CDNOW: What inspired you to become musicians? 

Mike Shinoda: My first concert experience was one of the things 
that inspired me most. That was the Killer B's show, which was
Anthrax with Public Enemy, and obviously that's the blend of 
music I've been interested in kind of performing since then, 
so it was really influential. 

Brad Delson: I got my first guitar about 11 years ago. 
I was probably in the sixth grade, [and that was how I got] 
inspired to grow long hair, 'cause that was the era in which 
Guns 'N' Roses, Metallica -- those bands were at their height, 
but my hair doesn't grow long really. It kind of grows outward 
so I tried to straighten it with a hair dryer and wound up trying 
to chemically straighten it, and then it died. So now I'm left 
with the bare minimum. 

Shinoda: Actually, I remember what that looked like, and it wasn't 
like your typical long-hair look from that time period. He really
had a mullet. 

Delson: I had a mullet. Yeah, and that's inspired me to 
overcompensate ever since. 

CDNOW: Mike, you did time in art school, didn't you? 

Shinoda: I did time at art school, and it was rough. 
I went to the Art Center in Pasadena. A school like that is 
really rough. I mean, you're in class for eight hours a day 
and then you've got eight hours of homework, and it's crazy. 
Actually, that was a good exercise in doing something creative 
and working hard at it -- keeping your focus on your goals and 
being able to take criticism. For example, in the same way that 
we'll make a song together -- we write a part and then we'll 
have to show it to the band and say "What do you think?" 
I learned that at school. Like, I have to paint a piece and 
take it to class, put it on the board in front of 30 people, 
step away from it, let them look at it and tear it apart. 
And if I agreed with them, then great. If I got really 
uncomfortable, then they're probably right, and I was just 
not OK with that. 

CDNOW: Mike and Chester's combined vocals are very forceful. 
Who writes the words? 

Shinoda: When it comes to the lyrics, we totally work on 
them together. In general, we try and come up with something 
that's honest and emotional without being like, over-descriptive. 
I don't want to like hit you over the head with some story and 
lay it all out word for word. We just want to give you a starting 
point and let you take what you can from that, relate your own 
experience to that, and find the emotion that way. We try and 
write something that's cohesive -- we've got two vocalists, 
but we don't want to have two points of view. We want to keep 
it simple. 

CDNOW: Is "One Step Closer" about a particular person? 

Shinoda: Let me explain it this way: We were in the studio working 
on lyrics for a very long time and some days got to be really long
and frustrating and that song was written [during] one of those 
periods of time, where we were extremely frustrated with writing; 
we were extremely frustrated with a lot of things going on in our 
personal lives, so we just let it all out. 

CDNOW: None of the tracks on Hybrid Theory breaks the four-minute 
mark. Was that deliberate?

Delson: I'm obsessed with song structure and form, and the way 
that a song flows together. I'm interested [in that] as much as 
[I am in] writing guitar parts in the overall structure of the 
song and making sure it's as tightly written and as fun to listen 
to as possible … Aside from making each song succinct, we really 
wanted a crafted album. The album isn't super long -- we wanted 
to create an album that from start to finish holds your attention 
and grabs you. 

CDNOW: You've been described as a rap/rock hybrid, but the album is 
actually more reminiscent of Nine Inch Nails. 

Shinoda: Originally, when the band was called Hybrid Theory, 
our idea was that we're bringing those musical styles together, 
but now we've kind of grown out of that definition. 
We want to put so many different things together -- that's not even 
our focus anymore. It's like that's second nature at this point. 
The thing we're focusing on is putting together these different 
emotions. Our album cover kind of sums that up. We have a soldier 
with these dragonfly wings -- delicate, beautiful wings on this 
rugged spray paint, stenciled soldier. So in our case I guess the 
hybrid would be the heavy music and the really emotional and 
introspective stuff put together. 

CDNOW: Do you feel pressure to succeed because you're signed to a 
major label -- to make their investment in you worthwhile? 

Delson: No. When we were deciding where to go we chose the company 
that really believed in what we were doing, and that's something 
that's more encouraging than adding any pressure … We write music 
that is meaningful to us and that's honest. This is what we're doing 
with our lives. If I weren't passionate about this, I'd do something 
else I was passionate about. We hope a lot of people will get 
something out of the music we're making. That's why we're in a 
band -- it's communication. 

    Source: geocities.com/tara_1984