Linkin Park Meteora Song Info
In March 2003 ShoutWeb had an interview with Mike Shinoda about "Meteora", in which he described the basics of how the songs came about, and wha some of the meanings behind them are.
01 - "Foreword" (Intro)
"Foreword" is just an intro. If you know what Foley work is,
it's my first attempt at Foley work. Basically, it's noises I made in
the studio breaking things. We have this CD player and CD burner attached
to my computer, which basically just ate shit during the writing process.
It gave Chester and I such a hard time! Burning CDs which should have
taken a minute were taking 20 minutes, 30 minutes, to an hour. I just
got so frustrated with the thing, I put it to the side knowing that
I was going to beat it with a baseball bat and that's what I did. I
smashed it with a baseball bat on metal table.
02 - "Don't Stay"
That song started off as almost a Spanish or reggae style sound with
the guitar. The first time I heard it, I almost thought it sounded like
some kind of Latin dancing thing. And it was funny because it didn't
sound that way. It just gave me that idea in my head so Brad and I worked
on it. Brad ended up coming up with the final thing, which is what you
hear there. The nice thing about the song is that it's written really
heavy. It's got an interesting bounce to it and that Spanish guitar
thing is gone now. Because it came from that place, it has a different
vibe to the rhythm of it. I think it's a really fun song. It's going
to be a really fun song to play live. It's really energetic.
03 - "Somewhere I Belong"
"Somewhere I Belong" is the single. It started out with an
interesting sample. Actually, the first thing you hear in the song is
a sample. Now, the sample sounds like keyboards but what it is really,
is a guitar progression Chester played.
And this is just to give you an idea. It just shows the evolution of parts. The guitar part that Chester played had a cool progression to it but the sound of it was too acoustic guitar. So what we did was, we flipped it backwards. We effected it. I cut it up into four pieces and instead of arranging it 1-2-3-4, I arranged it 4-3-2-1 because it had been reversed. So it evolved into this thing with the different manipulations in the computer. It evolved into this thing that it is now. In fact, you can hear an early version of that on our "Party At The Pancake Festival" DVD. That's the DVD that came out over a year ago. There's a version of that towards the end of the DVD that's playing. You kind of get an idea of what it sounded like in the second stage of it's lifetime and now it's at it's third when we finished it. So that song is cool for that reason.
Another cool thing about it is that it's really the first time you hear some optimistic views, some optimistic lyrics from us. I think that lyrically this album is a little older, a little more mature hopefully. When we were writing a lot of songs for the first album, we're talking about writing as 18 and 19 year olds. Being 25 now, I feel like I just look at things a tiny bit differently. It doesn't really have much to do with where we're at with the success of the first album and it has everything to do with having seen some of the world and just being a little bit older. So, that's where that comes from. But you'll see overall on the album that it's still the same heavy and melodic and dynamic sound that is kind of our signature thing just with some new evolution added.
04 - "Lying From You"
That song will be impossible for any cover bands to play! Chester just
sings too damn hard. I think it's great. I think he did some great stuff
on that song. We all are really proud of that song. It's another song
with a great keyboard thing that we made, this kind of sample sound
at the beginning. It's going to be a really fun song to play live. I
could say the same thing for the song that comes after that.
"Lying From You" is about pushing someone away. The title means, making up lies to make another person angry so that they don't want to be around you; which is something that some people do subconsciously in relationship. That's not what my part of the song is about but I know that in a broader sense, when people start feeling negative feelings toward somebody else, just naturally they start doing things to make that person not want to be around them. It's a subliminal reaction. That works with friends. That works with relationships - either way, people do that.
05 - "Hit The Floor"
"Hit The Floor" is interesting because it's got this hip-hop
style beat. For all the technical musicians out there, there is one
thing that you'll notice right off the bat in the song. When you're
writing a big rock chorus, you come in on the one count, on the downbeat,
and you're just blaring music. The interesting thing about this song
is that it comes on the "and" after the one. It's a syncopated
start almost. For the technical musicians out there, you'll notice that
it was definitely a chance that we took, that ended up working out.
It was a difficult thing to make work and I think we feel pretty proud
of it.
Just as a side note, and this leads us into the next song, is what I think makes great writing. It's like being a great athlete. It's when you can do something that's very difficult in a way that seems easy or even natural. You notice a great athlete, doing something that is just impossible for the average person to do but they make it seem so easy. And in that song, that's one element of it. In "Hit The Floor", that's one thing that is really working in that song.
"Hit The Floor" is kind of about people who look down on other people. It's basically about people stepping on other people to get to the top and acting like they're invincible when everybody knows that you can't be that person forever. You can't step on other people to get to wherever you want to get to. It just ends up coming back and biting you. And even in that song there is definitely more to it than that.
06 - "Easier To Run"
In the next song, "Easier To Run", Rob is just killing the
drums. It's my favorite song that he's done. You listen to the song
and you enjoy the song or whatever but if you listen back and just listen
to the drums, he's playing some very complex stuff. A drummer who's
only got a couple of years under their belt is not going to be able
to play that song. I'm really happy for Rob on that song. I think he
really pulled it off.
Lyrically, it's kind of about escapism in a way. I think that's a really familiar topic for myself and for a lot of people in the world. If that weren't the case, then movie ticket sales wouldn't be so high. People go out and do things to get away from their life. That's what the song is about, it's easier to run away from your problems then to face them. We elaborate on that theme in the song. I think that one came together pretty quickly as far as lyrics go, which is nice. For us, it feels like magic when the lyrics to a song just come together in a couple of days. It's really a special kind of feeling.
It's just tough because for a lot of these songs, Chester and I in general, because we don't have the same life, we are talking about different things a little bit but when they come together in the song, it becomes one story. Sometimes I worry if I'm telling too much of my side of it because it is open to interpretation, even from the two of us a little bit, not much, but a little bit.
07 - "Faint"
"Faint" is a fun song. Brad actually brought that guitar part
in originally thinking that it would be 70 beats per minute or somewhere
in that vicinity I think. I'm not sure about the exact number. He played
it to a click during Ozzfest and he came back. He and I had done the
drum tracks to 140 beats per minute. First he argued with me and told
me that it wasn't supposed to be that then I told him, "I know
what you intended but I think this works." He listened to it and
he totally changed his mind. I just heard something different when I
first heard the part so that's how this came about. We're going to skip
the lyrics on that one. "Faint" was just a working title that
we wanted to keep. I don't know what the actual title would have been
but it wasn't that. That word doesn't even appear in the song.
08 - "Figure.09"
"Figure .09" is another song that will be a lot of fun to
play live. It's a really loud song. The first sound you hear sounds
like little conga drums or something. It's actually Joe tapping on his
turntables with a distortion pedal. So the distortion creates this drum
type sound when he hits his needle and his vinyl. So he made this little
beat just tapping on his records, which is really interesting. I think
it's stuff like that that shows where Joe's going. He's doing some really
creative things with his turntables. He's not limiting himself to just
scratching and rubbing them back and forth and playing samples. He did
some interesting stuff.
09 - "Breaking The Habit"
"Breaking The Habit" is a really interesting song. It will
stand out to a lot of people as a different sound for us. It's very
obviously Linkin Park but there are live strings and there is live piano.
The guitar doesn't ever hit 11. Basically, the way the song started
was as an interlude. It was going to be an instrumental track that was
ten minutes long. The guys convinced me to turn it into a full song
with verses and choruses and whatnot and add some lyrics. Well, five
year ago or something I tried to write this other song that never came
together. I had tried it 20 different times and it never worked because
it was always cheesy or it was too dark or it was too melodramatic or
something and I always ended up scrapping it. When I tried it out on
this song and the lyrics were finished in two hour, I couldn't believe
it. I mean, this is a song I had been trying to write for five years
and it just came together in two hours. It was amazing. It finally came
together and I'm really happy about that. I'm proud of that song in
a lot of ways. I put a lot of work into it. From the beat, to the strings,
to the piano, to the vocals, I put a lot of work in and the guys were
really supportive. I had a lot if great suggestions and helpful criticism
and that's why the song came out really well for me. It's easy for me
to say that I love the song because I wrote so much of it. I just think
it's a really powerful song. Chester's performance on it is one of his
best.
Lyrically, it's kind of just about getting away from the parts of you that you do not like. It goes into great deal about that type of situation. The things about our lyrics in general is that we spend so much time on them that there is no way I can tell you in conversation any better than the actual lyrics. If I sit here and think up something, that's an off-the-top-of-my-head summary of what those lyrics are about whereas those lyrics took five years to do. So those lyrics are the most accurate depiction of what that's about, not what I can tell you.
10 - "From The Inside"
"From The Inside" started with an idea that Phoenix had on
guitar. For the musicians out there, our songs are all in 4-4 time.
That goes for the songs that we've released in the past anyway. I've
tried a few things in 3-4, 6-8 or 7-8 before. Phoenix wanted to do a
song in 6-8 really badly and he put it together in a way that was obviously
going to work for us. We heard it and we knew that it was going to work.
He felt like there was something missing. What's interesting is that
Brad came in. We're all really open to other people helping us with
our parts, like re-writing parts and whatever. It's not something that
happens all the time but if somebody does have an idea, we're open to
listening. Phoenix said, "Here Brad. Take this guitar part and
make this work because it's almost there. It's just not quite right."
Brad all of the sudden added this almost 4-4 style thing over top of
the 6-8 verse which totally pulled the song together and makes it feel
like a Linkin Park song. Finally, when it came to writing the lyrics,
Chester had no problem throwing some stuff in the verses. I, on the
other hand, had no reference point for 6-8 time signature rapping. There
are probably only three or four songs I can think of where people have
rapped in 3-4 or 6-8 time and I didn't like how they did it. I'd heard
them and I wanted to do my own thing. Again, as simple as it sounds
on the record, you try out ten to two different things to realize what
is working and what's not. It takes a lot of time to get there. Needless
to say, I've figured out what I like and don't like to do over 6-8 time.
Now, the next challenge is going to be 7-8. I don't know, like a Tool
or Mudvayne song. Lyrically, I am going to defer again to the person
reading the lyrics because that song especially might be open to a little
bit of interpretation.
11 - "Nobody's Listening"
"Nobody's Listening" is a more hip-hop style track. Beats
and samples are the backbone of the song and of course, as always, we
make our own stuff. When I use the word "sample", I don't
mean that we're lifting it off somebody else's thing. We always create
our own thing and loop that because to me it just feels more genuine.
I can have more pride in a part that I wrote than a part that I lifted
off of somebody else's thing. We made this interesting thing off of
a Japanese flute with different Japanese flute sounds. It was actually
keyboard and some other breathy sounds that we used, some piano and
some drum stuff but it was most keyboard. It's like a real deal hip-hop
track. The challenge in making that fit with the album was in the sonics
and the vocals. At a certain point, we realized the song is like an
island. It's detached from the mainland, the rest of the album. We realized
that our bridge would be a little bit of guitar played a little differently.
Brad does this muted guitar part in the chorus. Chester and I kind of
play off each other's vocals. When we finished the vocals, we figured
that it probably worked.
12 - "Session"
"Session", is an instrumental track. I did all the beats.
Joe did all the scratching. Brad and I manipulated Joe's scratching
on the computer. We used digital effects on it that basically make it
impossible to play! It starts out as just this piano and this beat and
then beat starts kind of disintegrate then the piano starts disintegrating
then the guitar comes in. It's just this nice evolution of digital simplicity
to complete chaos and two and a half minutes later, you've been thrown
off a cliff.
13 - "Numb"
The last song is called "Numb" which starts with a nice keyboard
hook. I thinks it was a nice way to end the album because it kind of
sums up the record. It's very recognizable as our sound. It sounds like
a Linkin Park song but it does have some mood that Meteora has if that
makes any sense. Maybe I can say that better. When you hear it, you
can easily recognize it as a Linkin Park song but it obviously belongs
on Meteora. It obviously belongs in this new group of songs just because
of the way the tone of the song is and the lyrics are. It's kind of
about those times when you've got no feeling left or you just don't
care. It's almost like exhaustion or something which funny enough is
how we felt after touring last year.