Tag Archives: Linkin Park

Does Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Rank Among Their All-Time Best?

Dark and murky clip premiered this week. Find out if it ranks in our top 5 list of LP videos. By James Montgomery Linkin Park’s “breaking the habit” Photo: Warner Bros. At 12:01 a.m. on Thursday (August 26), Linkin Park premiered their brand-new video for “The Catalyst,” the first single off their upcoming A Thousand Suns album. It’s a dark, moody, abstract affair , full of swirling smoke, charred earth and rising tides, and, judging from the comments we got on MTVNews.com, Linkin Park fans totally love it. So that got us thinking: Is it good enough to rank among their all-time best videos? Even though “The Catalyst” is barely 13 hours old at this point, it’s clear the clip takes the band to places they’ve never gone before. But the short answer is … no, not just yet. Sure, the video would probably land in the LP top 10, but we’re talking about the best of the best here. So while it’s undoubtedly good, it’s not quite good enough to crack the band’s top 5. But give it some time. We’re sure its impact will be measured in weeks and months, not hours. That’s how Linkin Park videos tend to go. At least, judging by the ones we’ve selected as their five best: #5: “Somewhere I Belong” The greatest Linkin Park videos also tend to be the biggest, and while “Somewhere I Belong” is definitely massive — the burning bed, the creeping, long-legged mammoths, the mech-like archway the band performs beneath — it’s the minimal touches that make it one of their all-time best. Joseph Hahn deftly uses macro focus to take us deep inside Chester Bennington’s subconscious, and from there, he fills the void with items taken from his bedroom: the Dali-esque painting on the wall, the Gundam figures on the dresser, etc. The end result is a stirring, powerful piece — one that matches the punch of the song — proof that sometimes the smallest things also pack the biggest wallop. #4: “Faint” Sort of a left-field choice (it’s by no means one of their best-known clips), “Faint” is little more than a live clip … and while Linkin Park have made more than their fair share of those, none can match the live-wire energy and emotional outpouring on display here. In a genius move, director Mark Romanek puts his cameras behind the band, which not only gives the viewer a new perspective on LP’s stage show, but somehow makes the explosion of angst and aggression all the more palpable. The closest thing we can find to capturing the band’s thunderous live performances. #3: “Crawling” A video that tackles heady themes (abuse, suicide, judgment and despair, to name just a few), “Crawling” goes deep — into the mind, behind the mirror, into a rapidly crumbling world — and somehow manages to come out the other side. It never feels heavy-handed, rather, the Brothers Strause were smart enough to harness the cathartic power of the song’s chorus, and set the main character’s road to redemption against it. Powerful stuff, with a happy ending. #2: “Breaking the Habit” Animated by the legendary Kazuto Nakazawa, “Breaking the Habit” is based around a simple story: the suicide of an unknown man in some foreboding future city. But as things progress, the story becomes increasingly complex … a ghost haunts the skyscrapers, a girl slowly bleeds, a man struggles with his demons. And at clip’s end, we learn that it was Bennington who leapt to his death. All the while, you’re marveling at the unraveling narrative — and the dazzling animation too. Dramatic, doomy, filled with dread: It’s the kind of thing that most bands only aspire to make. Linkin Park pull it off with style to spare. #1: “What I’ve Done” The biggest, baddest and best Linkin Park video of all time, “What I’ve Done” is full of wide-screen visuals (the band performs in a barren desert, surrounded by walls of speakers and lighting rigs, mountains peaking on the horizon), but it’s hardly a summer blockbuster. Rather, Hahn was smart — or brave — enough to inject a message here: the destructive power of man versus the unyielding beauty of nature, and where it all will undoubtedly end (hint: we lose). It also marks Linkin Park’s first time wading into political waters, as Hahn filled the video with images of the collapsing Twin Towers, a Katrina-ravaged New Orleans and oil-soaked wildlife. A shot of a starved African man is intercut with an engorged American eating a cheeseburger. An atomic bomb is detonated, followed by time-lapse footage of blades of grass peaking through the soil. “We are living in the end times,” the band seems to be saying. “Repent while you still can.” Not exactly the most uplifting of messages, but certainly the most vital. What’s your favorite Linkin Park video of all time? Does “The Catalyst” rank in your top 5? Tell us in the comments! Related Videos The 5 Best Linkin Park Music Videos Related Artists Linkin Park

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Does Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Rank Among Their All-Time Best?

Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Video: Watch Behind-The-Scenes Footage!

LP suffer for their art in the new clip, which premieres Wednesday at midnight on MTV.com. By James Montgomery Mike Shinoda on the set of “The Catalyst” Photo: MTV News Linkin Park have gone to the ends of the earth — and the inner reaches of the mind — in previous videos, but it’s doubtful any of them can match the sheer spectacle of their brand-new clip for “The Catalyst,” which pushes the limits (and the band’s endurance) in newfound ways.

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Linkin Park’s ‘The Catalyst’ Video: Watch Behind-The-Scenes Footage!

Linkin Park’s ‘Catalyst’ Video All About Contradiction

The clip conveys ‘something can be beautiful or it can be destructive,’ Mike Shinoda tells MTV News. By James Montgomery Mike Shinoda on the set of “The Catalyst” Photo: MTV News Linkin Park’s much-discussed A Thousand Suns will finally see the, uh, light of day on September 14, bringing to close a nearly two-year process that saw the band push themselves in ways they never thought possible. And, as is the case with most grand projects, things were still being worked out up until the very last minute. Case in point: The video for the album’s first single, “The Catalyst,” which the band shot back in June. In keeping with tradition, the clip was directed by the band’s DJ, Joseph Hahn, but aside from who would be sitting in the director’s chair, there were still plenty of details to sort out including just what they were going to call the song itself. “We are deciding the title as we speak,” LP’s Mike Shinoda told MTV News on the set of the video back in June. “We came in with a title in mind, and changed our minds, and probably by the end of the day, we’ll have a new name for the song.” And while they were still unsure of the song’s title a few months ago, the boys knew exactly the kind of emotions they wanted to convey in its video. Much like the album itself, they were gunning for big, often-contradictory themes: power and grace, destruction and salvation, ugliness and beauty. “The concept to the video: It kind of comes from the idea of, like, if you could imagine when nuclear fission was invented, or a moment in time when something can be used for positive or negative,” Shinoda said. “Something can be beautiful or it can be destructive. Or even, you know, if you’ve ever seen a dangerous fire from far away, it’s devastating up close, but from far away, it can be beautiful. Those are the kind of themes that run throughout the album, and they’re also themes that you see in the video.” “The Catalyst” video premieres at midnight August 25 (technically, the 26th) on MTV.com and VH1.com, and then on MTV, VH1, MTV2, mtvU, MTV Hits, MTV Tr3s and all MTV international territories at 8 p.m. ET/PT on August 26. Are you looking forward to seeing what kind of video Linkin Park created? Tell us in the comments!

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Linkin Park’s ‘Catalyst’ Video All About Contradiction

Linkin Park Promise ‘Catalyst’ Video Will Be ‘Very Different’

Joe Hahn ‘likes to go for something big,’ bassist Phoenix Farrell says of LP DJ’s vision for new clip. By James Montgomery Linkin Park Photo: Rob Loud/Getty Images Linkin Park have spent much of the past year touting the overall insanity of their upcoming A Thousand Suns album (it’s a “grandiose insanity,” in case you were wondering), and that idea certainly carries over into the first single, an aching slice of synth doomery titled “The Catalyst” . It seems that, every step of the way, the band is trying very hard to move beyond their nu-metal roots. So it should come as no surprise, too, that the video for “Catalyst” is a far different animal. “[Linkin Park DJ] Joe [Hahn] directed it, and Joe likes to create things visually, likes to go for something big,” LP bassist Dave “Phoenix” Farrell told MTV News. “So the look of it is very different. There’s a lot of energy in it, and for me, that’s what makes for a good video. It adds something to the song, and that’s what makes me like this particular video even more.” Farrell wouldn’t spill any details of the video — it’ll have it debut here on August 25 on MTV.com and VH1.com — but he did hint that it would be in keeping with the artistic theme of Suns (due September 14), which means that Linkin Park fans should gear up for a whole lot of blurry, digitally-scarred WTF-ery … sort of like the cover of the album. “For this record, I think we were able to be in front of the curve for a lot of things. We were working on art, and we’ve been working on it nonstop, because we really wanted to incorporate it in everything,” Farrell said. “And in the case of the album cover, we released it in little pieces, gradually constructing it out of nothing, and fans were seeing all kinds of stuff, they saw people’s faces and everything … none of that was intentionally there.” So, will the secret of the Thousand Suns cover be revealed in “The Catalyst” video? Probably not. After all, the guys in Linkin Park aren’t even really sure what the image is supposed to be. “I don’t want to say what I think it is — I don’t know — but I don’t want to ruin it for anyone. It’s a good reference for the record itself,” Farrell said. “I would go so far as to say it’s anything you want it to be.” “The Catalyst” video premieres at midnight on August 25 (technically that’s the 26th) on MTV.com and VH1.com, and then on MTV, VH1, MTV2, mtvU, MTV Hits, MTV Tr3s and all MTV international territories (MTV, VH1 and MTV2 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on August 26). What do you think of Linkin Park’s sound on their new single “The Catalyst”? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Linkin Park

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Linkin Park Promise ‘Catalyst’ Video Will Be ‘Very Different’

Plant a Tree With Linkin Park and Green Music Challenge, and You Could Win an an iPad

Credit: Arthur Plotnik, The Urban Tree Book / courtesy TreeLink . Why should you plant trees? For shade and oxygen? Right, but there’s tons of other things (like the tons of sequestered carbon) to keep in mind. And if these factoids to follow aren’t convincing enough, how about the chance to win an Apple iPad, along with a selection from the Warner Music Group?… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Plant a Tree With Linkin Park and Green Music Challenge, and You Could Win an an iPad

Linkin Park’s ‘My Back Is Killing Me’ Lawsuit

Filed under: Celebrity Justice Linkin Park endures the same pain millions cope with daily — a bad back. But the band will not take the pain lying down — especially when millions of bucks are on the line.Backstory: Linkin Park’s lead singer, Chester Bennington, injures his back … Permalink

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Linkin Park’s ‘My Back Is Killing Me’ Lawsuit

Beyonce, ‘NSYNC, Outkast Top Decade-End Sales List

RIAA list tallies top gold and platinum sellers between 2000 and 2009. By Gil Kaufman Beyonc

Travis Barker Gets RZA, Slipknot’s Corey Taylor, More On Solo Album

‘It’s a live record — we were in a room together where everything was live,’ he says of collaboration with Wu-Tang’s RZA. By Kyle Anderson Travis Barker Photo: MTV News Travis Barker is a busy man. He just announced his new collaboration with DJ A-Trak ( a tour that will kick off in Hollywood on March 9 ), a new Blink-182 album is on the horizon and he has his ongoing session and remix work. But his most immediate project is a long-in-the-works solo album . Barker told MTV News back in November that he wanted to have the album out “in January or February,” and though he’s blown that deadline, the next one is set in stone. “We just got a new date for June,” Barker said. “That’s when I have to turn it in. It can’t change, it can’t move — that’s the time!” The yet-untitled album promises to be a collection that leaps across genres and features a who’s who of musical luminaries, including Slash, Linkin Park frontman Chester Bennington and the aforementioned A-Trak. More recently he scored himself collaborations with Wu-Tang Clan mastermind RZA and Slipknot singer Corey Taylor (though not on the same track). Barker says the track that features Taylor on guitar and vocals is “on the heavier side — not as heavy as Slipknot, but heavier than any rock stuff I’ve done. We recorded the whole thing in an hour or two.” As for his team-up with RZA, it allowed the rapper/producer to spread his wings a bit. “RZA plays guitar on the track that will be on my record,” Barker says. “It’s a live record — we were in a room together where everything was live. It reminds me of old Beastie Boys, like Check Your Head when they all started playing instruments again.” In the meantime, fans itching for Barker’s work will soon be able to enjoy his remix of Snoop Dogg’s hit “I Wanna Rock.” “It’s done,” Barker said. “I hope people like it.”

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Travis Barker Gets RZA, Slipknot’s Corey Taylor, More On Solo Album

Linkin Park Say New Album Is Due ‘Toward The End Of The Year’

‘It’s produced by myself and Rick Rubin,’ Mike Shinoda says of upcoming LP.

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Linkin Park Say New Album Is Due ‘Toward The End Of The Year’

Chalie Boy Says Breakout Single ‘I Look Good’ Is ‘All About Swagger’

‘Everything is always about timing,’ Texas rapper tells Mixtape Daily about his decade in the business.

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Chalie Boy Says Breakout Single ‘I Look Good’ Is ‘All About Swagger’