Interview
with Wes Borland
Interview with Wes Borland (guitarist) of Limp Bizkit by Andrew Rackauskas
10/5/97 5:00 P.M. The Palace
Hollywood, CA
After endless touring, Limp Bizkit would seem to be poised for some chill
time. However, that would be far
from
the case. Limp Bizkit has been out on the road with the likes of Primus
and the Deftones and is currently
headlining
it's "Ladies Night in Cambodia" tour with Sevendust and Clutch. Before
their last gig on their tour
with Faith No More, Wes Borland (guitarist) of Limp Bizkit had a chat with
Spinal Column regarding Limp
Bizkit's origin, their future plans, and George Michael of all people.
WB= Wes Borland SC= Spinal Column
SC: October 5th, 5:00, Los Angeles, CA. Sitting here with Wes from Limp
Bizkit and just wondering how the
tour was going?
WB:
Today is the last day, and it's gone really good so far. The Faith No More
crowd is a little weird here and
there. They're kind of eclectic and into Faith No More. That's it.
SC: Has the reaction been really positive?
WB: Yeah, positive in most places. We won't talk about any negative response
(laughing)!
SC: You're going to go on tour next with Primus, how does that sound for
you?
WB: I've been a fan of Primus since I've been like fourteen years old.
For a long long time. We're really
excited
about it. Les called. Les Claypool called Fred's (Durtz) house and talked
to Fred for a while. He really
wanted
us to do it, because we were a little sketchy about it at first. We're
thinking Faith No More's crowd's a
little
weird, Primus' crowd is a lot weirder. I've been into Primus for a long
time, and they've always been one
of my favorite bands. So hopefully there's some people like me, who are
into what we're doing as well.
SC: You have a new single out for "Counterfeit" with a number of remixes...
WB: It's out now. It's not in stores. It was given to radio stations and
we've been selling it at the shows.
SC: Is it eventually going to be available in stores?
WB: Probably so. It's just kind of a test run right now. We're seeing what
the response is just selling it to the
fans on the road.
SC: Who did some of the remixes?
WB: A guy named Josh Abraham and Fieldy from Korn did one. And Lethal,
DJ Lethal did the other two.
SC: How has it been with the addition of DJ Lethal to the band?
WB: Oh,
really good. Really really excellent. He's almost like another guitar player.
I don't work well with other
guitar players. But him being a dj, he can do stuff that I can work well
with. I think that playing wise, we really
compliment each other in the songs. One of the goals on the record that
we were trying to strive for was to
have
there be certain parts of the record where you couldn't tell what was the
dj and what was the guitar. I think
that
we achieved that in some way. There are parts on the records where people
come up to me all the time
going, "Is that guitar or is that...?" We'll put a ton of effects on our
stuff.
SC: How does that transfer to your live show?
WB:
Oh yeah, there's nothing on the record we can't do live. And it's interesting
because there's so much...a
lot
of the stuff we did on the record was really spontaneous. So there's parts
in the songs where we can really
open
it up and have fun with it live, and improv, and do different stuff. So
it never gets boring to keep playing
the
songs live. But we try to jazz up the songs. We did the record last November
and December, so it's been
a year. So we're already wanting to, you know...
SC: Are you guys songwriting while you've been on the road?
WB: Yeah.
SC: Are you playing a lot of different stuff that's not on the album?
WB: We do some cover stuff that's not on the record. Just really stupid
cover stuff that's kind of fun.
SC: Kind of like "Faith"?
WB: Yeah.
SC: I would have to say that that has to be one of the coolest covers.
The first time I listened to the album I
was like, "Wait a minute here , oh my God, is that George Michael's "Faith"?
That is super heavy." It's
outstanding.
WB: On the next tour we're going to be doing a couple different covers.
Hopefully, we're going to try to do
"Father
Figure" by George Michael just to throw in another cover. I don't know
if we'll ever record it, but we're
going
to do it just for fun. We used to do a cover of "Straight Up" by Paula
Abdul and we're going to bring that
one back...so I get to play keyboards.
SC: How was working with Ross Robinson?
WB:
Excellent. Ross is such a great producer. He's so easy to work with. He's
a vacuum cleaner for emotion.
He
just sucks it out of you...and brings it out and puts it on tape. He brought
stuff out in all of us that we didn't
really
even know was in there, but it was. That's more than a producer. He's a
really good motivator/instigator.
He really just pulls out melody and fear and love, aggression. He'd take
us and put us in that zone to the
point
what we're recording on tape is beyond reality. It's beyond how we really
feel. It's the emotion intensified.
We really did some excellent recording. I mean, it was a blast making the
record.
SC:
I'm seeing a tremendous resurgence, at least on the ground level, of very
heavy bands. Obviously with
Korn probably breaking away ground for a number of bands and the Deftones
gaining a resurgence of
popularity... What's your feeling on the resurgence of really heavy music
that's not getting any airplay, yet
seems to be garnishing a tremendous following?
WB: Yeah, I think that a lot of what has happened as far as Korn and Rage
Against the Machine and The
Deftones and a lot of other bands in our genre has been kind of a word
of mouth and a letting go of the
normal
way of doing things. Which is make a video, get a single out on the radio.
We've not had a lot of help
from
radio. We've had nothing on MTV. I think M2 has maybe played our video
twice. The Box has played it,
but
The Box is only regional. And Canada's Much Music has done a little bit
with it. But, for the most part, by
chance
you might catch it being played. It's not a regular thing. I think Rage
Against the Machine has gotten
a lot of airplay and a lot of club play. And they kind of used both mechanisms
to make their fan base grow.
Rage Against the Machine did so much for everybody. Them getting singles
on the radio and having their
videos on MTV or whatever...a year ago their videos were being played like
all the time, all day. "People of
the Sun" was just like non-stop. And I think what that did was open up
the mainstream a little bit to
recognizing
heavy music as a real form of music and something that can be marketed.
It's never really been
there. People have dressed heavy, and taken pop and tried to make it heavy,
and done all this stuff. But
since 120 Minutes really doesn't play that much stuff anymore, and Headbanger's
Ball got shot down...
SC: And that almost became too pigeonholed and focused on real old school
heavy metal which became
limiting, and almost a parody of itself eventually.
WB: So, now things are opening up a little. I think heavy music is really
coming around a lot. I think a lot of
people
are opening up their minds and ears to it. Especially because I think that
bands like us and Korn and
Deftones
have made heavy music a little more audible. I mean people can understand
it more because we
throw
in a little bit of hip-hop, or we throw in some mellower stuff, or jazz.
Which is stuff we've been into forever.
My favorite band is the Future Sound of London. I love The Cure. Portishead
is amazing. Most the stuff I
listen to is mellower stuff. But yet I grew up on Death and Slayer and
Megadeth and Metallica and Bad
Brains,
and all those bands like that. The whole crossover theory, or whatever
you want to call it, with a lot of
these bands combining styles of music now I think is what's making everyone
open up a little bit to heavier
music.
There's something they can identify with in it, yet it brings the heavy
music in. Then they can identify
with that as well.
SC:
Absolutely, I agree. I think that's kind of where a lot of heavy metal's
life demised. I think it went too much
with mythological imagery and a lot of that stuff.
WB: Oh, yeah.
SC: How was the tour in Europe, where did you hit?
WB: It was great. We did Scotland and England, everything in the U.K..
Then we did Italy, France,
Switzerland,
Holland, and a couple others. We pretty much went everywhere all over Europe.
We just had a
great
response. Some of the people, like in Scotland, were starting fires and
stuff. Unreal. Those guys...you
can take the biggest, nastiest, gnarliest person in the States, like a
big huge punk 300 pound
motherfucker...and he would just be dwarfed by the intensity of the guys
over there. There were people who
had
those spike implants in their head. It won't be long before it's cool to
cut your fingers off or something like
that. It's unreal. Like little girls with scarification, branded tattoos
and stuff. A little intense.
SC: I've read where DJ Lethal is actually working on a solo project. Will
you guys be on that as well?
WB: Yeah, we're going to be doing some work on that. Some of the guys in
Korn. Everybody's going to be
involved in it. He's going to try to get like so many cameos that you can
list them a to z. A lot of people are
going to be involved on the record.
SC: How was the Florida scene when you guys first started out? Was it pretty
accommodating for what you
were doing?
WB:
Not really. Not in our town. There was like two scenes going on in our
town in Jacksonville. Which one of
the
scenes was super almost Sonic Youth-y type of Sebadoh, really indie-rock
scene. Where all the guitars
are
going through 200 effects pedals. Wall of noise type of bands. They all
wore thrift store clothes and their
hair...they looked really thin and sad. It was that scene, and there was
another scene that was super heavy
metal.
Like ridiculous heavy metal. And there was a punk scene kind of tied to
the heavy metal scene that all
those
bands played together. We just kind of were accepted by both. Because we
got tired of this separation
of the two different scenes. Nobody played with any bands in that scene.
All the other people stayed away.
We were like, "Nobody's doing any kind of crossover stuff." They're just
sticking to what they want to play in
those two different categories. And when we came around, I guess we were
kind of different than anything
anyone
had really seen there before there. There were some people into Korn and
stuff, but we kind of were a
mix
of a lot of different styles. We built a scene that didn't exist before
there. We were just really proud that we
had done it and we couldn't believe it. And then it was...we wrote the
song "Counterfeit" actually about what
happened after that. Because we...all these bands started changing like
from the other two scenes and
started
becoming rap-rock bands. And we were just like, "What is happening here?"
They saw this little thing
we built, or whatever, and they went and they were like, "Oh, let's get
baggy pants and dress like kind of
hip-hoppy
and, you know, play heavy metal and rap." And then we went, "Holy s***!
What's going on here?"
Like
five or six bands just popped up out of nowhere that became these, you
know, groups that were trying to
sound like us. It was ridiculous. That's where the song "Counterfeit" came
from.