juvenile humor along with the overpowering aggro rap-metal that is their stock in trade. Which makes it a rare artistic leap forward that will still please audiences that just want more of the same. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine |  | Smashing the sophomore jinx, Limp Bizkit puts together a screaming second album in SIGNIFICANT OTHER. The band's songwriting has matured, and the experience of touring is evident in the production. Singer Fred Durst is a frontman for the next millennium, combining hardcore metal with the slickness of hiphop. Limp Bizkit is backed by the turntable skills of House Of Pain's DJ Lethal. You can hear the hiphop influences in almost every track--from the lead single, "Nookie," to the DJ Premier-produced "N 2 Gether Now." Other highlights include "Break Stuff," "Just Like This," and "I'm Broke." Be sure to check out the Durst-directed video for "Nookie," as it shows just how multi-talented Limp Bizkit really is. | Engineer: Terry Date | Musical Guests |  | Les Claypool |  | Method Man |  | Jonathan Davis |  | Scott Borland |
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| | Technical Info |  | Release Date : 06/22/1999 |  | Original Release Date : 1999 |  | Catalog ID : 90362 |  | Label : Interscope Records (USA) |  | Number of Discs : 1 |  | Studio/Live : Studio |  | Mono/Stereo : Stereo |  | SPAR Code : n/a |  | UPC : 00606949036225 |
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| | Professional Reviews | | Rolling Stone (7/8-22, pp.143-144) - 3 1/2 Stars (out of 5) - "...at this point, hating them seems a little disingenuous. They're actually (gulp) good."Entertainment Weekly (6/18/99, pp.74-75) - "...It takes it cues from hardcore hip-hop...grunge...the post-80's metal of Metallica, and, to a lesser degree, electronica....But overall, SIGNIFICANT OTHER isn't simply modern rock; it's postmodern rock..." - Rating: B CMJ (6/28/99, p.5) - "...[SIGNIFICANT OTHER] has an intensity that never lets up, surpassing the musical scope of its predecessor with rap-core gems such as "Nookie" and the blunted hip-hop of..."N 2 Gether Now"....The unholy matrimony of metal and rap celebrates another victory...superb..." |
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