A bit of trivia: In the entire thirty-seven minutes and
fifty-three seconds of Linkin Park's rage-filled rap-rock
debut, Hybrid
Theory, you won't hear a single curse word. "We
just want to be honest and not hide any emotions with vulgarity,"
says vocalist Chester Bennington.
Hybrid Theory may not carry a parental-warning label,
but with as much potency as albums by Limp Bizkit or Korn,
it reflects the frustration of life as a twenty-something
dude - "the everyday struggle that you get stressed
out by," according to MC Mike Shinoda. Stacked with
catchy, pissed-off rockers like "One Step Closer,"
the album debuted at Number Sixteen on the Billboard 200
albums chart and within a month of its release sold 289,000
copies.
"When I met them," says Don Gilmore, "I
was expecting some darker creatures. But these guys are
very smart, very happy, and they're all sort of spiritual."
Adds Shinoda, "The topics of the songs may not be positive,
but I think people can relate to them in a positive way."
A graduate of the Pasadena Art Center College of Design,
Shinoda formed Linkin Park in 1995. He talks about benchmark
rap-rock moments - Run DMC and Aerosmith's "Walk This
Way," Public Enemy and Anthrax's joint 1991 tour, the
Judgement Night soundtrack - as life-changing events but
says Linkin Park aim to take that mix one step further.
"We want to make songs where you can't tell the rap
part from the rock part from the electronic part,"
he explains.
The band landed a publishing deal the night of its very
first show - before a scant crowd at LA's Whisky - but it
wasn't until it recruited Phoenix native Bennington two
years ago that things really jelled. "There is so much
passion, so much adrenaline in his singing," says Gilmore.
"In the studio, he would go off like he was insane."
For all the rage they project, though, Linkin Park want
to be seen as approachable- regular guys with regular problems,
who just so happen to be budding rock stars. "People
see us after a show," Bennington says, "and it's
like, 'Wait a second- you're supposed to be this scary guy,
and you're not.'" He describes himself as a "happy-go-lucky
dude" and says playing music has served as a kind of
therapy to help him work through childhood trauma. "I've
never talked about it," he says nervously. "I
was molested when I was a kid [by a friend]." Following
five years of sexual abuse and the divorce of his parents
when he was eleven, Bennington became addicted to cocaine
and methamphetamine in his early teens. "I went straight
in the wrong fucking direction," he says. "That's
where I get some of my intensity from, and I think that
fuels the music we write."
"In this country, people do not think about the sensitivity
of young men," Bennington adds. "It's a real tragedy.
For kids to be able to listen to bands like us who are able
to express ourselves-not through violence and vulgarity-I
think it helps them learn to express themselves."
Vital Statistics
Band Hometown: Los Angeles
Joseph Hahn (dj/samples)
age: 23
previous day job: graphic artist
Brad Delson (guitar)
age: 23
previous day job: college student
Mike Shinoda (MC)
age: 23
previous day job: graphic artist
Phoenix (bass)
age: 22
previous day job: musician
Chester Bennington (vocals)
age: 24
previous day job: coffee barista
Rob Bourdon (drums)
age: 21
previous day job: waiter
Influences
Chester Bennington
Getting Tattooed: It is the most painful and excruciating
experience, yet at the same time beautiful and enlightening.
When people look at my tattoos, I want them to see congruency
and something kind of unfolding.
Fashion: I'm the only member of this band who needs a carrying-kit
cargo case for my wardrobe. I've got shoes that go with
every outfit, my underwear has to match my outfits, my socks
have to match my shoes and my pants-everything is a very
big deal to me.
Fight Club: Brad Pitt is a fucking punk-rock god in that
movie. Everything about it is brilliant. I definately think
it nails American culture on the head.
Cooking: I like to cook: That's why my wife stays married
to me. I can make a steak with salt and pepper, and it will
be the best steak you've ever had in your life. I think
the special ingredient is love.
Top five albums
1)Fugazi, 13 Songs-it has a real raw sound: It wasn't punk,
it wasn't ska, it was just this weird, funky vibe that was
totally different.
2)Al Green, Greatest Hits-Soul music and old R&B is
probably the most perfectly perfect music ever. It's damn
sexy and, man, when that boy sings, it just pulls your soul
up.
3)Led Zeppelin, IV-Quite possibly the greatest rock record
ever written. Every song on that record is my favorite Led
Zeppelin song.
4)The Beatles, the White Album-Nobody has ever used melodies
like they do, before or since. They had four guys who were
just completely on top of their game.
5)Stone Temple Pilots, Purple-Scott Weiland rules the fucking
stage. He owns that microphone, and that's what I want to
do.
- by Jenny Eliscu, Rolling Stone, January 2001