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Linkin Park – One More Light Live: A Somber Tribute

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by Derek Oswald

One More Light Live

When I first received my review copy of One More Light Live, I’ll admit that I felt uncertainty and trepidation about how I would handle hearing the late Chester Bennington’s voice 5 months after his tragic passing.

As a young teenager back in the early 2000s, growing up with the angst and emotions that come with adolescence, Linkin Park was the soundtrack to my life in ways that no other bands could match.

I can still remember where I was on July 20th when the news first broke that Chester Bennington had passed away. It was mid-afternoon, and I had just been talking with my former editor Brian about items unrelated to AltWire when he wrote to me the words that I’ll never forget ‘โ€ฆplease tell me this is a hoax’. Upon clicking the link, instantly emblazoned across my screen were the words ‘Linkin Park Singer Chester Bennington Dead’. My expression turned to one of horror.

Frantically I picked up my phone and, in a panicked blurโ€ฆcalled every label contact I had, desperately seeking any hint or confirmation that this was a wildly disgusting and inappropriate hoax. Finally, when official confirmation came from Chester’s friend, bandmate, and co-vocalist Mike Shinoda that the reports were indeed accurate, I wept at the loss of such a massive part of my formative years. The blue and red flame tattooed hand that previously pulled so many a tortured soul out from the abyss had fallen victim to his own demons, and the voice of a generation was gone.

As fellow musicians, publications, fans, and the industry processed his passing, Linkin Park held an outstanding tribute concert at the Hollywood Bowl with several guest performers. While it certainly was an emotional roller coaster, it was a cathartic and vital moment of closure and remembrance for Chester. A couple of months later, the band pays further tribute to Chesterโ€™s voice and legacy through their latest release, One More Light Live, on December 15th. Recorded throughout the bandโ€™s European tour earlier this year and featuring many of their biggest hits, One More Light Live enshrines the incredible performances Chester gave in what would tragically become his final shows.

And what a fantastic and beautiful tribute it is.

There is something equally haunting yet beautiful about the display of Chesterโ€™s talent over the albumโ€™s 16 tracks. Songs like โ€œNew Divideโ€ (from the Transformers 2 Soundtrack) are performed with vigor and aggression that rival the studio version. The live recordโ€™s stripped down and primarily acoustic songs like โ€œCrawlingโ€ and โ€œOne More Lightโ€ pack a new emotional wallop in light of the tragedy that came only months after the bandโ€™s latest and most personal studio album, One More Light, was released. Itโ€™s hard not to hear these tracks on One More Light Live and be overcome with emotion when confronted with the reality that the voice we hear front and center on this live album is gone.

And perhaps that is what makes One More Light Live so somber, emotional, and impactful. Every song and sung syllable seems to take on new meaning and feeling in light of the circumstances. For the most part, the band is in top form on these tracks, and the mixing is so well done: it feels as if you are there in the crowd singing along. On โ€œSharp Edges,โ€ Chester comments, and comedically so, โ€œMan, playing guitar and singing is really hardโ€ after struggling slightly with the guitar part, just before dusting himself off and delivering a rock-solid performance of โ€œNumb.โ€

Moments like those demonstrate precisely why he was, and will forever be, one of the best to ever do it. In promoting this record, the band stated that โ€œthe shows we played together during the early summer of 2017 were extraordinary,โ€ and itโ€™s not hard to see why the band felt that way when listening to Chester deliver some of his most vulnerable and passionate performances.

One More Light Live really needed an accompanying live DVD, but even without visual aids, itโ€™s hard not to envision what it was like to be at one of those shows. When the album first begins and the lyrics to โ€˜Roads Untraveledโ€™ play through a vocoder, itโ€™s impossible not to get chills, as you would during those moments before Linkin Park would take the stage. Itโ€™s a beautifully haunting moment that sets the tone for the rest of the album and prepares the listener for whatโ€™s about to come.

It’s hard to say how fans will receive this album. For me, the album was therapeutic but also bittersweet considering that this will likely be Linkin Park’s last release to feature Chester’s vocals. While the band’s future remains uncertain, with no plans announced for any unreleased material and demos from the group’s 20-year history, we have no guarantee we will ever hear another release featuring Chester Bennington. 

Therefore, in providing fans this powerful look inside the magic that was the One More Light Tour, Chester has been afforded a chance to give his final performance to the world, and one that will live on for eternity. One More Light Live is a permanent time capsule of a vocalist at his absolute peak, who departed from this world far too soon. What begins as a sad reminder of what fans would have seen on the band’s North American tour ends as a celebration of everything that made Chester Bennington so truly special.

Fittingly, we have decided that, unlike any of our other album reviews, we will not provide a score for this album. One More Light Live is not a display of new material, subject to the opinions and scores of the masses. Instead, it is a beautiful goodbye, which allows us to hear Chester doing what he loved most โ€“ extending his hand to his fans one last time.

So crank One More Light Live up to 11, grab your lighters or your cell phones. This is one show you will not want to miss.

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