Limp Bizkit - Forgotten Muse (2014) [Gorgatz]seeders: 14
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Limp Bizkit - Forgotten Muse (2014) [Gorgatz] (Size: 139.51 MB)
DescriptionLimp Bizkit - Forgotten Muse (2014) [Gorgatz] - I N F O - Whether you hate them, loathe them or wish them a swift and bloody death, Limp Bizkit are a grimly impressive monument on the modern rock landscape. Fred Durst has become the Osama Bin Laden of rap-metal, fanatically worshipped by his unquestioning disciples, but roundly despised by the rest of the world. There is no middle ground. At least, there wasn't until now. Because this remix anthology is, unexpectedly, the best Limp Bizkit album ever. You heard. Why? Because it finds room for all the musical strands that Durst's gang always pay lip service to but never quite pull off - techno, R&B, funk, even drum'n'bass. Because much of it has a lightness of touch that a standard Bizkit album, with its ruthlessly calculated mix of bullying bluster and marketable machismo, can not deliver. Most of all, because Fred doesn't dominate. To give Durst due credit - or at least his spin doctors and presidential advisors - there are some witty and surprisingly decent inclusions here. Bizkit's traumatically duff novelty cover of George Michael's 'Faith', for example, is reborn as an unlikely hybrid homage to David Bowie's stuttering funk-pop smash 'Fame'. DJ Monk's darkbeat remake of 'Rollin' slots Fred's guttural growls into ragga-friendly drum'n'bass shoes with inspired smoothness, while Bosko sneaks vocoder phunk into the hard-step blast of 'Crushed'. Some obvious guest stars also do their thing. Superstar nu-soul producers The Neptunes find prancing grace in 'Nookie' and fashion a Wu-Tang style loop around the Method Man duet 'N2Gether Now', in each case elbowing Durst to the edge of the frame. And Timbaland's reshuffle of the 'Take A Look Around' is also an improvement, swapping testosterone bluster for Eastern-tinged beats and vapour-trail guitars. That said, the hefty sportz-jock body armour of nu-metal is clearly not naturally suited to the nimble art of remix culture. Hence in-house DJ Lethal's pared down 'Break Stuff', Durst's most brutally effective hate anthem, which sounds like a 25-stone Hell's Angel zipping around on a dinky scooter. And not even Taliban-style Bizkit fundamentalists need five - that's five - new versions of 'My Way', already a charmless bully of a tune. Puff Diddy Doddy The Magic Dragon, or whatever he's called this week, strips the track to something approximating his 'Godzilla' soundtrack stomp 'Come With Me', while DJ Premier and William Orbit bite out a few nondescript chunks. Only the Dub Pistols have the right idea by burying Durst's whiny throwdown lyrics almost entirely inside a midtempo dancehall scuttle. Nice one. So then - four or five excellent tracks out of 16. Hardly world-shaking stuff, but a vast improvement on Bizkit's usual batting average. And who knows - maybe a little of the subtlety, wit and invention displayed. - T R A C K L I S T - 01. Intro 02. Crushed Space Ice 03. All in the Family (feat. Korn) 04. I Did It All For The Rollin 05. The Way You Let Me Down 06. Build A Codejunkie Bridge 07. Ready To Go (feat. Lil Wayne) 08. Smells Like Break Stuff 09. Red Green Vice Miami Light (feat. Snoop Dogg) 10. Behind Blue Eyes (Piano Rock Remix) 11. Give It Up (Codejunkie’s Club Mix) 12. Doesnt Lie 13. Thieves (Ministry Cover) 14. All In The Family (Sowing The Beat Mix) 15. Outro Format: 320 mp3 Style: Nu-Metal Size: 139.50 MB Sharing Widget |