Linkin Park - Meteora (2003)
Artist: Linkin Park
Title: Meteora
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Warner Bros. Records 9362-48462-2
Genre: Nu Metal, Pop Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log)
Total Time: 0:36:41
Total Size: 274 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Meteora
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: Warner Bros. Records 9362-48462-2
Genre: Nu Metal, Pop Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log)
Total Time: 0:36:41
Total Size: 274 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Foreword (00:13)
02. Don't Stay (03:08)
03. Somewhere I Belong (03:34)
04. Lying From You (02:55)
05. Hit The Floor (02:44)
06. Easier To Run (03:24)
07. Faint (02:42)
08. Figure.09 (03:18)
09. Breaking The Habit (03:16)
10. From The Inside (02:56)
11. Nobody's Listening (02:59)
12. Session (02:25)
13. Numb (03:08)
Meteora, the follow-up album of the new material to Linkin Park's phenomenal eight-times-platinum-in-the-United-States (international sales approaching 6 million) debut album, Hybrid Theory, promises to be one of the most important albums of the year. A deluxe 40-page booklet accompanies the Enhanced CD presented in a Digipak.
Amazon.com
Linkin Parks second studio effort (not counting the 2002 remix album Reanimation) overflows with glossy production values and Big Rock oomph, fully embracing the pop instincts of their Hybrid Theory debut. For many, Theory sounded inexcusably corporate, from its too-timely rap-rock sound to the long list of product endorsements included in the liner notes. Meteora will only amplify those complaints, but this album is actually truer to the bands nature. Its still impossible not to hear strains of Limp Bizkit, Korn, Rage Against the Machine, and the like. None of those acts, howeve, would try something as blatantly anthemic as "Easier to Run," which would sound fine to a Def Leppard fan, or as borderline danceable as "Breaking the Habit" and "Session." Linkin Park is what Trent Reznor was always afraid of becoming, but if you ever wished he would drop the pretenses and just make a hair-metal record, you'll find Meteora to your liking. --Matthew Cooke
Amazon.com
Linkin Parks second studio effort (not counting the 2002 remix album Reanimation) overflows with glossy production values and Big Rock oomph, fully embracing the pop instincts of their Hybrid Theory debut. For many, Theory sounded inexcusably corporate, from its too-timely rap-rock sound to the long list of product endorsements included in the liner notes. Meteora will only amplify those complaints, but this album is actually truer to the bands nature. Its still impossible not to hear strains of Limp Bizkit, Korn, Rage Against the Machine, and the like. None of those acts, howeve, would try something as blatantly anthemic as "Easier to Run," which would sound fine to a Def Leppard fan, or as borderline danceable as "Breaking the Habit" and "Session." Linkin Park is what Trent Reznor was always afraid of becoming, but if you ever wished he would drop the pretenses and just make a hair-metal record, you'll find Meteora to your liking. --Matthew Cooke