
December 8, 2024
Kanye West’s latest video has everyone talking, and at the center of it all is none other than his daughter, North West. The 10-year-old is making waves with her charismatic performance, showcasing...
Read more
December 8, 2024
The wait is almost over—The Weeknd’s highly anticipated album drops tomorrow, and fans are buzzing with excitement. Known for his genre-defying sound and cinematic storytelling, the artist has been...
Read more
December 8, 2024
Cher, the iconic Goddess of Pop, has revealed that her upcoming album might be her final musical project. At 77 years old, the singer-songwriter and actress says she’s ready to take a step back...
Read more
December 8, 2024
Icelandic-Chinese singer-songwriter Laufey (pronounced *Loy-vay*) is bringing a fresh, modern twist to jazz, channeling the timeless allure of icons like Ella Fitzgerald. With her unique blend of...
Read more
December 5, 2024
A$AP Rocky, born Rakim Athelaston Mayers in Harlem, New York, has become one of the most influential figures in both hip-hop and fashion since his breakthrough in the early 2010s. Known for his...
Read more
December 5, 2024
Taylor Swift has once again cemented her legacy in the music industry, earning the number two spot on Billboard’s Greatest Pop Stars of the 21st Century list. This recognition celebrates Swift's...
Read more
December 5, 2024
When two of pop music’s most iconic artists join forces, magic is inevitable. Bruno Mars and Lady Gaga’s collaborative track, Die With a Smile, has taken the music world by storm, shattering...
Read more
December 5, 2024
Selena Gomez is a name that resonates worldwide, synonymous with talent, resilience, and versatility. From her early days as a Disney Channel star to becoming a global icon in music, acting, and...
Read more
December 5, 2024
The music world is buzzing after Drake publicly accused Universal Music Group (UMG) of using bots to inflate the popularity of Kendrick Lamar’s latest diss track. Known for his own sharp lyrics and...
Read more
November 29, 2024
From the moment Rihanna burst onto the music scene with her 2005 hit “Pon de Replay,” it was clear that she was destined for superstardom. Over the years, she has transformed from a Barbadian pop...
Read more
November 29, 2024
In a world where the music industry has long been dominated by patriarchal norms and systemic biases, Lady Gaga has emerged as a revolutionary force. Her career isn’t just about chart-topping hits...
Read more
November 29, 2024
Bruno Mars is no ordinary pop sensation. While his music is rooted in the feel-good vibes of party anthems, Mars offers more than just catchy beats and sing-along choruses. After witnessing his...
Read more.png)
The silence that followed my mother’s words felt like the weight of the world pressing in on me. I was 17, but in that moment, I felt small, like that eight-year-old kid again, curled up in my bedroom, hoping for one of Linkin Park’s songs to drift through the radio. I wasn’t prepared for it — the loss, the finality of it. Chester's voice had been with me for so long, a soundtrack to the most formative years of my life. He was the one who let me know that it was okay to feel broken, to feel angry, to feel like the world wasn’t always a place that made sense.
Even as I locked myself away from the world outside, memories flooded my mind. The countless hours I’d spent with Meteora, rewinding that scratched CD, listening to every note of “Numb” as if it was the only thing that understood me. I remembered the first time I saw them live, at the 2012 Honda Civic Tour. I can still hear the raw energy of Chester’s screams echoing in my head, the crowd chanting in unison. I’ll never get that moment again. And that hurt, in a way that no words could fully describe.
But the strangest thing of all was how vivid the AMVs were in my mind. The ones on YouTube, the ones that were sometimes poorly made but somehow made me feel something deeper than I had expected. Linkin Park’s music, paired with chaotic, animated visuals, became a kind of collective experience for me and millions of others. Those AMVs weren’t just fan-made videos; they were an extension of the emotions that Chester’s voice unlocked in us. And now, as I replay those memories, it hits me again — the loss. The sense that something irreplaceable is gone.
Chester’s death was more than the loss of a musician; it felt like the end of an era. He wasn’t just the voice of Linkin Park, he was the voice of a generation. His music was the bridge for so many of us, a connection between the raw intensity of rock and the vulnerability of human emotion. And even now, years after his passing, that connection remains. The music lives on, and so does his voice — in every lyric, in every AMV, in every memory.
But I still wish I could hear him sing "In The End" just one more time.