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Linkin Park’s ‘BURN IT DOWN’ Video: Watch It Here!

In the clip for their first LIVING THINGS single, which debuted Thursday on MTV, the band gets intimate … with fiery results. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s “Burn It Down” Photo: Warner Bros. Records On the upcoming LIVING THINGS album, Linkin Park veer away from the political territory they explored on Minutes to Midnight and A Thousand Suns, and instead mine decidedly personal topics — relationships crumbling, trust eroding, faith failing. In a lot of ways, it is perhaps the most aptly titled record in recent history. As proof, look no further than the first single, “BURN IT DOWN,” which is full of lines like “I played the soldier, you played the king/ Struck me down, when I kissed that ring,” none of which are about empire building or military service. Instead, the song is very much about the give/take dynamics of a relationship, and what happens when it all falls apart. And the video for the song — which premiered Thursday (May 24) on MTV — follows in the same vein: There are no sweeping shots of battlefields or wretched politicians … instead, it is a decidedly human thing: just the band, in a room, sweating their collective asses off and pouring their hearts into the music. It is a performance video pushed to the limit, and sure, there are a lot of digital effects added for good measure, but they’re used only to highlight the personal flourishes of that performance — the intimately tight close-ups, the pained attention to details — shoot, even when they burst into flames at the end, you have to at least wonder whether they didn’t just spontaneously combust … it’s that intense (and intensely personal) of a thing. So after spending the better part of five years exploring the outer boundaries of what a massively popular rock band can get away with, Linkin Park return home with “BURN IT DOWN” and LIVING THINGS (due June 26), shifting the focus eternally inward. Not only is that bound to make their diehard fans happy, but it makes for a truly interesting new chapter in this increasingly fascinating band’s career. What do you think of the “BURN IT DOWN” video? Leave your comment below! Related Videos MTV First: Linkin Park

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Linkin Park’s ‘BURN IT DOWN’ Video: Watch It Here!

Linkin Park Talk Next Album From Moscow’s Red Square

LP’s performance of ‘Transformers: Dark of the Moon’ single ‘Iridescent’ in historic landmark airs Friday at 8:55 p.m. on all MTV channels. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda and Chester Bennington (file) Linkin Park’s voluminous A Thousand Suns was a departure, to say the very least. And, from the sound of things, they’re getting ready to depart once again with a brand-new album that’s already in its infancy. At least that’s what Linkin Park told MTV News in Moscow, where they’ll perform the Suns song — and lead single from the “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” soundtrack — “Iridescent” on Friday from the iconic Red Square, in conjunction with the film’s world premiere (a performance that will air on MTV, MTV2, mtvU, VH1 Classic and Palladia at 8:55 p.m. ET/PT). Turns out they’ve been working on new material for months now, and things are finally beginning to take shape. “We’re always writing. It’s hard to explain to people in simple terms what it means to us; the way we do it is a little weird and unique,” LP’s Mike Shinoda said. “We kind of write it and record it at the same time; we can do it on the road at all times. I mean, I was in my hotel room throwing something together at, like, 2 a.m. But what it takes to go from one of those demos to a finished song, I mean, we really obsess over it. It takes a while.” And to that end, Linkin Park said there’s still no firm release date for the new album (which will once again be produced by Rick Rubin), but they do know that it will see the light of day sooner rather than later, which, for them, would be yet another departure. “We do have a really great head start. We’ve got some great music, some good ideas. The creativity has continued to flow for us for the last few years, consistently,” Chester Bennington said. “So, we do plan on having this record out much quicker than what we’ve turned out in the past — that was one of our goals — and I feel like we’re in a really good place now.” Of course, the next logical question would be: What does the new album sound like? And while LP weren’t about to give up all the details (“Right now, it sounds like blips and bleeps and pieces,” Bennington laughed), they’re adamant that it will most certainly sound different than any of their previous efforts … mostly because that’s been the goal with every record they make. “The fans, what they always ask is, ‘What’s it going to sound like?’ ” Shinoda said. “And, for us, when we go into a record, from the beginning until now, the attitude has been ‘We’re going to challenge ourselves, and try to be better songwriters, try and come up with something that’s original.’ And we can’t say, ‘Oh, it’s going to sound like one of our other records,’ because the goal is actually not to do that.” Linkin Park’s Red Square performance will premiere Friday, June 24, at 8:55 p.m. ET/PT on MTV, MTV2, mtvU, VH1 Classic and Palladia. Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Talk Next Album From Moscow’s Red Square

Linkin Park Call Red Square ‘Transformers’ Performance A ‘Privilege’

LP perform ‘Iridescent’ from the ‘Transformers: Dark of the Moon’ premiere in Moscow. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Mike Shinoda and Chester Bennington perform at Moscow’s Red Square Photo: MTV News Linkin Park have taken their expansive rock show to seemingly every corner of the globe, but they’ve never played Moscow’s Red Square (to be fair, very few acts ever have). But now, thanks to the power of Michael Bay and “Transformers: Dark of the Moon,” they can finally cross it off their list. On Friday, their performance of “Iridescent” — a song from their A Thousand Suns that’s since been tapped as the first single off the new “Transformers” soundtrack — was broadcast across MTV’s platform of networks. It was part of the blockbuster’s world premiere at the Moscow International Film Fest, but to hear Linkin Park tell it, it was also a moment they’ll remember for the rest of their lives. “To do a movie premiere is pretty cool — we’ve done some of them before — but to do a premiere in Moscow, and then perform in Red Square … We were saying earlier, it’s kind of one of those things where you think, ‘How did they pull that off?’ ” LP’s Chester Bennington told MTV News. “I mean, Red Square is not exactly a place they throw concerts every day. Not many bands have performed there, so … this is really a very special and exceptional moment for us. We’ve had the privilege of playing a few other landmark locations that are very special, and this definitely tops that.” Of course, it was a moment that couldn’t have happened without the considerable clout of “Transformers” director Michael Bay (“There’s, like, nothing he can’t do,” Bennington joked. “He may have actually shot the [film’s] moon footage on the moon “), but when Linkin Park first joined forces with the franchise back in 2007, they never dreamed the collaboration would eventually lead them to Red Square. Basically, back then, they just signed on because they were huge fans of the toys. And needless to say, things have worked out pretty well ever since. “I have a special place in my heart for Soundwave and Starscream,” Mike Shinoda laughed. “We loved playing with the toys as kids and conceptually, the idea of Transformers — these machines that are alive — it’s always been a great story,” Bennington added. “But realistically, the toys were amazing. They’re still the coolest toys ever.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Transformers: Dark of the Moon.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Linkin Park Explode Into Moscow At ‘Transformers’ Premiere MTV Rough Cut: ‘Transformers: Dark Of The Moon’ Related Photos ‘Transformers: Dark Of The Moon’ Premieres At The Moscow Int’l Film Festival

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Linkin Park Call Red Square ‘Transformers’ Performance A ‘Privilege’

Steve-O Says He Should Top Justin Bieber For MTV Movie Award

‘Jackass’ star also competing with Natalie Portman, Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page, and James Franco for Best Jaw Dropping Moment. By Kara Warner Steve-O Photo: Matt Elias/ MTV News One of the many ways the MTV Movie Awards distinguishes itself from all the other awards shows out there is the unique categories for which performances by actors, actresses and assorted moments in film are nominated and awarded. The is a perfect example. This year’s nominees run the gamut from cringe-worthy and painful moments to larger-than-life concert experiences, amazing special effects and being covered in poo. The nominees are: Natalie Portman for her hangnail moment in “Black Swan,” Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page for the dream-within-a-dream “caf

Linkin Park’s ‘Iridescent’ Video Premieres

Clip for ‘Transformers: Dark of the Moon’ soundtrack song matches franchise’s otherworldly vibe. By Kara Warner Linkin Park’s Chester Bennington on the set of “Iridescent” Keeping up with what seems to have become a great movie/music partnership, ” Transformers: Dark of the Moon ” director Michael Bay has once again enlisted Linkin Park to contribute a song to the film’s soundtrack, a remix of their song “Iridescent,” from their A Thousand Suns LP. On Thursday (June 2), the ” Iridescent ” video premiered on MTV.com. Fitting in with the thunderous, world-is-ending, intense, high-action vibe that revolves around the world of the “Transformers” films, the clip for ” Iridescent ” has an otherworldly, post-apocalyptic vibe. The video, which is entirely in black-and-white, seems to take place on another planet, in another world entirely, with a sense of weightlessness, combined with shadowy, translucent images of either a futuristic or lost civilization. There is also a bit of religious imagery, with a shot of the band in a “Last Supper”-like scenario at one point. Naturally, there are scenes from “Dark of the Moon” interspersed throughout, but there aren’t so many robots that they distract from the song or the band. “The ‘Transformers’ collaboration has been really fun for us. I mean, we grew up playing with the toys,” LP’s Mike Shinoda told MTV News when we visited the “Iridescent” set in April. “When we first got approached on the first one, we said yes based on the idea of taking that thing that we loved so much and bringing it to life in a modern way. As it’s gone on, that’s still a big part of it for us.” When asked why they chose “Iridescent” for “Dark of the Moon,” Shinoda said the song felt like a good fit. “We put out the record in the late part of last year, and even though it’s never been a single up until this point, [when we played it live] you could really hear the singing pick up momentum during that song,” he said. “It was just something that seemed a natural fit.” “Iridescent” marks the third pairing of Linkin Park and the “Transformers” franchise. The original “Transformers” soundtrack led off with Park’s track ” What I’ve Done ,” and the companion CD to sequel “Revenge of the Fallen” also gave LP the pole position with the tune ” New Divide .” What do you think of Linkin Park’s latest video? Share your reviews in the comments below! Related Videos Linkin Park’s ‘Iridescent’ Music Video Premieres Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park’s ‘Iridescent’ Video Premieres

Linkin Park’s ‘Iridescent’ Video: A Dog, A Throne And A Blind King

In the new video for their song from the upcoming ‘Transformers: Dark of the Moon’ soundtrack, the rockers get ‘abstract.’ By James Montgomery, with reporting by Audrey Kim Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda on the set of their video for “Iridescent” Photo: MTV News Linkin Park lending their music to a “Transformers” movie isn’t exactly a new thing &#8212 the rockers are three-for-three at this point, having just shot a video for “Iridescent,”, the lead single off the soundtrack to the upcoming installment of the sci-fi/action franchise, “Transformers: Dark of the Moon.” What is new this time out is the concept of the video for the song, which, truth be told, is actually pretty confusing … even to the guys in LP themselves. “All I know about the concept is that [Linkin Park turntablist/frequent director] Joe Hahn sent me an e-mail that said something about ‘In the valley of the blind, the one-eyed man is king,’ or something like that,” singer/rapper Mike Shinoda laughed. “And the next thing I know, I’ve got horns growing out of my shoulders, and I’ve got one blind eye, and I’ve got a white dog and a snake on a throne made of antlers. I think you’d have to ask Joe what that all means.” Sounds like Hahn’s been catching up on his H.G. Wells. And while the “Iridescent” clip is just the latest in a long string of Linkin Park videos to be directed by Hahn, it’s perhaps his most out-there work to date. And that’s fitting, considering that ever since the band released their 2010 A Thousand Suns album, they’ve been working very hard at pushing boundaries, too. Then again, to hear the Linkin Park guys tell it, all you need to know about Hahn’s videos is that they are 100 percent his, coming from a place that even his bandmates don’t totally comprehend. “As we’ve gone on, the videos have gotten more abstract,” Shinoda said. “[And] I kind of like that, I’ve been encouraging it with Joe, because … the stuff that goes on in his head is really interesting and really fun, and I think it probably comes from the fact he grew up reading a lot of comics, watching anime, those things. Especially in a video like this, you can tell the influences are there.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Transformers: Dark of the Moon.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Linkin Park’s Video For ‘Iridescent:’ Behind The Scenes Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park’s ‘Iridescent’ Video: A Dog, A Throne And A Blind King

Linkin Park Say ‘Iridescent’ Was A ‘Natural Fit’ For ‘Transformers’ Soundtrack

A Thousand Suns tune will be in third installment of franchise. By Gil Kaufman, with reporting by Audrey Kim Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda Photo: MTV News On the surface, it makes perfect sense that Linkin Park would contribute a song to the third installment in the “Transformers” film franchise, “Dark of the Moon.” Both the band and the film are known for their thunderous, metallic noise and post-apocalyptic vibe. Plus, LP were on the first two soundtracks and they clearly have a connection with director Michael Bay. But LP vocalist Mike Shinoda recently told MTV News about why the band offered up a remix of their A Thousand Suns tune “Iridescent” for the soundtrack to the summer blockbuster. “The ‘Transformers’ collaboration has been really fun for us. I mean, we grew up playing with the toys,” Shinoda explained. “When we first got approached on the first one, we said yes based on the idea of taking that thing that we loved so much and bringing it to life in a modern way. As it’s gone on, that’s still a big part of it for us.” The original “Transformers” soundtrack led off with the LP song “What I’ve Done,” and the companion CD to the sequel, “Revenge of the Fallen,” also gave LP the pole position with the tune “New Divide.” So when director Bay approached the band to contribute a song for the third film, Shinoda said the tune that came to mind right away was “Iridescent.” It’s been a fan favorite at live shows, even though it doesn’t have the kind of bombastic sound that you’d expect for the battling-robots flick. “We put out the record in the late part of last year and even though it’s never been a single up until this point, [when we played it live] you could really hear the singing pick up momentum during that song. It was just something that seemed a natural fit.” Though it’s less of what Shinoda called an “in-your-face” kind of tune, he said the somber, hopeful tone of the song appealed to both the band and to Bay. “We loved that part of it when we were in the studio, but Michael actually loved pairing it with the movie because there’s something that he feels it speaks to about the story line.” Do you think LP’s “Iridescent” will fit well into the “Transformers” movie? Let us know in the comments below. Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Say ‘Iridescent’ Was A ‘Natural Fit’ For ‘Transformers’ Soundtrack

MTV’s Musical March Madness Preview: Linkin Park Promise Total Dominance

Our 2011 tournament begins on March 14, but early favorites Linkin Park already proclaim, ‘We’re winners. That’s our motto.’ By James Montgomery Linkin Park Photo: Warner Bros. Last year, whether it was due to oversight by the selection committee or just plain bias, Linkin Park did not make the field of 65 bands that competed in MTV’s inaugural Musical March Madness tournament. In the end, after weeks of fiercely contested matchups , more than 2 million votes and precisely one accusation of cheating, it was Coheed and Cambria that ended up taking home the championship, shocking the world and inspiring this hilarious photograph in the process. And while we’re not going to discount the valiant efforts of Coheed and their fervent fanbase — after all, winners were determined by fan voting — we couldn’t help but wonder if things would’ve turned out differently had Linkin Park made the tournament in the first place. They are, after all, one of the biggest rock acts on the planet, commanding a vast (and loyal) army of fans that most certainly would’ve carried them to the Final Four … at least. So this year, we’re determined to put that claim to the test. Because while we’ll reveal our full 2011 MTV Musical March Madness bracket on Monday (March 14), we’re going to let it slip right now that not only did Linkin Park make the field this year, they’ll enter the 2011 tournament at a very high seed. This is what happens when you release a jaw-dropping, envelope-pushing album, A Thousand Suns, and then convince the entire world to listen . So, does Linkin Park have what it takes to claim the 2011 MMM Championship? We decided to ask them, and as it turns out, they’ve already got their game plan in place. “Well, I think what we’re going to have to do is, we’re going to have to be smart about our offense, we’re going to have to have a tough defense,” Chester Bennington said. “We’re going to put a lot of pressure on the other bands, to really perform at their best. Because, you know, our motto is ‘Go hard all the time.’ Whether we win or lose, we’re winners. That’s our motto.” That’s actually two mottos, but who’s counting. And though they’re already planning on bringing the pressure — Brad Delson is a master of the full-court press — Linkin Park are focused on one thing, and one thing only: hoisting the hardware on April 5. “We want to win,” Mike Shinoda smiled. “We want to win,” Bennington added. “So basically, we’ll let these guys come in and play hard, but we’re going to want to kick their asses. And that’s just how it goes.” MTV’s 2011 Musical March Madness Tournament begins on Monday, March 14, when we reveal the full field of 65 bands that will battle for the championship. Winners are determined by fan votes, so if your favorite act made the cut, it’ll be up to you to guide them to glory. You can rally the troops on Twitter using the hashtag #MMM … but get ready, it’s gonna be a war. Related Artists Linkin Park

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MTV’s Musical March Madness Preview: Linkin Park Promise Total Dominance

Linkin Park Tell Thousand Suns Critics To ‘Go Find Something You Like’

‘We’re just going to make music that we like,’ Chester Bennington tells MTV News. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda and Chester Bennington Photo: MTV News By now, you’ve probably listened to Linkin Park ‘s A Thousand Suns somewhere between 20 and 50 times (just like Mike Shinoda told you to !), and you’ve probably formed a pretty solid opinion on the album. Either you think it’s a brave, ballsy reinvention of the band’s sound , or you hate it because, dude, where are the guitars ?!? Safe to say, A Thousand Suns is easily Linkin Park’s most divisive album, but no matter how you feel about it, the band is fine with it. After all, they stopped listening to other people’s opinions years ago. “When it comes to people’s opinions about the music, we know people are going to like some things, and some people are going to not like things, and that’s the greatness of opinion,” LP’s Chester Bennington told MTV News. “You don’t have to like something because someone told you it was good, and you don’t have to think something’s bad because someone says [it is]. “[And] there have been periods of our career where our maturity level might not be what it is today, and … like, we read 60 things that are positive about the band, and the one thing someone says they didn’t like, you’re like, ‘Oh God, I have to change my life,’ ” he continued. “And you know, you can get caught up in that kind of stuff. So we’ve decided — very clearly — that we’re just going to make music that we like, that is challenging to us to create and pushes us in a place that makes us feel uncomfortable and giddy, like we’re discovering something. As long as we do that, and we feel happy with the record we put out, then it’s like, ‘OK, we’ve done our best, and if you like it, great, and if you don’t, go find something that you like.’ ” To that end, though much of the criticism about Suns seems to focus on how different it is from LP’s previous efforts (that or the whole “no guitars” thing), Bennington said that those different moments are actually his favorite on the entire album … rather unapologetically so. “I think that ‘Waiting for the End’ and ‘Iridescent’ are probably tied at #1 [for my] favorite song on the record,” he said. “I just think they’re really beautiful. They’re different. I like the way ‘Iridescent’ builds and climaxes, I like the summertime vibe of ‘Waiting,’ and I like the lyrical content of it all, and the dynamic, too.” Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Linkin Park Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Tell Thousand Suns Critics To ‘Go Find Something You Like’

Linkin Park Bring A Thousand Suns To Life In New York

Band plays first show in nearly two years hours after new album hit stores. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s Chester Bennington performs at Best Buy Theater on Tuesday Photo: Cory Schwartz/ Getty Images Over the past few months, or really, years, Linkin Park fans have been subjected to an unending stream of talk that the band’s new album would be a departure from their hard-riffing roots, instead forging heady, darn-near conceptual new territory from which there was no return. Early reviews of A Thousand Suns only seemed to confirm all that chatter, and it appeared that the Linkin Park of old was gone forever, that the once-snarling Dobermans had been replaced with a group of bespectacled Mr. Peabodys . And this was not good. But those fears can be put to rest. Because on Tuesday night — hours after that new album, A Thousand Suns, hit stores — Linkin Park played their first show in nearly two years (or, as Chester Bennington put it, “two f—ing years”) at the Best Buy Theater in New York. And though the tickets for the show prominently displayed the new album’s name, there was little of its calculated, claustrophobic conceptualism on display. Rather, this was a balls-out rock show, with some rapping and electronic frippery thrown in for additional impact. Or, in other words, it was just like a Linkin Park show of old. In fact, the band played just a handful of tracks from A Thousand Suns, peppering them in throughout a hit-packed, pummeling set. They opened with “The Requiem,” the first track on the album, which featured Mike Shinoda and DJ Joseph Hahn lit in moody silhouette, the former hunched over a synthesizer, repeating — in robo-coated vocals — the de facto mantra of Suns (“God bless us everyone/ We’re a broken people living under loaded gun”) with the latter providing ethereal harmonies. That washed into the sampled Robert Oppenheimer speech from the album, and then, the band now at full force, LP backtracked gloriously, hammering through older tracks like “New Divide,” “Faint,” “No More Sorrow” and “Given Up.” Those were met with thunderous cheers and a sea of fists thrust skyward, and with enough goodwill built up, the band worked the second Suns track into the set, the booming, rattling “Wretches and Kings,” which saw Shinoda and Bennington trade vocals and had the audience nodding along to the gut-punching beat. After a quick “thank you” — their first words to the audience all night — LP threw themselves into “Numb,” and then slowed things down exponentially with another new tune, “Iridescent,” which built slowly and solemnly on a Shinoda-played piano line and was met with a mixture of rapt attention and angry indifference, though most of that came from the tank-top-and-backward-ball-cap aggro set (and, it should be noted, the song climaxed pretty amazingly, with the band going five-wide on the chorus and the guitars soaring to the ceiling). The rest of the set played out in much that same fashion: The older stuff pummeled, peaked and powered (“Numb,” “Bleed It Out,” “In the End”), the new songs soared and stuttered and, yes, slightly mystified (“Burning in the Skies,” “Waiting for the End”), and it was pretty clear that A Thousand Suns was probably going to take a while to win some of the fans over. But, as Shinoda told MTV News last weekend, that’s sort of the point, really. And, perhaps to soothe those still hoping for a return to their Hybrid Theory days, Linkin Park opened their encore with current single “The Catalyst,” which, on this night, was cranked to the max and actually featured a good deal of chugging guitars (Bennington sang the hell out of it too). And then they closed with “What I’ve Done,” the first single off their last album that ticked off fans, Minutes to Midnight. And it’s worth noting that, in the three years since it was released, something rather amazing has happened to the song: It’s become a fan favorite, ranking right up there with their earlier, snarling stuff. There probably wasn’t intent behind the decision to close with it, but it’s not too hard to make the logical leap: Give the new songs time too, and see what happens. Patience is a virtue, after all. Related Photos Linkin Park Perform At Best Buy Theater In New York City Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Bring A Thousand Suns To Life In New York