LINKIN PARK - Meteora (reissue) - Vinyl (LP)

Sold Date: August 3, 2024
Start Date: August 1, 2024
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Free delivery on many items.   Same-day despatch, no-question returns.   Authorised dealers - full technical support.   Online since 1997. Shop categories Information LINKIN PARK Meteora (reissue) (limited gatefold clear gold & red splattered vinyl LP + insret) Warner

Cat: 009362 4844051. Rel: 29 Jul 24
Metal


Side 1 - Track 1. ForewordSide 1 - Track 2. Don't StaySide 1 - Track 3. Somewhere I BelongSide 1 - Track 4. Lying From YouSide 1 - Track 5. Hit The FloorSide 1 - Track 6. Easier To RunSide 1 - Track 7. FaintSide 2 - Track 1. Figure.09Side 2 - Track 2. Breaking The HabitSide 2 - Track 3. From The InsideSide 2 - Track 4. Nobody's ListeningSide 2 - Track 5. SessionSide 2 - Track 6. Numb

It's difficult to describe to those too young to have been there and to those too old to give a toss, just how rife the anticipation was for the sophomore full-length from nu-metal giants Linkin Park following on from the global success of their multi-platinum selling debut album Hybrid Theory in 2000. Following what felt like an eternal three years, both shortened and lengthened by the bloated remix album Reanimation, 2003's Meteora was nothing short of lightning striking in the same place twice. Debuting at number 1 on the Billboard 200, certified 8xPlatinium and currently ranked as the 8th highest selling album of the 21st century, to call the band's second album a success seems like a very muted understatement when anthems such as 'Somewhere I Belong', 'Faint', and, 'Numb' are still some of the highest charting and most world-renowned metal singles to ever blare out across the airwaves. While musically drifting further away from their nu-metal beginnings with each subsequent project, both Meteora and its predecessor belong to a subset of genre-defining classics that appear to become more embraced and less maligned with age, as the nu-metal subgenre becomes less of a dirty word. It also goes without saying that the incomparable vocal presence of late frontman Chester Bennington as well as his vulnerable and cathartic lyricism take on a far more bleak and oppressive shade with the folly of hindsight.