May Vary 2003 Flac24 B Exclusive - Limp Bizkit Results

Results May Vary, released on September 23, 2003, marks a unique and experimental chapter in Limp Bizkit's history. As the band's fourth studio album, it was the first following the departure of longtime guitarist Wes Borland and features a sound characterized by a shift toward alternative rock and more introspective, melodic themes. Production and Context

  1. "Intro"
  2. "Eat You Alive"
  3. "Behind Blue Eyes"
  4. "The Truth"
  5. "Some Like It Hot"
  6. "The End"
  7. "Falling Away from Me"
  8. "Crawl"
  9. "Dad Vibes"
  10. "Boiler"
  11. "Almost (half-blank) Positive"
  12. "Let Me Drown"
  1. "Eat You Alive"
  2. "Behind Blue Eyes"
  3. "The Truth"
  4. "The End of Time"
  5. "Shoot Me Again"
  6. "Gold Cobra"
  7. "Boiler"
  8. "Crawl Away"
  9. "A Lesson Learned"
  10. "Re-Arranged"
  11. "The New World"
  12. "Let Me Be"

HDCD: Unofficial 2xCD HDCD releases have been documented, aiming to provide enhanced audio depth. Production & Sound limp bizkit results may vary 2003 flac24 b exclusive

3. The Guitars (Smith vs. Borland)

Because Mike Smith used a different tuning and amp setup (Mesa Boogie versus Borland’s various rigs), the mid-range is unique. The Exclusive transfer separates the guitar track from the bass track clearly, allowing you to hear the “Snot-like” groove in Let It Down that gets lost in the 192kbps MP3 versions. Results May Vary , released on September 23,

----- Rip Notes ----- Requested by popular demand. This is the ONLY 24bit copy floating around that doesn't have clipping on "Creamer." Verified via SpecLab. "Intro" "Eat You Alive" "Behind Blue Eyes" "The

Guitarist Wes Borland—the masked visual and sonic architect of the band’s early sound—walked out due to creative differences. In his place stepped Mike Smith (of Snot fame). The resulting album, dropped on September 23, 2003, was a genre-bending experiment. Tracks like Eat You Alive delivered the signature aggression, while ballads like Behind Blue Eyes (a The Who cover) and Build a Bridge showed a vulnerable, melodic side Durst rarely exposed.

was a significant departure for the band following the exit of guitarist Wes Borland. Lineup Change:

: A cover of The Who's classic that became a major radio hit and remains one of their most-streamed songs "Build a Bridge"

Results May Vary, released on September 23, 2003, marks a unique and experimental chapter in Limp Bizkit's history. As the band's fourth studio album, it was the first following the departure of longtime guitarist Wes Borland and features a sound characterized by a shift toward alternative rock and more introspective, melodic themes. Production and Context

  1. "Intro"
  2. "Eat You Alive"
  3. "Behind Blue Eyes"
  4. "The Truth"
  5. "Some Like It Hot"
  6. "The End"
  7. "Falling Away from Me"
  8. "Crawl"
  9. "Dad Vibes"
  10. "Boiler"
  11. "Almost (half-blank) Positive"
  12. "Let Me Drown"
  1. "Eat You Alive"
  2. "Behind Blue Eyes"
  3. "The Truth"
  4. "The End of Time"
  5. "Shoot Me Again"
  6. "Gold Cobra"
  7. "Boiler"
  8. "Crawl Away"
  9. "A Lesson Learned"
  10. "Re-Arranged"
  11. "The New World"
  12. "Let Me Be"

HDCD: Unofficial 2xCD HDCD releases have been documented, aiming to provide enhanced audio depth. Production & Sound

3. The Guitars (Smith vs. Borland)

Because Mike Smith used a different tuning and amp setup (Mesa Boogie versus Borland’s various rigs), the mid-range is unique. The Exclusive transfer separates the guitar track from the bass track clearly, allowing you to hear the “Snot-like” groove in Let It Down that gets lost in the 192kbps MP3 versions.

----- Rip Notes ----- Requested by popular demand. This is the ONLY 24bit copy floating around that doesn't have clipping on "Creamer." Verified via SpecLab.

Guitarist Wes Borland—the masked visual and sonic architect of the band’s early sound—walked out due to creative differences. In his place stepped Mike Smith (of Snot fame). The resulting album, dropped on September 23, 2003, was a genre-bending experiment. Tracks like Eat You Alive delivered the signature aggression, while ballads like Behind Blue Eyes (a The Who cover) and Build a Bridge showed a vulnerable, melodic side Durst rarely exposed.

was a significant departure for the band following the exit of guitarist Wes Borland. Lineup Change:

: A cover of The Who's classic that became a major radio hit and remains one of their most-streamed songs "Build a Bridge"