Despite having no singles released, it achieved Gold certification by the
RIAA in February 2002 in the US.[4] The album peaked at #26 on the
Billboard 200.[5] AllMusic writer Bradley Torreano panned the album, writing "Most of these songs could have even survived the remix if the choruses, which are an important part of the Bizkit formula, retained their massive
riffing and awesome production."[1] Torreano appraised three of the album's tracks:
Fred Durst and
Josh Abraham's remix of "Faith",
DJ Premier's remix of "My Way" and
Butch Vig's "Nookie" remix. Describing Vig's "Nookie" remix, Torreano said that it might be the album's best track, writing that it "sounds more like
Fatboy Slim with its thick beat and dirty keyboard".[1]The Rolling Stone Album Guide awarded the album two out of five stars.[2] In The Essential Rock Discography, Martin Charles Strong gave the compilation a 5 out of 10 rating.[3]
Track listing
No.
Title
Music
Producer(s)
Length
1.
"
Nookie - For the Nookie" (Remixed by The Neptunes)
Despite having no singles released, it achieved Gold certification by the
RIAA in February 2002 in the US.[4] The album peaked at #26 on the
Billboard 200.[5] AllMusic writer Bradley Torreano panned the album, writing "Most of these songs could have even survived the remix if the choruses, which are an important part of the Bizkit formula, retained their massive
riffing and awesome production."[1] Torreano appraised three of the album's tracks:
Fred Durst and
Josh Abraham's remix of "Faith",
DJ Premier's remix of "My Way" and
Butch Vig's "Nookie" remix. Describing Vig's "Nookie" remix, Torreano said that it might be the album's best track, writing that it "sounds more like
Fatboy Slim with its thick beat and dirty keyboard".[1]The Rolling Stone Album Guide awarded the album two out of five stars.[2] In The Essential Rock Discography, Martin Charles Strong gave the compilation a 5 out of 10 rating.[3]
Track listing
No.
Title
Music
Producer(s)
Length
1.
"
Nookie - For the Nookie" (Remixed by The Neptunes)