The Rise and Squall of Limp Bizkit Part 1: Three Dollar Bill, Y'all - Renegade Jukebox #21
This is Part 1 of a 4-part journey through the first half of Limp Bizkit's discography, back when Nu-Metal was in its prime.
What’s going on, everyone? Welcome to Part 1 of a brand new artist retrospective! We begin with Three Dollar Bill, Y’all, Limp Bizkit’s 1997 debut, produced by Ross Robinson. How does it hold up? Better than you might think, but tune in to hear what myself and Nick thought about the record, and what exactly led to their massive success.
This is only the beginning, folks! Next time, we get to break stuff, from family values to Woodstock ‘99. But until then, thanks for tuning in!
On this episode of Renegade Jukebox, Trivium finally end up getting the respect they finally deserve. The Sin & The Sentence was the right album at the right time, and finally with the right drummer. So Nick & Mike as massive fans of the band, how does the album hold up for them? Listen and find out, and be ready to open a pit in your living room to "Beyond Oblivion."
You are absolutely WRONG about Silence In The Snow. Tonight, Nick and Mike cover what might just be the most contentious Trivium album. One mired by circumstance, member changes, and a changing metal scene from the New Wave of American heavy Metal, to the Octane Metalcore and pre-TikTok influencers telling you not to like this album. But actually how is the music on display? Well, listen and hear Nick & Mike defend this gem.
Jukebox returns with the next episode in The Trivium Retrospective, Vengeance Falls. Nick & Mike confessed in the last episode that it had been a long time since either of them actively jammed the album. So how does it hold up? Sit back, relax and get ready to Ooh ah ah ah as Trivium collaborate with David Draiman. (The results fair considerably better than Disturbed last two albums.)
New decade. New rules. New Trivium, figuratively and literally. In Waves is a huge turning point in the band's catalog, one the band insisted was a necessary step to them continuing. Is the album a shower or a grower? Or would we not see what they were going for on later albums? Listen and find out.
