American rock band Linkin
Park is seen in this file photo. The six-piece band will play in
Shanghai on November 18.
Shanghai audiences have just about seen and heard it all - from
international mega stars to all kinds of rock/alternative
performances by musicians from all over the world. But Linkin
Park's concert this Sunday will be the first major international
rock group concert held in an outdoor stadium on the Chinese
mainland.
The Grammy-winning group will stage a two-hour rock performance
at Hongkou Football Stadium. They will sing 20 songs, half from
their newly released album Minutes to Midnight and the
rest its most popular songs.
The six-piece band is one of the most popular Western bands on
the mainland, partly because of two Asian-American members (Mike
Shinoda and DJ Joseph Hahn).
The Linkin Park China Fan Club has 23,239 official members, not
to mention those who never join clubs. Fan club head Xu Pengyuan
says about 3,000 fans will attend the live show. Moreover, fans
will welcome the group at the airport.
"I've heard a lot of good things about China and Shanghai, not
least that we have a lot of really great fans here. It's a really
exciting place to play. We would like to visit some traditional
Chinese places and experience the Chinese music here," the bands'
co-vocalist and programmer Shinoda says in an e-mail interview with
Shanghai Daily.
For their Shanghai concert, the group didn't ask much in the way
of accommodation - only regular rooms and no special food.
"A good concert, is not the production or the lights or anything
like that, it's more about playing and putting together the best
experience for the fans that we can. We have a lot of room for
improvisations," he says.
The band was formed by Shinoda, lead singer Chester Bennington,
guitarist Brad Delson, bassist Phoenix, drummer Rob Bourdon and DJ
Hahn. As a metal band, Linkin Park debuted in 2000 with its hit
Hybrid Theory.
Then the Los Angeles-based rap-rockers followed up with the
five-time platinum album Meteora in 2004.
The first two albums are very much alike. The melodies are hard
core, sometimes tending towards heavy metal. The lyrics are angry
but emotional and even melancholy about the pains of an ordinary
person in today's world. The pain - Nobody's Listening,
finding Somewhere I Belong, or feeling so Numb -
is described in words that are felt and understood by many.
Linkin Park is often categorized as nu-metal or rap-rock but the
band dislikes this label.
"I hate nu-metal," says Bennington. "I never liked any of the
bands - not even the ones I was friends with."
Shinoda is much milder. "I don't hate nu-metal per se. I just
hate being called nu-metal. We were never a part of it. We didn't
care to be part of it, and to have people labeling us as that -
nu-metal, rap-metal, whatever - was just annoying."
But to many fans, the powerful rapping over the hard instruments
and screaming vocals is also a signature of Linkin Park.
"It was something brand new to me," says Liang Qin, a city fan
since he heard their first album when he was in high school. "The
punk, the rapping, the rock, the lyrics, they combined all these.
Six or seven years ago, for kids like me, that was a complete
explosion of rock music."
A busy computer programmer, Liang has already bought a ticket
for "nostalgia of my times in high school and university."
Like some other fans, Liang feels less connected to Minutes
to Midnight, the band's third studio album released in May.
Working with producer Rick Rubin, the group has taken a big step
away from their defined style. And they had expected they would
lose fans with this new sound.
Shinoda admits it was difficult to change the sound because "the
old sound was so widely accepted and loved." But he is pleased with
feedback from fans who say they're "reaching a higher level."
The 12 tracks have milder melodies and more direct lyrics about
world affairs and war, compared with the personal feelings
expressed in the past.
"Some people have called it political, but I'd just call it
aware," he concludes.
Date: November 18, 7:30 pm
Address: 444 Dongjiangwan Rd
Tickets: 200-1,600 yuan
Tel: 400-707-9999 or 021-6481 2938
(Shanghai Daily November 15, 2007)