No other nu-metal band of the rap/rock generation has garnered
as much attention and success as Southern Cali's Linkin Park, who actually started out in 1996 as the heavy metal outfit Xero.
Featuring high school pals Brad Delson (guitar), Mike Shinoda (vocals), Rob Bourdon (drums), and Darren "Phoenix" Farrell
(bass), the group's lineup was later completed by a DJ, Joseph Hahn (whom Shinoda met at a Pasadena art school), and a second
vocalist, Chester Bennington.
Due to legal reasons, Xero were forced to switch their moniker
to Hybrid Theory, then finally to Linkin Park (a deliberate misspelling of the Santa Monica, California landmark Lincoln Park,
thought up by Bennington). Under their new name, Linkin Park soon earned a reputation in L.A.'s local scene, becoming a regular
attraction at the legendary Sunset Strip club the Whisky A Go-Go. After being passed over by various record labels several
times, they finally caught the attention of Zomba Music Publishing's Jeff Blue, and then landed a recording contract with
Warner Bros. in late 1999.
With the finishing touches of producer Don Gilmore (Pearl Jam, Eve 6, Tracy Bonham, Lit), Linkin Park released their debut album in fall 2000, titling
it after their former band name, Hybrid Theory. Debuting in the U.S. top 20 in November 2000, the album received rave reviews for its powerful, eclectic fusion of post-grunge
metal, old-school hip-hop, and electronic stylings, and garnered heavy radio rotation for the hit singles "One Step Closer,"
"Crawling," and "In The End." By this time, founding member Farrell, who had left the group a year earlier, wisely decided
to rejoin as its sixth member, and LP's popularity continued to escalate steadily. The group even soon won the favor of MTV's
pop-oriented TRL crowd.
Linkin Park toured nonstop after the release of Hybrid
Theory, playing a total of 324 shows in 2001, including such major tours as Family Values, Ozzfest, and Projekt Revolution. They moved to headlining status
within a year, and by early 2002 had earned three Grammy nominations, for Best Rock Album, Best New Artist, and Best Hard
Rock Performance. Hybrid Theory eventually went eight times platinum, becoming the top-selling album of 2001 and the
fifth-best-seller of 2002.
Linkin Park quietly released a follow-up remix album, Reanimation, in July 2002, while spending nearly 18 months writing and recording their official sophomore effort, Meteora.
Produced by Hybrid Theory's Don Gilmore and mixed by Andy Wallace, Meteora promises to live up to Linkin Park's
past huge accomplishments and continue their meteoric rise.
This Biography was written by Minnie Chi