This last
month, I was shocked at the news of the passing of Chester Charles Bennington, the
frontman for Linkin Park. I’m usually not taken aback by celebrity deaths,
since I am too removed from the entertainment scene to feel a connection either
to the lifestyle or its inhabitants. This however, was different. I felt sick
and shaken, especially because he committed suicide. He hung himself in his home.
Linkin
Park released their debut album in 2000. I first heard of them and came across ‘Hybrid
Theory’ when I was in junior college, at age 16. The album was a huge
commercial success but I never would have guessed this was the band’s debut
effort. The lead singer was a skinny, bespectacled, bejeweled, earnest looking guy, with
one of the most unique voices ever.
When I
was in college, kids branded themselves metal-heads and considered the mosh-pit
as an exclusive club, entry into which was determined by the heaviness of the
rock bands one was ‘influenced by’. I never quite understood the tribalism of
college kids and found myself swimming against the tide, in more respects than
one.
When I
first listened to the Hybrid Theory cassette – yes, a cassette. CDs were just
becoming popular and not everyone had a CD player - they seemed
to me to be yet another band seeking popularity based on manufactured angst. As
I went down the playlist, I was fascinated by the unusual combination of lyrical depth, melodic composition, and vocal firepower. Chester’s range was incredible – from low whispers, to soulful
croons to feral screams. His heart was truly in it, in the fullest sense of the term.
I enjoyed
their next album as well, Meteora. ‘Crawling’, ‘Numb’ and ‘In the End’ became increasingly
popular and went on to become their most recognized songs. Although I liked the
popular numbers, my preferred songs were the lesser known ones like ‘This is my
December’. The lyrics were heartfelt and moving -
“And I'd give it all away
Just to have somewhere
To go to
Give it all away
To have someone
To come home to”
Chester
would have been in his early thirties, when his star was rising in the 2000s. At
that time, I had no idea of Chester Bennington’s personal story. Not even the vaguest
idea about his searing pain, his unrelenting heartache and the demons he fought
on a daily basis. I read his biography only
after his death, and then, many of the haunting lyrics he had penned, came
flooding back and made awful sense.
After college, I moved on from Linkin Park, and
save for some singles like ‘What I’ve done’ largely lost touch with their work.
‘What I’ve done’ was striking, with lyrics drenched in despair but lurching
toward hope. Much like he was trying to find God, he sang “let mercy come and wash away what I've done".
In the
end, though, he gave in to the demons who vied for his life. Through his
life, with gut-wrenching frequency, he felt like giving up, throwing in the towel and severing the last
thread of sanity he was hanging on to. Always inching one step closer to the edge. In the land of the living, death stalked
him unremittingly -
“I'll
face myself to cross out what I've become
Erase
myself
And let go of what I've done”
#chesterbennington #linkinpark #hybridtheory #meteora
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