Limp Bizkit - Three Dollar Bill Y All
|
 See Larger Image | Three Dollar Bill, Y'All Artist : Limp Bizkit List Price : $18.98 USD Your Price : $18.98 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1997-07-01 Studio : Interscope Records Label : Interscope Records Avg. Customer Rating : (629 reviews)
|
Reviews Customer Reviews for Three Dollar Bill Y All This is when Limp Bizkit was at its darkest Rating: The first album from Limp Bizkit was very different from "Significant Other" and "Chocolate Starfish". It had a much darker atmosphere, and the overall sound was much heavier. This album dealt with two-faced people & annoying neighbors & trying to find out who you really were, wheareas "Chocolate Starfish" dealt with the media, money, not giving a f**k what people think, etc.
The songs here are really catchy, and sometimes depressing. "Pollution" and "Leech" are the heaviest songs here, and they're what defined the early days of Limp Bizkit. The singles "Counterfeit," "Faith," and "Sour," have never sounded better. "Clunk" sounds like a filler, so it's not that good. "Nobody Loves Me," "Indigo Flow," "Everything," and "Stalemate" are the darkest songs on this album, so don't expect any Keep-Rollin' beats here. I wonder what happened to these guys, anyway? I guess it's money and fame that prompted them to go on with "Chocolate Starfish". Oh well.
Customer Reviews for Three Dollar Bill Y All Cd rock amania Rating: the only thing i have to say is this debut from LB was corney it was trash this album was so whack i wanted to go to the studio and kill them thank go i did'nt. But really the way fred was singing it was retarted especially the song pollution this album was'nt worth it don't buy it you will be real pissed of if you do.
Editorial Reviews for Three Dollar Bill Y All Audio Cd Amazon.com Rap metal has been around ever since 1986 when Run-DMC and Aerosmith joined forces for a remake of "Walk This Way," but it took nearly a decade for Rage Against the Machine to bust the floodgates wide open. Soon after, a stream of percussive hellraisers including Korn, Downset, and Deftones infiltrated the metal market, and they, in turn, sired a new breed fronted by acts like Snot and Limp Bizkit. Three Dollar Bill Y'All, Limp Bizkit's debut album, is a tempestuous collection of divergent styles. Unlike metal acts that try to get "dope," but lack the hip-hop background to legitimately fuse the two genres, Limp Bizkit--which features Wes Borland and House of Pain member DJ Lethal--have the know-how to groove and grind. And instead of launching a one-dimensional Blitzkrieg, Limp Bizkit mixes up its rhythms and tempos to keep its listeners guessing. --Jon Wiederhorn
|
|