Phoenix MTV Interview
Linkin Park Say New Single 'The Catalyst' Is 'A Risk, But Worth It'
'We wanted a track that represented where the album was going to be and how it was going to work,' says bassist Phoenix Farrell.
Last week, gamers everywhere thrilled to the new trailer for the   upcoming "Medal of Honor," which was directed by Linkin Park's Joseph   Hahn and features the band's brand-new single, "The Catalyst."
And while the trailer no doubt had "MOH" fanatics going crazy, it may   have left LP fans feeling a bit confused. Because "The Catalyst" is   undoubtedly unlike any song the band has ever released. A moody,   synth-heavy, decidedly doomy rumination on the broken times in which we   live, it seems to back up the group's claims that their new album, A   Thousand Suns, will be a drastic departure from anything they've done in   the past.
And that, according to LP bassist Dave "Phoenix" Farrell, was precisely the point.
"We wanted a track that represented where the album was going to be and   how it was going to work, and this was really the track to do that. ...   It's a risk, but [it's] worth it," he told MTV News earlier this week.   "We've known [the album is] going to be different, and if fans were   expecting Hybrid Theory or Meteora, they're going to be surprised. It's   going to take people some time to figure it out and know what to do  with  it."
Farrell wouldn't go into greater detail about just how the new album,   due September 14, will differ from Linkin Park's previous efforts, but   any fan with a pair of ears should be able to tell based on "The   Catalyst" alone. The songs are bigger, deeper, decidedly weirder. And   while Farrell didn't exactly back up frontman Chester Bennington's   earlier claims that A Thousand Suns is a full-blown "concept" album, he   didn't really deny them either.
"I've never liked the title 'concept record,' to me that holds up the   idea of Tommy or The Wall. And I love those records, but this is not   that," he said. "There are a couple threads that run throughout it, but,   for us, the only concept is that it's not intended to be a collection   of individual songs. It's constructed in a way and thought of in terms   of 'How will it flow?' I would love ... in this day and age, for our   fans just once to sit down and listen to it from front to back. We want   it to work as an experience."
And to that end, Farrell said the band always wanted to tie "The   Catalyst" into a video game of some sort. The way they see it, it only   adds another layer to the experience. So when the "Medal of Honor" folks   approached them, they leapt at the opportunity. Though, sadly, working   with Electronic Arts — the publisher and developer of the "MOH" series  —  hasn't improved their gaming skills any. But you can't really blame  LP  for that. After all, they've been working on A Thousand Suns for a  long  time now.
"I loved the old 'Medal of Honor' games, but since we've been working on   the new album — and really, since I had kids — I've kind of hung it up   for a while," Farrell laughed. "It sucks because now I have a younger   brother who's 15 and when we play against each other, it's not even   competitive. It's ridiculous. And it pisses me off. He's laughing and   sh--. He's killing me with his knife."
source: LPA, MTV
 

 



 







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