Sam Rivers, Wes Borland, DJ Lethal and Fred Durst of Limp Bizkit backstage at Lollapalooza 2021 at Grant Park on July 31, 2021 in Chicago, Illinois.

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Limp Bizkit will release their first new album in 10 years on Sunday (Oct. 31), the self-deprecatingly titled Limp Bizkit Still Sucks. Guitarist Wes Borland confirmed the news on Thursday, when he posted an image of the album's cover and the message, "Our first album in over a decade comes out this Sunday! Happy Halloween! Limp Bizkit - Still Sucks."

The illustrated cover features the members of the Nu-Metal band laying on the floor of a suburban house as a joint-smoking woman attempts to vacuum them up. A link to the album title hashtag takes you to the track list for the 12-song collection, which promises such songs as "Dirty Rotten Bizkit," "Turn It Up, B--ch," "Don't Change," "You Bring Out the Worst in Me," "Empty Hole," "Pill Popper" and "Snacky Poo," among others.

Singer Fred Durst's Instagram also featured a review of their sixth album by one Jake Bacon, a mulleted mook who promises it will "blow your poop out of your butt" when you listen to it in the Wal-Mart parking lot in your Camaro. The three-minute video contained previews of a number of the tracks, which have the band's signature mix of pummeling riffs, Durst's yelping, distorted rapping and rumbling bass.

The band dropped their first new single in seven years last month, the bouncy "Dad Vibes," which they debuted at their Lollapalooza set in July. LB's most recent studio album was 2011's Gold Cobra.

Check out the album cover, track list and preview below.

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Perry Farrell has released another public apology following an on-stage confrontation involving his bandmate Dave Navarro.

The Jane's Addiction frontman was involved in a physical altercation with guitarist Dave Navarro last year during a live performance, an incident that prompted the band to cancel their reunion tour and eventually led to their split.

“I'd like to address what happened on stage last year,” Perry, 66, said in a statement shared across both his personal Instagram account and Jane's Addiction’s official page. “I've reflected on it and know I didn't handle myself the way I should have. I apologize to our patrons and my bandmates for losing my temper and for disrupting the show.”

He went on to admit that he did not meet fan expectations and described himself as deeply remorseful toward everyone impacted by the incident.

“Jane's Addiction has been at the center of my life for decades. The band, the songs, the patrons, and the impact that we've had on music and culture mean more to me than any words I could ever possibly write down,” he shared.

“My aim has always been to give our audience the best possible show, something real, honest and positive. In Boston, we fell short of that, and I'm truly sorry to everyone who was impacted.”

Jane's Addiction also issued its own statement regarding the altercation, which ultimately led to the group’s remaining members filing a lawsuit against Perry alleging assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of contract.

“Today we are here to announce that we have come together one last time to resolve our differences, so that the legacy of Jane's Addiction will remain the work the four of us created together,” the band wrote, signaling that the group would not move forward with Perry. “We now look forward to the future as we embark on our separate musical and creative endeavors.”

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