Linkin Park are:
Chester Bennington Vocals
Mike Shinoda Vocals / Emcee
Rob Bourdon Drums
Brad Delson Guitar / Bass
Phoenix Farrell Bass
Joseph Hahn DJ / Samples
Sophomore albums are famously tricky affairs. Musicians
have their entire lives to pen their debut album, the theory
goes, and a relatively short time to follow it up. But what
if the debut in question is the biggest selling album in
recent memory? And what if the music industry has Hollywood-like
expectations for another instant blockbuster? That was the
scenario Linkin Park faced when they entered the studio
to record Meteora,
the follow-up to their multi-platinum debut Hybrid
Theory.
That album, which Rolling Stone called "twelve songs
of compact fire indivisibly blending alternative metal,
hip-hop, and turntable art", has shipped 14 million
units worldwide to date. It was the Number One selling album
of 2001. It launched three chart-topping singles including
"In The End." And in 2002 it received a Grammy®
for Best Hard Rock Performance for "Crawling,"
as well as nominations for Best Rock Album and Best New
Artist. After diligently pursuing their craft since the
band's humble origins in Southern California circa the mid-'90s,
Linkin Park now had the world's ear.
To those outside the band, the pressure to follow up that
success might have seemed insurmountable. But within Linkin
Park, vocalists Chester Bennington and Mike Shinoda, guitarist
Brad Delson, turntablist Joseph Hahn, drummer Rob Bourdon,
and bassist Phoenix weren't sweating it in ways you might
expect. Instead of dwelling on outside expectations, they
set to work, meticulously crafting each moment of each song
to their own exacting standards. The bigger picture developed
accordingly.
"We don't ever want to have the mindset where we need
to sell 10 million albums each time out. That's ridiculous,"
says Bennington. "It's a blessing to sell that many
albums; it doesn't happen very often in this business--even
once in your career is an achievement. Our obligation is
to our fans. We're not going to get too comfortable and
say it's a given that people will run out and buy our albums."
"And if you know us, you know the biggest pressure
came from within the band," says Shinoda.
"We just wanted to make another great album that we're
proud of," says Bourdon. "We focused on that,
and worked hard to create songs we love. We're our own harshest
critics." If you doubt that, consider this: Shinoda
and Bennington wrote 40 unique choruses for Meteora's poignant
first single, "Somewhere I Belong," before arriving
at the best possible version.
"We knew we needed to fix a couple things on that
song," says Shinoda with a shrug. "So we'd write
a new chorus, record it, mix it. Then we'd listen to it
the next day, and Chester and I would look at each other
and say, 'I don't know... I think it could be better.' And
then we'd start again from scratch. It was a lot of work.
We probably wrote and scrapped our sophomore jinx album
somewhere in the mix. But we took our time, remained critical,
and wrote songs we knew were good. Some people might have
expected us to write a weaker version of Hybrid
Theory -water it down, stagnate. But that's not what
we're about."
The winning results of that painstaking approach are instantly
apparent on Meteora. The twelve lean tracks display immense
growth from the road-honed band, while still showcasing
the rare chemistry that's been in place since Bennington
completed the line-up in 1999. Working once again with Hybrid
Theory co-producer Don Gilmore, the album came to life in
a variety of studios, including the band's beloved tour-bus
facility and each member's respective home set-up. This
time Linkin Park had the opportunity to experiment with
a wider palette sound, and an even more diverse array of
styles.
They married wildly distressed samples to heavy guitars
on songs such as "Somewhere I Belong." They arranged
live strings and piano for "Breaking The Habit"
and "Faint." They experimented with complex beats
on songs such as "Easier To Run." They even added
a Japanese flute called a shakuhachi to the hip-hop-driven
"Nobody's Listening." Throughout, the rich textures
and dynamic arrangements serve to enhance the moods created
by Bennington's and Shinoda's powerful vocals - and vice
versa. The synergy invites repeat listens.
The guiding vision for the 18-month recording process was
evoked by the album's title, Meteora.
During a European tour in 2002, the band stumbled upon a
travel magazine featuring destinations in Greece. On the
cover, the word "Meteora " and the accompanying
photo caught their eye, and subsequently fired their imaginations.
Meteora is a group of six monasteries perched atop rock
pinnacles rising 1500 feet above the plains of central Greece.
As Bennington puts it, "they don't seem of this planet."
And it's true. (To see for yourself, rent the Bond flick
For Your Eyes Only, in which Roger Moore kicks ass at one
of the mountain fortresses.) The Greek word literally translates
as "hovering in the air." It's a fitting term
for the otherworldly region, as well as for the album Linkin
Park created with the image in mind. "We wanted to
write songs that lived up to the energy that name exudes,"
says Bennington.
"It's really epic and beautiful. It totally embodies
the sense of timelessness and expansiveness we wanted the
album to have," says Shinoda. "We've since met
people who've visited Meteora," adds Hahn. "People
go there for solitude now - to find themselves. And that's
what the album is about - finding yourself. Each song is
about looking within and letting out emotions."
This time out, Bennington and Shinoda expanded the emotional
range heard on Hybrid Theory. That album dealt with frustration,
anger, fear and confusion from a younger person's perspective,
according to Shinoda. The goal: catharsis. By contrast,
Meteora reflects the accelerated lives the band members
have led since recording their debut. "We toured the
world for two years. That alone makes you step back and
take a look at the bigger picture," says Shinoda. "We've
always been interested in universal feelings, and that's
what we focused on with this album. But Meteora is different
in the sense that we're dealing with more facets of the
human condition." "It's still a very dark album,
but there's definitely more optimism," says Bennington.
"We're still the same people, but now there's a light
at the end of the tunnel."
On "Somewhere I Belong," for example, the verses
describe fear and confusion, but the chorus takes that crucial
first step toward arriving at a solution. Bennington sings,
"I want to heal. I want to feel like I'm close to something
real. I want to find something I've wanted all along, somewhere
I belong."
And on "Breaking The Habit," he sings, "I
don't know what's worth fighting for. Or why I have to scream.
I don't know why I instigate and say what I don't mean.
I don't know how I got this way. I know it's not alright.
So I'm breaking the habit tonight."
Once again, the vocalists worked closely together to deliver
a broad spectrum of emotions as a unified front. Now, however,
Bennington and Shinoda draw upon a longer shared history.
Their voices and sentiments are practically indivisible.
"Mike is a computer whiz, and a formally trained musician,"
says Hahn, distinguishing the difference between the two
vocalists. "Chester brings the rawness - the emotion
that needs to come out. They complement each other that
way. It's a true yin-yang thing."
The entire band, in fact, sounds more fully realized on
Meteora.
It's a rare achievement: A full integration of six members
that still retains the unique qualities of each individual.
The end result is the thumbprint style known as Linkin Park.
"We don't really analyze the chemistry," says
Bourdon. "We're just lucky and grateful that we found
each other and that we work so well together."
"The collaborations are more seamless now," agrees
Bennington. "Mike, for instance, knows more about me
as a person, and I know more about him, so it's easier to
write lyrics together. It's not possible to have secrecy
in our relationship. You have to open up, because you want
the other person to be on the same page. We're all that
way with each other."
And with collaborators like these, who needs a therapist?
"Exactly," says Bennington with a laugh. "That's
why I joined a band in the first place."