Archived News
7/4/01 -
"Crazy
things are happening that don't need to be happening, and people
are retaliating in the wrong way" Fred Durst explains.
"This movie needs to happen now."
But the film is still far from hitting the big screens. Durst
said if an actors strike hits Hollywood this summer, production
will not begin until the strike is over. The project has been in
development for more than a year.
"There are so many movie studios that are scared to touch
subject matter like this, but I think it's real. ... I think it
will help people understand the underdog." Fred remarks
In the meantime, the singer has been busy directing videos for
Staind and Cold and playing label exec while Limp Bizkit take a
break from the road. Fred, who was named a senior vice president
at Interscope in 1999, has been working with new signings to his
Flawless imprint, including a singer from Virginia Beach,
Virginia, named Kenna and a rock group called Puddle of Mudd.
Durst was turned on to Kenna by production duo the Neptunes, who
produced Kenna's New Sacred Cow album. The LP should be out in
late summer.
Durst met the singer for Puddle of Mudd, Wesley Scantlin, when
Scantlin sneaked backstage at a Limp Bizkit show in Kansas City,
Missouri, and gave him a demo tape.
"I was like, 'Holy shit, who is this guy?" Durst
recalled. "I checked him out in Kansas City — his band
wasn't that killer, but he was a great songwriter. We brought him
out to work with us and set him up with some dudes I used to jam
with in Jacksonville. We put them together and luckily the
chemistry was right, and now Puddle of Mudd is a really good rock
band."
The group recently finished recording its debut, which is due in
July.
Fred said his job as record mogul is simply giving artists a kick
start — from there, They're on their own.
"I think every artist that I'm working with has bigger
dreams than me. I think that's the key. They need to build their
own empires. I'm just getting their foot in the door."
29/3/01
-
Limp Bizkit will Begin summer by writing the "heaviest album
you've ever heard," Fred Durst says.
"We're gonna go in, no air-conditioning, 130 degree room,
just mad as f*ck, and just go there," he said. "We need
to go there.
"We have a lot to say now, and we're really emotional,"
he continued. "The success has allowed us to step back and
look at the world."
Fred said Limp Bizkit have worked on some new material during
sound checks, but they plan to start largely afresh when they
return from their European tour in late June.
He said the album will be "totally opposite" from last
year's Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water, even
going as far as to call it "anti-Chocolate Starfish."
But Limp Bizkit aren't so over their current album that they're
done spinning off material from it — in fact, a slew of
"My Way" remixes are on the way, including renditions
by Puff Daddy and William Orbit (Madonna). Fred described Puffy's
version — which he said he'll release online — as
"real simple" and Orbit's as more "driving."
DJ Premier and DJ Lethal are also each remixing the song, Durst
said. "The more you hear ["My Way"], the more you
understand it and relate to it," he said, explaining the
reason for the multiple remixes. "It's one of those songs
that will grow on you."
The members of Limp Bizkit are pursuing separate projects while
the band is on a break from the road until early May. DJ Lethal
is working on his solo debut, while guitarist Wes Borland is
touring with his side project, Big Dumb Face. Fred is also
fiddling with some solo music, in between various other projects
that range from directing videos for Staind and Cold to preparing
for his film directorial debut with a movie called
"Runts." He said he'll put out a solo album some day,
but for now, it's low on his list of priorities.
"Limp Bizkit isn't in the studio every single day, but
Lethal is with his stuff, Wes is with his stuff, and I am at my
house with my stuff," he said. "I have things I'm
working on that are just me — I create everything from drums
to guitar, bass — everything. It's a whole 'nother side to
see."