Linkin Park after Chester
Rock band discusses upcoming group ensemble. Photo: File
After the death of Linkin Park's lead vocalist, Chester Bennington in 2017, the band is finally ready to make a comeback. In conversation with The Guardian, singer-songwriter Mike Shinoda and vocalist Emily Armstrong discussed the band's rebirth and the backlash they have dealt with.
Twenty-five years since its formation, Linkin Park has become one of the biggest US rock bands of this millennium. Their debut Hybrid Theory was one of the best selling albums of 2001 and since then, the band has garnered a massive worldwide fanbase. While they have given us bangers such as Numb and In the End, Linkin Park has struggled with deciding the course of their music career after Bennington's death.
After much experimentation, the originally six-person group decided to add two more people to the mix. Armstrong joined as co-lead vocalist and Colin Brittain as the drummer. This addition to the band was made while navigating fan reaction to Bennington's death and understanding what musical path the group wants to take in future. Shinoda, who founded Linkin Park at nineteen years of age, described what prompted him to pick Armstrong for lead vocals and why it upset fans.
"There were people who lashed out at Emily and it was really because she wasn't a guy." Shinoda narrated, "(The fans) are used to Linkin Park being six guys and the voice of a guy leading this song. They were just so uncomfortable with what it was that they chose a ton of things to complain about."
Despite fan backlash, Shinoda was fully confident in Armstrong's enthusiasm to carry their legacy forward. "There are a lot of people for whom it's all about follower count. It's a very greedy way to live. And these guys aren't that way," he said. The singer thought that Armstrong, who had a "sassy little sister energy" seemed like a "natural fit".
"Something clicked," he added.
Staging a comeback
Armstrong's selection was made on the basis of trials held at the band's studio.
"I didn't tell them this was part of a potential Linkin Park comeback," Shinoda revealed. "Things could get awkwardly vague. Two hours into the session, they'd be like, 'Hey, can I ask you a question? What's going on here? Who are we writing for?' And we'd be like: 'Yeah, we don't know.'"
Finally he came across Armstong and was impressed by her respectability and enthusiasm for the kind of music we asked her to play. As for Armstrong herself, she was simply, "excited to write with Mike Shinoda".
Armstrong was the frontwoman for Dead Sara, a bluesy LA punk band that never really made it big. When she first heard about Shinoda's offer, she was in disbelief. "I've (previously) been in a band for 20 years and I could only dream of this kind of success," the new lead shared.
Being Bennington's replacement, Armstrong was slightly under pressure. She recalled, "I was scared at the prospect of stepping into such big shoes. 'Why do I think I can do this?' I wondered. I told Shinoda that I didn't want to 'ruin' Linkin Park. I was like 'you guys are a legacy band – you guys are so important.'"
New horizons
Despite Armstrong's hesitation, Shinoda is eager to take new music forward after coming to terms with Bennington's death. For example, in honour of his late bandmate, the singer released Post Traumatic on June 15, 2018, which was an emotional solo album that detailed his journey of processing grief. He described the tours as, "I felt like I was coping well and I was able to get up in the morning and not think about it, and I was evolving from the terrible stuff that had happened."
However, it soon became exhausting, "I would go to the show and spend 90 minutes with half the crowd crying. And I'm like, this is exhausting. You know how therapists see patients all day and help them, but then they need therapy themselves? That's how I felt."
Having processed Bennington's passing, Shinoda decided to recruit musicians, work on new music and move forward. Their eighth studio album, FROM ZERO, came out on November 15 via Warner Records. The new album is similar to the band's original music, with rock rap fusion, easy to catch melodies, loud guitar harbouring and angry lyrics.
Now that the rock band is complete again, Linkin Park is all set to tour the US from July 29. While fans still look for traces of Bennington in their work, the hype for new music has not died.
"This tour and this album are one of our most successful of all time," marvelled Shinoda. "That, for me, is insane. That is way beyond my hopes and dreams for what this whole thing could be."