Cermin Diri

August 31st, 2005 by fizzodominator

PETIKAN DARI KATA-KATA SEORANG MOTIVATOR TERKENAL TANAHAIR

Assalamualaikum dan salam sejahtera,
Dalam celoteh kali ini saya teringat kenapa kita susah sangat untuk
berjaya.  Sebabnya ialah kerana kita tidak menggunakan masa kita dengan
berkesan.  Saya teringat satu peristiwa bagaimana seorang kawan telah
kehilangan wang sebanyak RM50 ringgit.  Dia cuba ingatkan kembali dimana
dia berada sepanjang hari tersebut dan dia telah berusaha mencari
wangnya yang hilang itu.  Dia telah mengambil masa hampir 7 jam berusaha
memikirkan semua pergerakannya dan pergi mencarinya.  Akhirnya dia pulang
dengan hampa, murung, kecewa dan marah.  Tetapi dia tidak sedar, kalau
dia letakkan fikiran dan usahanya melakukan sesuatu untuk mencari wang
baru dengan melakukan sesuatu pekerjaan atau perniagaan maka dia pasti
akan pulang dengan sesuatu hasil!  Dia takkan pulang dengan tangan
kosong dengan masa 7 jam itu.  Malah hasilnya mungkin lebih besar dari wang
RM50 ringgit yg dia hilang itu.  Tetapi itulah kita, kita lebih
bazirkan masa kita kepada sesuatu yg kurang berkesan dalam hidup.  Kita lebih
meratapi dan membuang banyak masa dengan sesuatu yg bukan lagi milik
kita tanpa kita berusaha untuk memperbaiki keadaan diri kita sendiri.

Ingat, walau apa pun ujian Allah untuk kita… life must go on!

Fikir-fikirkanlah.

LP’s Bio

August 26th, 2005 by fizzodominator

Ask Linkin Park guitarist Brad Delson for a wish-list of bands he’d like to tour with, and he’s ready with a response. "We told our manager, ‘Pick a band and we can tour with them.’ Our music reaches out in so many directions that there’s pretty much an unlimited amount of cool bands with which we could play.."

Delson is understandably proud of the diversity and uniqueness apparent on the band’s debut album, Hybrid Theory (the band’s original name). Built on an aggressive hard rock foundation, flavored with hip-hop vocal styling and electronic flourishes, Linkin Park’s sound is utterly their own, an accomplishment strengthened by the band’s remarkably powerful and unforced songwriting. But almost everything about Linkin Park has been unforced, including their Southern California origins.

Delson and emcee/vocalist Mike Shinoda attended the same high school together, where Delson also met the band’s drummer, Rob Bourdon. Shinoda then hooked up with DJ Joseph Hahn while studying painting at the Pasadena Art Center. The final piece in the puzzle was singer Chester Bennington, a transplanted Arizona native who started making records when he was sixteen.

"Since I learned how to talk I’ve been telling everybody I was going to grow up to be a singer," laughs Bennington. "When I was two, I used to run around singing Foreigner songs – there’s tapes of me doing that."

The combination of Bennington’s rich, mammoth vocal style clicked immediately with Shinoda’s streetwise emceeing. "I think one of Chester and Mike’s goals is to be as integrated as possible," offers Delson. "We want our sound to come across so that people go, ‘oh, that’s Linkin Park,’ not ‘I heard this hip-hop part, and now they’re hitting me over the head with this rock chorus.’ We want everything to have dynamics, but also a continuous cohesive flavor, so that you know what band you’re listening to."

It was that cohesive style and instantly memorable songs that attracted immediate attention, starting with a publishing offer after the band’s very first show at L.A.’s famed Whisky. After showcasing around town and eventually inking with Warner Bros., the band began work on their first album with producer Don Gilmore (Eve 6, Lit, Pearl Jam). "We met with a lot of people and had a very difficult time deciding," says Shinoda. "But Don, aside from making things sound good, stood out as someone who could really push us further as songwriters.

The end result is an album that’s as well-crafted and melodic as it is confrontational, with a strong lyrical message.

"We try to push real things through in our lyrics; whether it’s feeling insignificant or questioning your own thoughts or discovering the dark side of yourself."

Weaving influences as diverse as Deftones, Nine Inch Nails, Aphex Twin, and The Roots into a single unified whole, Linkin Park and Hybrid Theory are living proof that a fresh combination of talent, an unwavering dedication to craft, and a pure artistic vision can result in a powerful musical statement.

"I’ve wanted to do this my whole life, and I feel really blessed to be here," says Bennington. "A lot of hard work and dedication and faith can get you through anything and make it happen."

Breaking the habit

August 26th, 2005 by fizzodominator

Memories consume
Like opening the wound
I’m picking me apart again
You all assume
I’m safe here in my room
[Unless I try to start again]

I don’t want to be the one
The battles always choose
‘Cause inside I realize
That i’m the one confused

I don’t know what’s worth fighting for
Or why I have to scream
I don’t know why I instigate
And say what I don’t mean
I don’t know how I got this way
I know it’s not alright
So I’m breaking the habit
Tonight

Clutching my cure
I tightly lock the door
I try to catch my breath again
I hurt much more
Than anytime before
I had no options left again

I’ll paint it on the walls
‘Cause i’m the one at fault
I’ll never fight again
And this is how it ends

I don’t know what’s worth fighting for
Or why I have to scream
But now I have some clarity
To show you what I mean
I don’t know how I got this way
I’ll never be alright
So I’m breaking the habit
Breaking the Habit
Tonight