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About My Music

I do get a lot of stick for the kind of music I like. I don't mind stuff like Linkin Park or Papa Roach. I tried Slipknot, but that's TOO extreme for me if you know what I mean. I have a sister, and she's always complaining about what music I like. She loves Slipknot, and goes around with the dark makeup. She's been beaten up twice. I guess it's her clothes. With the metal studs and all that.



This Picture Is LINKIN PARK. One of my favorite bands. I don't know anyone who should take the mick out of these. That band is strange. As soon as I started to like Rock music, oh, look who came along. LINKIN PARK! Great band, hope they get better than all the crappy pop bands. But, Linkin park is a bit like Limp Bizkit. It's a mix of 3 genres, like rap, hip-hop and rock....

I recentley came along a band called 'A'. Everyone thinks that they are a new band. I have evidence that they aren't. I have found a CD which has a song called 'Sing-A-Long', by A. It sounded good, but my favorite is 'Nothing'. I have a lot of Mp3 files on my computer. I use Winamp to play them for me. It's a wonderful peice of software, and I first started to use it in 1998, when it was on a Sharware Disc. It was rubbish then. You had to pay for it. Now it's freeware! Download it from http://www.winamp.com/, and get some mp3's. If you have some CD's, get Windows Media Player 7.1 (or 8 if you have Windows XP). Download some Plugins for it, and some skins, and then you are ready to go to make your sound card explode(Not seriously)!

If you want some great mp3's for your collection, my top sites would be http://www.emp3finder.com/, or http://www.mtvhits.com/.

You should really get a music creation game, they are great. I had Music 2000... that got a bit boring, so I got MTV Music Generator 2. That's just the same except it's vertical instead of horizontal...

About Linkin Park

I just Thought i'd say, people think Linkin Park is a manufactured band. I used to think so. I'll tell you, their not. I've never been on thier website, and if it's not a Flash website, they are a manufactured band and I hate them. But it won't be. Even Feeder have a Flash site! A bit more about Linkin Park.. I have loads of their older songs like High Voltage, Step Up, And One. Most of the old ones. All the one's off the Hybrid Theory Album too.

I used to hate Linkin Park. But for some reason, they are now one of my favorite bands.

Linkin Park Bio

THE BAND
"The biggest misconception about us is that we're just a rock band," describes Linkin Park's guitarist Brad Delson. "We think our music is a cross-section of many genres; a hybrid of what the six of us have grown up on." The title of the band's debut album and its original band name, Hybrid Theory, describes both the six-piece's artistic goals and its approach to making music. Linkin Park's sound, a melting pot of heavy alternative rock, hip-hop, and electronic flourishes, is utterly their own, an accomplishment strengthened by the band's remarkably powerful, organic songwriting. But almost everything about Linkin Park has been unforced, including their Southern California origins.

ORIGINS
The band saw its beginnings in emcee/vocalist Mike Shinoda's small bedroom studio, where he and Delson recorded the band's first material in 1996. The two had attended high school together, where they met the band's drummer, Rob Bourdon. Shinoda hooked up with DJ Joseph Hahn while studying illustration at Art Center College in Pasadena. Meanwhile, attending UCLA, Delson shared an apartment with bassist Phoenix, who left the band after college and returned a year later. The final piece of the puzzle was singer Chester Bennington, a transplanted Arizona native who started making records when he was 16. "When I was two, I used to run around singing Foreigner songs--there's tapes of me doing that...Since I learned how to talk I've been telling everybody I was gonna grow up to be a singer." laughs Bennington.

THE ALBUM
The combination of Bennington's rich, mammoth vocal style with Shinoda's rapid-fire emceeing helps to define Linkin Park's sound. "I think one of Chester and Mike's goals is to be as integrated as possible," offers Phoenix. "Although the styles we're mixing can be very different, we want the combination to feel natural--that is a big part of our band's identity." Weaving influences as diverse as Deftones, Nine Inch Nails, Aphex Twin, and The Roots into a unified whole, Linkin Park "want everything to come together without feeling forced," explains Shinoda. "As part of the writing process, I record everyone directly into a computer to best integrate our digital and live elements. We spend countless hours mixing and matching parts until we get the right combinations and composition."

The band immersed itself in the writing process until the spring of 2000, when they inked with Warner Bros. Records and immediately went into the studio. To help record their work, they enlisted producer Don Gilmore (Pearl Jam, Apex Theory, Sugar Ray). "We met with a lot of people and had a very difficult time choosing a producer," says Bennington. "But Don, aside from making things sound good, stood out as someone who could really push us to work harder as songwriters." The end result is an album that is as well-crafted and melodic as it is confrontational, with a strong lyrical message. "Chester and I write about universal emotions, whether it's feeling insignificant, optimistic, or frustrated," Shinoda describes. "We write about everyday life, because sometimes it's good to know there are other people going through the same things that you are." These lyrics, along with the diverse instrumentation in which they are embedded, result in a powerful musical statement: Linkin Park's debut album, Hybrid Theory.

TOURING
Following the completion of Hybrid Theory and the return of Phoenix, the band has played incessantly, introducing crowds worldwide to their explosive live performance. "I've always wanted our show to be energetic," says Hahn. "We use drum pads, samplers, and turntables with original vinyl to perform all the sample parts live on stage, which I think brings an exciting uniqueness to the songs." The energy and tightness of the band's performance, on tours with Deftones, P.O.D., and Papa Roach, and as a headliner itself, has secured Linkin Park a strong foundation of dedicated fans worldwide, and helped propel the band's record sales into the millions.

When asked about the secret behind the Linkin Park's rapid success, Bourdon responds, "Ever since the beginning, we've always tried to maintain a strong relationship with our fans. From our close-knit street team family, to our videos, to designing quality merchandise, to our hands-on website activity with 'www.linkinpark.com', we stay involved in order to put our fans first." Linkin Park's reputation for being fan-oriented is best exemplified in their dedication to interacting with listeners at shows: the band obsessively sign hundreds of autographs at every concert. When asked about this phenomenon, Shinoda explains, "It's just a way of giving back. Our fans have helped us to realize a dream we didn't know was possible." It's taken Linkin Park five years to become an overnight success, and in the process, they've proven that a fresh combination of talent, unwavering dedication to craft, and pure artistic vision can, as Bennington describes, "get you through anything and help you realize your dreams."


(Bio taken from Projekt Revolution, www.linkinpark.com)

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