âLinkin Park became one of the most popular and most divisive bands of the new millennium because of their genre agnosticism and pop polish, but to listen to that debut single is to remember that they were also differentiated by a core of raw, convincing pain. It almost entirely came from Bennington.â
âHe was arguably the purest font of angstâand inarguably one of the most powerful male voicesâin mainstream music since 2000.â
ââHe sang like a fucking beast, the same way he sings now,â Linkin Park rapper Mike Shinoda recalled to Kerrang in 2008, describing Benningtonâs 1999 audition for Shinodaâs new group that was looking to blend hip-hop and metal. Whether in Linkin Park or earlier bands like Grey Daze, Bennington could screamâreally scream, in the way that vicariously makes the listenerâs vocal cords hurt. But he also had a balladeerâs smoothness and sense of melody that showed his tastes as a listener. In 2014, he listed his influences on Twitter: âDepeche Mode, The Cure, The Misfits, Fugazi, Minor Threat, The Smiths, Skinny Puppy, Nitzer Ebb, Ministry, x.ââ
âHe also listened to a lot of grunge, and Benningtonâs death inevitably and unfortunately shall now be linked to those of singers from that movement.â
âGrungeâs disaffection, though, was more self-indicting than the anguish Bennington aired. His sorrows were those not of the nihilist but of the aggrieved, someone deeply betrayed by an ever-present âyou.ââ
âLinkin Parkâs sound has always been omnivorous, and the band deserves more credit than it gets for the way it prophesied the current moment in which rockâs drama and pop sweetness and rapâs swagger seem to combine on more Hot 100 hits than not.â
âHe was unapologetically a victimâthe solace Linkin Park provided, with its techno-futuristic beats and energizing power chords and Shinodaâs stern boasts, was in turning victim into righteous superhero.â
âThe band, experimental from the start, has pushed its sound a few different directions over the yearsâproggy and aggro on 2014âs The Hunting Party, EDM-adjacent prettiness for this yearâs One More Lightâand Bennington adapted to all of it. But his point of view didnât waver much.â
âAnd Linkin Parkâs most recent albumâs title track will be playing a lot in the coming days, no doubt. âWho cares if one more light goes out,â Bennington sang. âWell, I do.ââ
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