Limp Bizkit: News, History & Updates
Limp Bizkit Biography by Matt Pinfield
Exclusively for Alternative Nation
My first impression of Limp Bizkit was that they were doing something that was kind of on the edge of what was happening with new rock at that period of time. I was doing a TV show, MattRock, which was a new version of Headbangers Ball, which I was hosting. As things started to happen, and we debuted “Counterfeit” and early video stuff off Three Dollar Bill Y’all, it also turned out that my youngest daughter Maya’s mom, my second wife, was from the same town as Limp Bizkit, Jacksonville.
So I spent a lot of time down there, plus I ended up meeting the guys because they were obviously fans of all the rock stuff. We got introduced in Jacksonville through that music scene and Fred and I hit it off — and all the guys in the band, really. I just loved their attitude and everything that they were doing at that period of time. And I also thought it took balls to cover their face. I thought it was cool, like these guys were having fun in their life.
Also, it’s because of the Korn guys — I was friends with Korn. They ended up having the same management with Peter Katsis. And Peter Katsis and I have been friends for 37 years, when he first started managing bands out of Chicago. So there was a long friendship, there was this succession of different people that were involved, and then I was one of the earliest supporters of the band at MTV.
I remember when I started at MTV, I wasn’t just a VJ, I was actually one of the people picking music for the channel, which was fantastic. I started doing that, I got hired managing music programming — and I filled in Depeche Mode, I met Oasis and a bunch of people. It was that kind of thing.
It made sense because there was a real crossover of what was happening in rock and the new hard rock and nu-metal, and that there was enough of a crossover that this stuff was getting played on 120 Minutes, and getting played on the new version of Headbangers Ball, which was called MattRock, which is my show. Where I’m on there with Ozzy Osbourne, Eddie Van Halen — and it was also like with Korn and Limp — so that was what was happening at that period of time.
So that’s where that friendship started. And, you know, the whole thing — but I don’t know if we ever talked about this before for any books — but that friendship, I was very early because I was such an early supporter. We had become such great friends. Fred had flown me down — the band had flown me down to Atlanta — to cut that track, the bonus track on Significant Other, where I do my whole rant at the end of the album. We had a blast doing that.
Fred had asked me, ‘Hey man, I want you to go on the end of our album, I want you to be the last track on our record.’ And the guys were excited about it, and so they flew me to Atlanta, to Southern Tracks, to Brendan O’Brien, where the producer was working, mixing the record. And I came up with that thing that I did on the end of that Limp Bizkit record — part of it in the cab in New York City. Like, I’m coming around in New York City. I’ve lived in Jersey, but I was working at MTV, so I was commuting. I remember writing a lot of that crazy shit that I do in that rant on that record.




