Limp Bizkit guitarist Wes Borland quit the band in 2001, only to rejoin once again in 2004. Borland revealed in a recent interview with Let There Be TalkĀ that he lost all his money in the stock shortly after quitting the band, and that all his then ex-bandmates experienced something very similar.
Interviewer: At one point, was it just massive money?
āYeah, like a ridiculous amount of money. And all of my money got really aggressively invested in the stock market ā high-risk stocks. Because at that time, this is one of the things, this is one of the ideas of arrested development ā because I was just like this you said, when youāre in it, you think itās never going to end!
āBecause people are just stroking your ego going, āYou guys are the best thing ever, this ride is never going to end,ā and positive, positive, positive. The buzz is on, and then youāre like defeating boy bands on TRL ā we felt like gods! And so I was just like, āYeah, man, invest it all! If we lose it all, who cares? Thereās more where that came from!ā
Interviewer: And did you lose it?
āAll of it. 9/11 happened and I lost well over a million dollars in the stock market. Just gone ā poof! And whatās crazy is ā I was just like, āWhatever.ā But I had nothing! That was all my money!
āAnd I was like, āDonāt worry, weāll make more money.ā And then I was like, āActually, I donāt want to.ā And I quit.ā
Interviewer: Oh my god! So you quit and you had no money at that time?
āYeah, and I look back on this itās just like, āGod, youāre an idiot.ā And everyone listening to this will think Iām an idiot too, but this is how hard-headed I am and was at the time.
āThey were like, āAll the moneyās gone, you lost all your money in the stock market. We have touring set up next year and youāre gonna net 5 million next year.ā And I said, āYou can shove it up your fucking ass. Iād rather be poor.ā
āAnd I left. I was in the management office and they were just like, āOkay.ā Yeah, Iām like the most hard-headed idiot.ā
Interviewer: Now, when you look at it the other dudes, were they broke too?
āYeah, because their money was kind of invested in the same way.ā
Borland also explained why he quit Limp Bizkit in 2001, saying he just couldn't take being in the band anymore.
āI think [I quit] two times, but mainly it was the one where I was just like, āI canāt take this anymore,ā you know, the money, everything ā I canāt. I canāt be subjected to this kind of insanity anymore. Because I think what happens is ā I became a part of creating a public persona that wasnāt reallyā¦ I just play a small part in that because itās also everyone elseās idea, or presentation, or the way that they are viewing whatever is going on.
āAnd that was a weird time where people were like ā whenever a band gets big enough, there become these really strange folks that ā maybe theyāre not strange, maybe theyāre just totally normal, but they write fan fiction. And I was getting all these like ā people sending me stories theyād written about the band. It was just bizarre, just people get way in there, way into it, and just get in a whole dream world of thinking about people.
āAnd I was just like, āThis is gross, I donāt wanna do this. I donāt wanna be in magazines, I donāt wanna beā¦ā Because at first, youāre like, if you havenāt ever been in a magazine or been famous, it seems like itās going to be awesome! And itās just weird. Youāre like, āYay, Iām on the cover!ā And then youāre like, āI donāt want to be, I donāt want to do this anymore. I donāt want to be tricked into the photographer telling me to make a certain pose and we wonāt use that one, we just have to get it.āā
Check out more highlights of the interview on Ultimate Guitar.
[via MetalSucks]