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Kill The Music

Kill The Music
Reviews
KTM Podcast
About
Features
Editorials Interviews Guest Blogs Retrospectives Show Reviews Track By Track Photo Galleries Album Streams Spotify Playlists Career Spotlight Unsigned Spotlight Top 10 Countdowns The Daily Complaint
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This Day In Music History: October 24th

Little did Linkin Park know that their debut album would go on to sell 27 million copies. Our friends at The New Fury wrote a great piece on this influential album that countless bands ripped off. You can hate on this band all you want but don't act like you didn't jam this band back in the day.

It’s easy to see why the album was incredibly successful. It merged accessible song structures, instantly relatable lyrics, and was released at the peak of the nu-metal era, making it a launching pad for their career after years of toiling away in their home state of California.

Newer:Get Bewitched with November's Magical Loot CrateOlder:Unsigned Spotlight: Lara Americo
PostedOctober 24, 2016
AuthorJordan Mohler
TagsThis Day In Music History, linkin park, hybrid theory

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