Tag Archives: Linkin Park

Briana Evigan @ American Teen Actress In Justin Bieber ‘Never Say Never’ Movie Premiere

Briana Evigan is a stills hot teen of American singer, actress, dancer and choreographer. Briana Evigan who are the best known as 2008 Hollywood film Step Up 2: The Streets . The film winner in next year held MTV Movie Awards 2008 for best supporting leading actress. After movie actress in Hollywood she became before that work American music video, thought as popular and famous Band Linkin Park , Flo Rida , T-Pain and Enrique Iglesias . Latest Briana Evigan in Justin Bieber ‘Never Say Never’ film premiere show gallery. 2011 new picture of Briana Evigan, Briana Evigan new photo gallery, Briana Evigan hq wallpapers at Justin Bieber 2011 ‘Never Say Never’ movie premiere in London.

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Briana Evigan @ American Teen Actress In Justin Bieber ‘Never Say Never’ Movie Premiere

Linkin Park Tease ‘Unique’ Performance On ‘Saturday Night Live’

‘We feel like there’s a way to make it a little extra-special,’ Mike Shinoda tells MTV News. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda and Chester Bennington Photo: MTV News There’s not much that makes Linkin Park nervous — at least not anymore. But back in 2007, on the eve of the release of their Minutes to Midnight album , the band performed on “Saturday Night Live.” And, for the first time in a long time, LP were very, very skittish. “The first time we did it, I was really nervous and really skeptical. I love the show, it’s very funny, but we have no control over the sound, you have people that may or may not know who the band is, they may or may not like the band, so you’re coming in, working with a crew you’ve never worked with before,” Chester Bennington said. “And, on a TV show, it’s got to be really, really great [in the studio] in order to come across pretty good on TV, and that freaks me out. So I was really nervous the first time … wanting to find a way to work with everybody and not piss people off.” Needless to say, things went off without a hitch, and all was right with the world. Fast-forward to Friday (February 4), when Linkin Park were back in New York for another performance on “SNL.” This time around, they’ve got another album to support — last year’s voluminous A Thousand Suns — and, perhaps telling how far they’ve come, they’re not nervous in the slightest. Quite the opposite, in fact. “I’ve been watching ‘SNL’ forever, I love ‘SNL,’ and actually, one of the jokes for me is, the first time we played it, [the host] was Molly Shannon, and this time it’s Dana Carvey. I guess we’re the band that brings the classic castmember back,” Mike Shinoda laughed. “So I’m looking for, like, some Chevy Chase action … next time. Give us a call when Steve Martin is gonna be on, and we’ll be happy to keep the torch held high.” In all seriousness, Linkin Park are planning big things for their performance, which will incorporate elements of their ongoing arena tour and, in the process, might just break a few barriers too. “I think lately people have been pushing the envelope with that show, and on TV in general, and for us especially, we feel like there’s a way to make it a little extra-special,” Shinoda said. “So we have a couple of things planned for ‘SNL’ this time that are unique for us and, I’m pretty sure, unique for their show. I don’t think anyone’s done anything like this on their show.” Are you excited for Linkin Park’s “SNL” performance? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Tease ‘Unique’ Performance On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Nicki Minaj To Perform On ‘Saturday Night Live’

Jesse Eisenberg will host the January 29 episode; Linkin Park and Dana Carvey lined up for February 5 show. By James Dinh Nicki Minaj Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Nicki Minaj has been tapped as the musical guest for an upcoming episode of “Saturday Night Live.” According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Young Money MC will join “Social Network” star Jesse Eisenberg, who will serve as host, for the show’s January 29 broadcast. THR also reported that Linkin Park will perform during the February 5 episode, which is set to feature hosting duties from former “SNL” castmember Dana Carvey. Known for her out-of-the-box fashion and manic rhymes, Minaj will likely perform her new single, “Moment 4 Life,” featuring Drake, as she brought the tune to her appearance on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” earlier this week. Eisenberg’s and Minaj’s upcoming appearance marks the first time for both on the sketch show. “SNL” isn’t the only treat Minaj has up her sleeve for her fans. Minaj recently teamed up with Rihanna to shoot the music video for another one of the MC’s new singles, “Fly.” When E! News asked about the concept for the upcoming clip, Nicki remained tight-lipped, saying, “We’re going to save the world in more ways than one with the video, and that’s all I can say about that.” However, it was the duo’s TwitPics that sent the Internet ablaze when rumors circulated that Nicki and Rihanna were living together . The MC took to Ryan Seacrest’s radio show to clear the air. “I don’t know where people got this really insane, hilarious, random rumor that she and I were living together,” she said. “We just shot the video for a song I have on the album I have called ‘Fly,’ and when I saw her, the first thing I said was, ‘So, did you hear we’re living together?’ and we just started cracking up laughing. She was like, ‘Yo, I can’t believe that people are, like, this ridiculous. So we Twit-Pic’d ourselves, and she put it on Twitter and said ‘Me and Nicki at our new pad’ or something.” Are you excited for Nicki’s “SNL” debut? Tell us what you think! Related Photos Nicki Minaj’s Wildest Looks Related Artists Nicki Minaj

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Nicki Minaj To Perform On ‘Saturday Night Live’

How to win a trip to NYC to see Lady Gaga, Linkin Park or Interpol live..

Fuse TV has just released it's latest promotion “Music Moments That Matter!” The sweepstakes gives us the chance to sit up close and personal with Linkin Park, Lady Gaga, or Interpol! All you have to do is enter the Fuse Music Matters Sweepstakes for a chance to win the ultimate music experience! Fuse will fly three lucky winners and their guest to NYC and seat them within the 10 front rows to see Linkin Park, Interpol, or Lady Gaga Live!! One winner will be picked for each concert, so it's your choice who you want to see! They will also throw in hotel accommodations for one night and one pair of Denon AH-D1100 “Acoustic Luxury” Over-Ear Headphones. To enter for your chance to win, simply read the official rules and fill out the form here: http://www.fuse.tv/musicmoments But you need to act fast! Contest ends January 15th at 6PM. added by: meeebo

Linkin Park — Wailin’ In Jerusalem

Filed under: Linkin Park Linkin Park went off-the-wall on sacred ground recently — stopping by one of the holiest places on Earth to pay their respects … the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem. As for the yarmulkes, most of the guys aren’t part of the Tribe … but it’s considered… Read more

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Linkin Park — Wailin’ In Jerusalem

Lady Gaga, Katy Perry Score MTV Europe Music Awards Nominations

Gaga and Perry tie with five nominations each; Eminem close behind them with four nominations. By Jocelyn Vena Lady Gaga Photo: Chris Gordon/ WireImage It’ll be somewhat of a girls’ night out at this year’s MTV Europe Music Awards in November, with Lady Gaga and Katy Perry tied at five nominations each. The ladies will go head-to-head in four categories: Best Pop Act, Best Song, Best Female Act and Best Video. Gaga is also up for Best Live Act, while Perry, who hosted the show last year , is up for Best World Stage performance for her fifth nomination. Eminem follows right behind the ladies with four nominations: Best Song, Best Male Act, Best Hip Hop and Best Video for his Rihanna collaboration “Love the Way You Lie.” But it wouldn’t be an awards show without Justin Bieber. Bieber, who won the Best New Artist Moonman at the VMAs last week, will compete against Ke$ha, B.o.B, Jason Der

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 Take Guitars To New Places On A Thousand Suns

‘We sampled them and played them like you would make a hip-hop song,’ Mike Shinoda explains. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s Mike Shinoda Photo: MTV News Depending on which side of the great A Thousand Suns debate you stand, Linkin Park ‘s use of guitars on the album (or, more specifically, the general lack of them) is either a brilliant, ballsy move or a total letdown. After all, LP’s near-trademark guitar tone — something between a rocket-launcher and a firework, explosive, arching and incendiary — was a big part of what made them one of the hugest rock acts on the planet, and on Suns, it’s largely absent, replaced instead with a myriad of effects-laden squelches and rumblings. How you feel about that fact will affect how you feel about the album itself. And, yes, Linkin Park are aware of that — they’ve been following the debate rather closely, in fact. “I heard a lot of comments about how certain songs on the record … fans were hearing them and going, ‘Wow, those are so heavy!’ and I even caught people talking about guitar on a song like ‘Wretches and Kings,’ for example, and somebody else would call them out, be like, ‘Actually, I don’t even think that’s guitar. I think it’s some kind of sample or something,’ ” LP’s Mike Shinoda told MTV News. “We’ve been getting a lot of questions on that. Our approach on that stuff has been really something different for us. We didn’t just plug the PRS [guitar] into the Mesa amp; it was like, we played these guitars through all these different effects, and we put them in the computer and we sampled them and played them like you would make a hip-hop song.” And those new sonic ideas — while alienating to some — were also the key building blocks to A Thousand Suns. Linkin Park knew they were taking a risk, but in the end, it was worth it. After all, they’ve walked away with perhaps the first major-label rock record in recent memory that doesn’t sound like a major-label thing. Or really, a rock record, for that matter. “Loosening that process up really enabled us to make some sounds that felt really fresh to us,” Shinoda said. “And [it] made the songs better.” What do you think of Linkin Park’s new sound? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Linkin Park Related Photos Linkin Park Perform At Best Buy Theater In New York City Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Take Guitars To New Places On A Thousand Suns

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

Linkin Park Will Perform ‘The Catalyst’ At 2010 VMAs

The MTV Video Music Awards air live on September 12 at 9 p.m. ET. By James Montgomery Linkin Park on the set of their “Catalyst” music video Photo: Warner Bros. Linkin Park just premiered their murky, mercurial video for “The Catalyst,” and for the second consecutive week, the song is #1 on Billboard rock songs chart, but so far, they’ve yet to perform the song live. But on September 12, at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards , that will change. Because Linkin Park have just been added to an ever-growing list of performers for the big show, and they’ll be playing “The Catalyst,” for the first time on television. “After two years of working on our new album, we’re looking forward to sharing our first live performance of new music with our fans around the world on the MTV Awards,” Chester Bennington said in a statement about the show. It’s an appropriately big stage for the song, the first single off the band’s much-anticipated new album, A Thousand Suns, which hits stores on September 14. Other confirmed performers for the 2010 VMAs include Eminem, Kanye West, Justin Bieber, Paramore, Drake, B.o.B, Usher and Florence and the Machine. Travie McCoy, Jason Derulo and Robyn will also join VMA house artist deadmau5 for a series of intimate performances. Confirmed presenters for the show include Justin Timberlake, Ke$ha, Nicki Minaj and Trey Songz. More performers and presenters will be announced in the coming days. Comedian Chelsea Handler will host . The 27th annual MTV Video Music Awards will be broadcast live from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles on September 12 at 9 p.m. ET. Go to