Nookie (Limp Bizkit song)
"Nookie" | |
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Song |
"Nookie" is the first single released from the album Significant Other by Limp Bizkit. It was released on August 24, 1999.[5]
Lyrics and background
In a 2008 interview with British rock magazine Kerrang, guitarist Wes Borland had the following to say about how the lyrical content turned out: "The music was cool, but I didn't like the lyrics at all. The funny thing is that Nookie was actually the working title. When we were in the studio there was a porn magazine that had the word 'nookie' on the cover, so I was like, 'This song's called Nookie!', I never thought someone would actually run with it. I suppose it's all my fault."[6]
Fred Durst said about the song, "It's about my ex-girlfriend, how she treated me like shit, and I couldn't leave her, wouldn't get over it," he said. "She screwed my friends and used me for my money. I tried to figure out why I did it, and I figured I did it all for the nookie."[7]
Music video
In the song's music video, the band allowed hundreds of fans to participate, playing the song in front of the large crowd. All the men went to one side of the stage, and the women on the other side. When Durst sang the chorus, at certain parts he would hold out his microphone to the crowd, getting that particular side to sing. This was, according to Durst, to show that "guys go off hard, but girls go off even harder". The audio from this plays during the music video. At the end of the music video, Durst is arrested and taken away by police officers.
Track listing
- "Nookie" - 4:28
- "Counterfeit" (Lethal Dose Remix) - 3:21
- "Counterfeit" (Phat Ass Remix) - 3:05
- "Nookie" (video)
- "Faith" (video)
Reception
Hed PE guitarist Wes Geer said that "Nookie" is "cheesy and is not as good as [Hed PE's song] 'Bartender'. ['Nookie' has] a catchy hook, but at least in my opinion, it's just kind of dumb. But somewhere along the way the business decided to support that one harder than they did 'Bartender', you know."[8] Pharrell Williams, while recording N.E.R.D.'s 2008 album Seeing Sounds cited this song as part of the band's incentive and drive to record more energetic music, noting it as the last energetic hit single before the album's release.[9]
References
- ^ Young, Chris (May 27, 2013). "Faithful Limp Bizkit fans pack the Observatory". Orange County Register. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
Released the summer before Y2K, that band's sophomore album Significant Other dominated modern-rock airwaves with instant nu-metal anthems like "Nookie" and "Break Stuff."
- ^ Grierson, Tim. "Top 10 Essential Rap-Rock Songs". About.com. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
- ^ Rosenblatt, Josh (August 22, 2008). "The Longshots". The Austin Chronicle.
- ^ "Nookie". AllMusic. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
- ^ "Nookie - Limp Bizkit". AllMusic. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
- ^ http://www.blacklightburns.com/community/archive/index.php/t-463.html
- ^ Teri vanHorn (June 22, 1999). "Limp Bizkit Score With 'Nookie' From Significant Other". MTV.
- ^ http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=10036
- ^ Micallef, Ken (2008-06-01). "N.E.R.D - Old Money, New Money". Remix Magazine. Primedia Business Magazines & Media. Retrieved 2009-01-14.