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Hicksy

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  • 3 weeks later...
Last week Linkin Park were promoting their new album in Germany. They were guests at MTV TRL, did a brilliant concert in Berlin and went to Cologne to perform "What I've Done" at TV Total. ;)

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOkhkGxnMRk

 

Great!

 

Yesterday, the album was leaked to internet. While I will wait for 05/14 to get it, I got time to read the lyrics. They´re cool and mature.

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Yea i just listened to the new album, and......it's really really different. I mean, I was expecting that, but man, there are only like 3 songs that still have the hard rock sound. The rest is slower ballads and electronica stuff. It's not horrible, but not very good either. Shadow of the Day almost sounds like U2.

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Linkin Park's Minutes To Midnight | Preview: Nu-Metallers Grow Up

 

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For all the talk about Linkin Park killing off nü metal on the upcoming Minutes to Midnight, it's rather puzzling that the first sound you hear on the album is the crackle of a needle hitting a record.

 

After all, one of the, uh, tenets of the genre was the head-bopping DJ — think guys like LP's Joe Hahn or Limp Bizkit's Lethal — the dude responsible for, literally, putting the needle on the record (and for appearing out of place in all the press photos). So was co-frontman Chester Bennington kidding when he told MTV News back in September that Midnight was the record in which LP would put the nü-metal tag to bed forever (see "Linkin Park Say Nu-Metal Sound Is 'Completely Gone' On Next LP")?

 

Well, sort of. Because while there's certainly way less, oh ... I don't know ... DJ-itude on the album, there's still plenty of Hahn to go around (via a spate of spooky synths and electronic bric-a-brac) not to mention an abundance of thundering guitars and vocal grrr-owls. But it's perhaps due to the influence of producer Rick Rubin — whom the guys credit, via some rather expansive liner notes, with changing the way they wrote and arranged songs (see "Rubin Turns To Linkin Park, Weezer After Winning Buckets Of Grammys") — that Midnight also sounds a lot like a band detonating its roots, picking up the rubble and building a brand-new monolith with the remains.

 

(Linkin Park has announced dates for this summer's Projekt Revolution Tour: see "Linkin Park, My Chemical Romance, Taking Back Sunday To Headline Projekt Revolution").

 

"Wake," the opening track, is an ominous-sounding instrumental that kicks off with the aforementioned needle crackling, picks up a fog of spacey keyboards, then slowly builds steam before erupting into the band's near-trademark guitar crunch. The din quickly fades away into a series of handclaps and the multi-tracked sound of keys jingling, an impromptu backbeat that signifies the beginning of song number two, "Given Up," which showcases Bennington's newfound lung capacity (wailing "What the f--- is wrong with me?!?!") and the capable guitar work of Brad Delson, who summons a firing squad's worth of machine-gun guitars.

 

"Leave Out All the Rest" is a big-boned ballad, all dreamy electronics and heavy-hearted cello, with Bennington's falsetto floating above it all. "Bleed It Out" is the album's first "WTF?" moment, beginning with the sound of MC Mike Shinoda descending a flight of stairs, then entering a raucous live room and beginning to spit lyrics. The room sounds (various laughing and trash-talking) are slowly drowned out by a juke-joint piano line and the cadence of handclaps, all of which raves up to the chorus — Bennington snarling "I bleed it out!" — and then continues to build into a genuine stomper.

 

"It's a song that rides the line of what you might expect from us," Bennington said of "Bleed." "It's got rapping on it and a real big chorus, but it's also got these great Motown drums and a real party vibe to it. So it's something different too. It's fun."

 

"Shadow of the Day" is another nü-ballad, kicking off with heart-pumping electronic drums and fuzzy bass, throwing in a wave of shoe-gazing guitars and then bending into a keyboard outro that sounds like something out of "2001: A Space Odyssey" (or Coldplay's X&Y). The bombastic first single, "What I've Done," is next, picking up from a series of synth stabs straight out of the "Halloween" movies and then rocketing off on Linkin Park's electro-guitar frippery.

 

And then, just as you're starting to wonder where the heck Shinoda is in all this, "Hands Held High," a somber track highlighted by a rattling drum cadence and a creaky pipe organ, comes in. Sonically, it's unlike pretty much anything the band has done before, and lyrically, it's one of the most upfront statements LP have ever made: a full-blown attack on GW Bush, complete with Shinoda decrying the state of the country — gas is too expensive! — and mocking Bush's "stuttering and mumbling for the nightly news to display."

 

That's followed by the chugging, alienation-by-the-numbers track "No More Sorrow" (Bennington raging against "hyp-o-critsssssss!!!!!") and the relationship-gone-bad tune "Valentine's Day," which seems to hint at Bennington's 2005 divorce. "In Between" comes next, another melancholy track featuring Shinoda belting over a cello line and a big blossom of a chorus.

 

"In Pieces" starts with steel drums, then wobbles a bit on some electronic boom-blip and heats up thanks to a face-melting solo courtesy of Delson.

 

And finally, Midnight closes with "The Little Things Give You Away," which Bennington singled out as "the pinnacle of what we can achieve as a band" (see "Linkin Park Finish Apocalyptic Album, Revive Projekt Revolution Tour"). And rightfully so. Full of mentions of "water gray through the windows" and "levees ... breaking," the song is clearly a condemnation of the government's reaction in the wake of Hurricane Katrina ("Generations disappear/ Washed away/ As a nation simply stares"). But in perhaps the biggest display of maturity on an album full of mature moments, Linkin Park don't ever let the song morph into a full-blown assault, instead letting its subtler moments — a gently strummed acoustic guitar line, a rippling drum-and-bass exercise midway through and a disarmingly affecting vocal harmony at the end — speak volumes that no amount of power chords can.

 

"We were writing these harmonies before we went down to New Orleans on the first anniversary of the [Katrina] disaster," Bennington said of "Little Things." "And when we were down there, we were talking to these people who lived in the Ninth Ward. One of the lines, about 'water gray, coming through the windows,' was taken from what one older gentleman told me. The feeling I got down there was not a good one.

 

"For my whole life, I was spoon-fed what a great country this is, and I just didn't get that feeling from that trip," Bennington added. "I didn't understand how we could spend $120 billion a year on killing people in other countries, but we only allocated $1 billion to rebuilding lives here. It really bothered me. ... I felt sick about it. So I wrote the lyrics. Mike and I had a discussion, and he said, 'Why don't you go write about Katrina?' So I did ... and I put it to the melody we had been working on, and it just fit perfectly."

 

It's an alarmingly good song — Bennington's right, it's the best thing Linkin Park have ever done — the kind of thing they wouldn't have been capable of pulling off five years ago. Though they might have spent an entire album trying to grow up, perhaps, with "Little Things," LP finally learned that subtlety is the most mature trait of all.

 

http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1558873/20070504/linkin_park.jhtml

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  • 3 weeks later...

Dear Linkin Park, just be who you are

 

m_27mn_e10_Linkin_Park.jpg

 

If I were a band therapist, saving rock legends from self-destruction in stupidly expensive weekly sessions, I’d offer one key bromide to the members of Linkin Park: Dare to be who you are.

 

Running from the past into the arms of a new image may seem necessary when a midlife crisis afflicts — many have done it, from Michael Jackson to Depeche Mode to Metallica to everybody’s role model, U2.

 

But such a move only works if there’s substance beneath the semantics. And that pith almost always flows from what made you great in the first place.

 

That’s the case with “Minutes to Midnight,” the first proper studio album from Linkin Park since 2003’s “Meteora.”

 

NO FORMULA

 

Hyped as a leap beyond rapcore and nu-metal — the subgenres brought to commercial heights by this band — the album has all the markers of a credibility move.

 

Reputation doctor Rick Rubin produced; the band used vintage instruments and experimented with roles throughout the recording process; DJ Joe Hahn put down his scratch bible and got more atmospheric; the first video, for the headbanging “What I’ve Done,” was shot in the desert.

 

Yet “Minutes to Midnight” isn’t valuable because it does away with Linkin Park’s formulas. It’s best when the band reinvests in those codes, looking for new ways to interpret them.

 

Certain readers might be wondering what of value might be found in rapcore and nu-metal, two of contemporary pop’s most derided subgenres. (Other equally unattractive terms for them include rap-rock, rap-metal and aggro metal.)

 

Both styles refreshed heavy rock a decade ago by connecting it to other styles, especially hip-hop.

 

Meanwhile, Linkin Park and a few other artists kept creating music that explored how hip-hop’s turntable manipulations, cool rhyming and collage effect might connect to rock’s guitar onslaughts and howling emotionalism.

 

THREATENED NORMAL

 

No wonder teens loved this stuff: It made a significant leap by treating their casual approach to multiculturalism as normal, and rejecting the hierarchies that declared rock more significant than hip-hop, and vice-versa.

 

For Linkin Park, this refusal of formal boundaries also connected to lyrical content — Chester Bennington, the androgynous punk who can scream or croon, and Mike Shinoda, the swaggering rapper who holds his machismo close to his chest, work together to express the confusion and hope of kids for whom identity is no simple game.

 

On “Minutes to Midnight,” these now-30ish musicians grapple with what makes a sound endure beyond the cultural confluence that inspired it.

 

There’s a contemplative feel throughout the album, especially on the pretty, somewhat indistinguishable ballads where Bennington fully takes the lead.

 

This is the kind of music artists make to find out who they’ll become next: It reaches toward many influences — notably U2 (some songs invoke the Irish rock group almost note-for-note), but also Tool, Evanescence, Nirvana and Coldplay — without committing to anything.

 

The sound finds its mojo whenever Linkin Park remembers that its music is, as Shinoda said in one interview, “the product of a new culture.”

 

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=356749&Category=20&subCategoryID=

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I've heard "What I've Done", and I like it. It's different from their usual sound, but good different. I haven't heard the cd entirely yet, though, but I've heard mixed reviews. Has anyone here heard it?

 

i've heard it so many times, maybe about 50 play counts in my itunes in 2 days 'til now. hehehe, :D isn't there already released the album in your country? :)

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  • 1 month later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Linkin Park was a lot better before. =/

 

imo, Minutes to Midnight is pretty mediocre. :(

 

^Nice sig, btw.

A lot of people I know have said the same thing. I used to be a huge fan, but then I kind of pulled away from their music. Now I just think they're ok. Yeah, so I've heard. I want to see for myself, though. Thanks. =) I like your sig, too. Muse is awesome.

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