Question: Hey guys... this is Rob from www.linkinparkweb.com.
What do you think of all the fan sites?
Brad: We started out on the Internet, and
we started out with our street teams, and we've grown from
there. We've always taken a grass roots approach to building
our fan base. They have really made us who we are, and putting
up stickers around the neighborhood really inspires us to
work hard at what we do. And I'm really proud of what our
street team and fans have done in terms of publicizing us
through the Internet. Every kid on a street team is rad.
I worship them.
Mike: My favorite part about the existence
of fan sites is that they have photos and fan art that we've
never even seen, and it's fun for me to go browsing in those
sites and find new artwork, drawings, or photos or any kind
of creative material. Basically, some of our fans know more
about us than we do.
Question: Brad, it seems you love to use a lot
of harmonics when playing. Do you use harmonics, and how
come you like them so much?
Brad: Excellent question. Bonus points!
There are a number of things I do in my playing that I do
to try and define my own sound, one of which is using harmonics.
The reason I like harmonics is because oftentimes they don't
even sound like traditional guitar playing. With the right
effects and the right performance harmonics on, a guitar
can sound like a keyboard, or strings, and more rooted in
an approach that works well with the hip-hop and electronic
influences in our songs.
Mike: And when we've suggested things to
Brad about what we've heard that we thought was interesting,
he usually leans to something that's more playing-oriented
than effects-oriented. He wants to be able to make the sounds
on the guitar.
Question: How did the Dust Brothers help with track
#3, "With You"?
Mike: We met the Dust Brothers when we were
looking for somebody to produce the album, and we decided
after meeting that we'd try a song together. They gave us
a track with drum loops and different Moog and synth sounds,
and we ended up mostly centering in on those Moog and synth
sounds, coupling them with guitar and live drum.
Question: What are your favorite songs on the album?
Brad:"Papercut" is my favorite
right now because I think it best integrates all our influences
into one song and does it in a way that's tasteful and cohesive.
In other words, one criticism that people have leveled at
existing bands is that their songs don't always sound organic,
that some of the songs might sound forced.
Mike: Or pasted together.
Brad: And our goal has always been to integrate
these influences in the most seamless way, and I think Paper
Cut does that really well.
Mike: Brad's answer was well put-together
because we've had this conversation a number of times and
we both agree that "Paper Cut" is our favorite
at the moment, and I agree with everything he just said
about it.
Question: Does Joe Hahn have a split personality?
Mike: Absolutely. Joe Hahn keeps inventing
new personalities daily. We're not sure how many he has,
but at this point he's keeping us on our toes.
Brad: I think my favorite Mr. Hahn personality
is the practical joking Mr. Hahn that probably doesn't have
a name yet, but he's constantly inventing things in conversations
with new fans who don't know us very well. He'll make up
things about us that are totally untrue. So beware.
Question: How is it touring with POD and Project
86 who are all Christians? Has it been a good example to
you guys as to what Christians are really like?
Brad: The tour hasn't started yet, it actually
starts 11/7. All the dates are visible on our website www.linkinpark.com.
But we're fans of POD's music and also (hed) p.e., Product
86. In terms of their personal beliefs, they're their personal
beliefs. Not necessarily anything else. The only thing I
can say as a band - in terms of extra things that go beyond
the music for us, because we all have different personal
beliefs in the band - is that we try to make our music as
positive as possible for us and for all our fans.
Mike: And I think that may be one reason
why POD invited us to tour with them, and I see that positivity
in their music as well.
Question: What is the biggest audience you have
played in front of?
Brad: We played an Atlanta radio festival
show with a number of really great huge bands like Stone
Temple Pilots, Green Day, Deftones, Incubus, Papa Roach
among others. And the official crowd number at that show
was 18,000. There were two stages, so we probably ended
up playing for close to 10,000 people, and that was a pretty
amazing feeling. The most incredible rush I've gotten onstage,
however, actually occurred at Roseland ballroom in NY because
there were probably 4,000 people packed into a club and
the entire crowd was reacting to our music. Or at least
that's how it felt. Someone might have been talking in the
back, but onstage it was pretty amazing.
Mike: My favorite shows have actually been
the smaller venues that are a little more intimate because
you can see everybody's faces in the room.
Question: How do you guys find ways to write when
you're touring, or do you?
Brad: We're supposed to be writing? I don't
even have room to sleep or go to the bathroom in our RV.
Question: Are you guys available or are you hooked
up?
Brad: We're all pretty much married to our
music at this point. Mike just stuck out his tongue in disgust.
But there are single guys in the band.
Question: Linkin park has been scheduled to be here
in Norfolk, Virginia twice, and each time they have chosen
to play a radio show instead. This is happening again on
November 11th. I told the band when I met them in Richmond
to come to Norfolk, but each chance they've had they've
played somewhere else. What do you have against Norfolk?
Mike: I've never been to Norfolk but I hope
to play there someday. The unfortunate thing is that when
our label or our management hears of a radio event where
we can play in front of a large number of people, they'll
usually pull us out of a smaller show so that we can play
there. It's just a coincidence that it's happened a couple
times in Norfolk. We have nothing against it, we have a
bunch of street teamers from there, in fact. We hope to
play there at some point.
Question: Any way a street-teamer such as myself
can get hooked up with backstage passes? :)
Mike: What backstage? In the clubs we're
playing, there isn't much of a backstage area.
Brad: But one thing we try to do at each
show is talk with as many people as possible.
Mike: So, usually, going backstage would
mean that you're not hanging out with our band because we're
usually in the crowd or at our merchandise booth where the
people are. We figure that if a club is going to make it
difficult for people to get backstage, then why have a backstage
at all? Let's just bring everybody out in the same place.
Question: Where can I get the song "Carousel"?
Mike: Your best bet is to try finding the
MP3 on the web, because the limited CDs we printed up are
out in circulation. We don't have it anymore. So you can
look on eBay for one of the Hybrid
Theory EPs or look on Napster.
Question: How do you feel about Napster?
Brad: I think it's only helped us at this
point. Almost everyone who had downloaded songs from the
Hybrid
Theory record before it came out said that they were
going to buy the album, and I'm sure they did. So I think
it's just a way for more people to find out about the band.
Question: What's the one thing you miss while
you're on tour?
Brad: My own toilet.
Mike: That's difficult. I miss everything
about home, all my friends and family, my dog. I have a
little mutt dog, a little half-pointer, half-basset hound
named Bessie that lives with my parents. I didn't give her
the name. I would have probably named her something else,
but we got her from the pound and we didn't want to rename
the dog and confuse her.
Brad: How come our fans are so dope?
Mike: I know, they should be doing the interview
instead of us. They're way more interesting, probably.
Question: I was at Live 105's Halloween Freak Show
on Friday, and I was wondering which band there (Orgy, Dust
For Life) did you think was the coolest, as artists and
as people?
Brad: I got to see both bands and I was
really stoked on both of their sets and also really grateful
that Orgy, the headliner, included us in the show. We're
looking forward to playing more with those guys.
Mike: It's kind of unfair, which group we
liked more, because we already had established some sort
of a relationship with Orgy because they recorded in the
same studio we did (NRG in Hollywood). So being that we're
friends of some sort or another, I enjoyed their set a lot
Question: Did you have a lot of songs you had to
cut from the album?
Brad: We spent at least two years songwriting
for the record, so there are songs that didn't make the
record. But more importantly, the songs that did make the
record we put a ton of care into.
Mike: Don't you think that, usually, if
a song is going to be cut, we usually decide [to do] so
right after we write it?
Brad: Yeah, sometimes we write a song, and
we'll be really excited about it, and [then] we're totally
over it. We send it to the song graveyard.
Question: Do you guys support a lot of the underground
hardcore and rapcore bands out there?
Brad: It's rumored that we'll be doing a
headlining tour in 2001. So we've always got our eye out
for cool new bands to take out and support.
Question: If you were stuck on a desert island and
could only bring a CD player, a guitar, a lifetime supply
of moonpies or Jennifer Lopez, which one would you bring
and why?
Brad: That's a joke. I'd bring Jennifer
Lopez in a second.
Mike: I can bring the moonpies. We'll have
both.
Brad: Instead of playing guitar, I would
construct a new instrument out of bamboo and coconuts and
serenade Jennifer.
Mike: And we'd write a song called "Little
Buddy" just like Gilligan's Island.
Question: Were you able to maintain a high level
of creative control while making your album?
Mike: I think so. I think that in any writing
process with a lot of people involved everybody wants to
have their say, and when you are signed to a major label
there are a lot of people to give input. So lucky for us
all of us were on the same page and all our ideas were received
really well.
Brad: As artists, it's always important
to have creative control over your work. You know best what
your art should look like. So while it's important to entertain
input, it's my opinion, for me as an artist, that it's important
to always maintain and have control over your final vision.
Question: The lead singer of (hed) p.e. was just
arrested for possesion of pot. Do you have any opinion on
that? Do you think it will affect the tour?
Brad: I hope not, because they're a rad band
and we're looking forward to playing with them.
Question: There is a rumor that the EP is going
to be re-released on the official site sometime in the future.
Is it true?
Brad: I started that rumor. So it's still
a rumor. Let's not ruin the rumor by giving a definite answer.
But in all seriousness, I hope it becomes availablee so
that people can go back and see what we were working on
before we recorded our LP.
Question: So I hear there was this girl in Portland
that got on the stage and flashed everyone... is this true?
Ahahahahaahhahahahah!
Mike: I feel like we're on a game show and
I have to buzz in as fast as possible. Unfortunately for
me, I don't put together dates and places and venues very
well - I'll tell a story about something that happened and
get the date and the venue and the person mixed up. So this
probably happened somewhere, maybe, but I wouldn't remember
Brad: Besides, when we're playing we're
so busy drooling on ourselves and thrashing around that
a fire truck could run across the stage and we wouldn't
notice. Thanks to everyone for logging on and hanging out
with us. Try and go to our website www.linkinpark.com
Find out when we're coming to your town We love to come
out and meet folks
Mike: Thanks also to House of Blues' HOB.com
for hosting the chat. I think it's a great way to interact
with our listeners, who I think are the coolest, smartest,
most fun, raddest, dopest people in the universe.
by Yahoo HOB.com
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