This is a transcription of an online chat conducted with
Linkin Park on 11/30/2000 in the Yahoo! chat room by hob.com
Mike Shinoda: Hey, this is Mike and Brad
from Linkin Park.
Question: What are you guys going as for Halloween?
Brad Delson: That's a really good question,
because we're playing a big Halloween show tomorrow night
and everyone's going in costume, and I have about 24 hours
to figure it out. So I'll be taking suggestions online today.
Mike: I'm pretty much on the same page.
I had a bunch of ideas, but I don't think I'm quite at the
stage where I could actually share them with people.
Brad: He's still in development.
Question: Do you guys feel like you've got some
pretty big shoes to fill with all the Limp Bizkits and Korns
out there in today's music scene?
Brad: Well, I'm not that tall - I actually
wear a size 11 [shoe] - and we're actually getting stuff
for free now. I just got a pair of Converse, so in terms
of filling shoes I don't have any complaints.
Mike: Filling shoes? Wouldn't that mean
that those bands are gone? I don't think any of those bands
have left the scene. We're all playing music together at
this point.
Brad: That was a very adept answer.
Mike: Thank you, Brad. Brad's so kind. He's
here for my moral support. Without Brad I think I'd be pretty
bummed out on tour, because he's the only one who gives
me any moral support. Everyone else makes fun of me - especially
Mr. Hahn.
Question: How long have you guys been a band?
Mike: About four years. Going on five, actually.
Brad and I have been friends since 7th grade, and everybody
else we kind of picked up along the way.
Question: Who directed your video for "One
Step Closer"?
Linkin Park: Gregory Dark
Brad: He's actually an ex-porn director
turned video director/superstar. The response to "One
Step Closer" has been really overwhelming in a good
way. We hear stories all the time of people who seem to
have been really moved by the song, and in that regard I
think it was an excellent choice for us to meet the world.
Even better would be for people to actually get our full
record - because even though "OSC" is a really
solid singular track, if people listen to the entire record
they will get an idea of what we're trying to do musically
and creatively. And that's just starting to happen. We're
just starting to get feedback from people who have heard
the whole thing.
Mike: When kids are picking up the album
it seems to me that they're at this point, by listening
to all the tracks, really starting to get to know the whole
band and the different types of music that inspire us -
what we like to listen to - and that's important to us because
we have pretty diverse tastes and hope to draw a diverse
crowd when we play.
Question: Who are your biggest influences?
Brad: My tastes are pretty varied. I listen
to everything from groups like the Roots and Blackeyed Peas,
maybe even JaRule on a good day, to harder and more alternative
sounding rock bands like the Deftones, Sunny Day Real Estate...
and then electronic sounding stuff like Depeche Mode, Nine
Inch Nails. Dido. I'm all over the place.
Mike: Same here.
Question: Have you guys ever been arrested? If so,
why and when?
Brad: That would be a very exciting question
if we weren't really unexciting guys. I think I got in trouble
in 8th grade once for talking out of turn in class. I spent
some time in detention.
Mike: I remember getting in trouble in third
grade for trading Garbage Pail Kids in class, and we weren't
supposed to do that until recess or lunch. But the teacher
didn't actually find my stash of cards, so she couldn't
take them away.
Question: What band would you most love to be on
tour with?
Brad: That's a great question. I said to
my manager once, when he asked me that, that our goal as
a band has always been to be as far-reaching as possible
- in the sense that we would like to tour with as many different
types of bands as possible. Our last tour with the Union
Underground was pretty much a rock based tour. And currently,
with the Cottonmouth Kings, the shows are more rap/hip-hop
influenced.
Mike: But we would like to push even further
in the hip-hop direction someday and possibly tour with
groups like the Roots and Blackeyed Peas and De La Soul,
just as we would hope to push in the electronic direction
and tour with groups that do more electronic based music.
Question: Why did you change your name from Hybrid
Theory to Linkin Park?
Mike: It was basically a legal decision,
but we definitely wanted to come up with a new name that
was powerful and had the right tone or vibe, and Linkin
Park just stood out to us. But the main reason we chose
that [spelling of the] name is that we wanted the website,
and obviously the presidential spelling would be pretty
expensive, so we went with our more fun version. We've found
that it's a great place on the web for people to get in
touch and find out about the band and keep current with
what we're up to.
Brad: And just so it's clear, that website
is www.linkinpark.com and we update it as much as possible.
We have all our show dates there, we're going to have merchandise
available soon for purchase right from the site. We've got
a message board where you can leave a message for the band
- we read almost all our messages - also bios, lyrics, all
kinds of cool stuff. Next year we'll have journal entries
from the tour where you can hear directly from the band
about what things have been most exciting on the tour.
Question: What was it like going on tour the The
Kottonmouth Kings?
Mike: Before the tour we didn't know them
very well. We had never met them in person before and it
turns out that we all get along extremely well. The entire
tour has been a lot of fun. We're currently on tour with
a group called Rehab as well. They start the show. After
that Dogboy and Gypsy from Cottonmouth play an acoustic
set from their Too Rude project, then we play, then Corporate
Avenger, then Cottonmouth. Most of these groups have a lot
of members, so the tour is just a big party all the time.
And the kids get pretty riled up. Some shows are like riots.
Question: For Halloween, you should go as a Priest
and one of the other guys should go as a pregnant nun.
Brad: We can have a third guy go as the
DNA lab guy to test the paternity.
Mike: I don't think that Halloween costume
is going to impress our friends from POD, who we're touring
with next month, and I don't want to offend them.
Question: Is there any female influence in particular
to any of your songs?
Mike: Musically, I'm a big fan of Dido.
I also like a ton of female groups from Kitty to Madonna
to Sneaker Pimps. Portishead. If you ask Brad, he'll tell
you he loves his Britney Spears.
Brad: I love Britney Spears.
Mike: She's a big influence on his guitar
playing, especially.
Brad: She drives me crazy.
Question: Are you gonna do a video for "In
The End" and/or "Pushing Me Away," because
those songs just kick ass!!!
Brad: It's probably the most popular question
we get, what our next single's going to be. We have no clue
but we definitely love making videos, so look forward to
more creative visual candy from Mr. Hahn and our visual
production team of choice. I'm glad you like those two songs.
Our approach to this record was to make each song a potential
single, in the sense that each song is strong and stands
on its own but also works within the context of the entire
album. We wanted it to tell a story from beginning to end.
Question: Why does Brad wear headphones in concert?
Brad: Brad cannot reveal his inspiration.
Mike: When Brad's being mysterious he speaks
in the third person.
Mike: When Mike speaks in the third person
he makes himself crazy.
Brad: Malkovich, Malkovich, Malkovich.
Question: What was the hardest part about making
the album?
Mike: Sitting in the same room with Brad
for two months. But then we got on tour and it just got
worse.
Brad: I didn't shower a lot then.
Mike: He showers less now.
Question: Do you plan on touring a lot? Or being
in the studio more?
Brad: We plan on touring extensively for
probably the next year before we go back into the studio.
We like touring.
Question: What's the wildest thing a fan has ever
done to get your attention. Also, what's the most outrageous
gift you have gotten from a fan?
Mike: As far as gifts, we (Brad and I) have
collected a pretty large grouping of bracelets and little
jewelry and gifts like that, and usually at the shows we'll
wear some of them for fun. We enjoy stuff like that.
Brad: I'm wearing two now and they're jingling.
Mike: As far as getting our attention, actually,
at our last show in Arizona there was a big painting of
our album cover and our name by some of the kids who worked
at Tower Records. They took the time to paint up a version
of our album cover on a six foot tall piece of wood. That
probably took a lot of time. I was really impressed.
Brad: We've also gotten a lot of cool fan
art via the web.
Mike: And we hope to get more.
Question: Where were you the first time you heard
your song on the radio?
Mike: I was in Arizona. Brad, was that the
first time you heard it too?
Brad: It wasn't the full song, it was a
clip of the song on a radio spot, and we were all in the
van together. It was a pretty exciting feeling. I still
haven't seen the video yet on MTV.
Mike: Neither have I.
Brad: And I think it'll be a big kick...
that expression makes it sound like I'm 48.
Mike: Most of the things you say make you
sound like you're 48.
Question: Brad, be a big-ass Gumby for Halloween.
Brad: Actually, that would be good idea,
but before Mike had red hair he actually once had green
hair and he looked like Gumby, so that would be more appropriate
for him.
Mike: I have red hair now that can work
around it.
Question: Is it weird to have fans in L.A. that
call you at breakfast in Seattle, or that you're definitely
starting to get recognized?
Brad: We were at a restaurant in Seattle
and one of the hosts asked who we are, because we're extremely
conspicuous anywhere other than L.A. We look like a band.
They asked what band we were, we said Linkin Park. About
5 minutes later a waiter came by and asked if Chester wouldn't
mind speaking to his friend back home. Word had gotten around
that we were there, and the staff had called their friends
and there was a call that came in from someone who called
in for Chester. And since the only people who know about
[the call] are the band and the person who called, I'm guessing
that the person that called asked the question. So, what's
up!?
Question: Is the song "Pushing Me Away"
about anyone specific?
Mike: In general, when we write a song we
write it from the inspiration of whatever emotion we're
trying to capture and put it in a way that somebody else
can take it and relate their own story to it. I definitely
wanted to give somebody a starting point that was descriptive
but not overwhelming.
Question: You should go as Fat Fred Durst and the
other guys can go dressed up like the Bizkit chicks. But
then everyone would hate you!!
Brad: ????????????????
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