The Star Malaysia - Star2

Not your average Joe

Linkin Park’s Joe hahn talks band, K-pop and future plans.

- By IM EUN-BYEL

BEING in a band is cool, especially if the band is Linkin Park.

The iconic American rock band has produced numerous hits, including In The End and Numb, since its debut in 1996 and boasts a long list of awards. Since the tragic loss of its vocalist Chester Bennington in 2017, the band is on hiatus.

Still, the band exists and Joe Hahn has been part of its miraculous journey through the years, standing in the back as the DJ. The 42-year-old Korean-American artiste is now stepping forward in South Korea, sharing the story of Linkin Park and offering advice to aspiring musicians on a TV show here.

Hahn is a jury member, along with other big figures from the South Korean music industry, on Super Band, a talent show that is currently airing in the country.

As part of Linkin Park, Hahn hopes to share his story with the contestant­s. Though now establishe­d, the group had its difficulti­es in the beginning. At first, producers thought the band was just a bunch of kids doing weird music.

“Nobody wanted to sign with us, we met almost every label. And people did not understand. They needed us to decide whether we are going more hip-hop or rock,” he recalled.

The band’s music was something new – a mix of everything from metal rock and hip-hop to disk jockeying. They each were doing their own version of music, creating synergy with how the music genres worked together.

“We took fate into our own hands and we started building our own fan base. We made cassette tapes, CDs and went to clubs to give out flyers,” he recounted.

“What we did actually worked so well, we had a marketing company promoting other bands.

“I want to share these stories. I see the disappoint­ment on the faces (of contestant­s), but they actually are super talented. Any one of them can be successful and the combinatio­n can be even more successful in the context of a band.”

At a press conference held recently to promote the show, the jury – including Hahn – expressed sorrow that bands that perform their own music seem to have fallen out of the mainstream music scene in South Korea.

The entertainm­ent industry has been tightly evolving around K-pop idol groups.

“When I am in the States, people are talking so much about K-pop. I think it’s pretty brilliant how these labels have been able to recognise things that work and systematic­ally create what they call as the K-pop machine,” the

Los Angeles-based artiste said.

“I have appreciati­on for that but I know there is a lot more (to Korean music) than that,” he said. “I actually met some people from those companies, they actually like this kind of music, but as a business it is a lot more difficult.”

Yet he was sure up-and-coming bands like

Linkin Park would have their day too.

“We just need whatever the next Nirvana was. You need someone strong, a front man. (Super Band) can actually bring the conversati­on back on the table. It could be through the show or through someone watching the show,” he said.

Though Hahn strongly calls out for the next wave, he still greatly appreciate­s the roaring

K-pop trend. He says being a

Korean is something cool now, with the country leading various industries around the world.

Hahn’s father was a miner and his mother was a nurse, both in Germany. Mass migration from Korea to Germany happened in the 1960s and 1970s, when West Germany invited workers. His parents were part of that diaspora. “It was very difficult to grow up as an Asian in America, but you know, now it’s like things are changing,” the Dallasborn musician said.

Hahn believes the K-pop trend could lead to something bigger.

“One thing I think about the K-pop factory, it is a great training ground. (The trainees) can learn so much, but they can take that training and turn that into artistry.”

That is why Hahn likes BTS. He even worked on a music video of Steve Aoki’s Waste It On Me track featuring BTS last year.

“More than the music itself, I love the story. They are thinking about their fans. It’s really important, you know. There is a few components that I would give (as advice), know your audience and have a relationsh­ip with them, and become an artist,” he said.

While some may know of Hahn only for his role in Linkin Park, there is more to him than that. He is also a producer, photograph­er and director. He showed his short film The Seed at the Busan Internatio­nal Film Festival in 2006. “While I am here, I get to meet with people and see what the possibilit­ies are, whether it will be art or fashion.

“I am very open to it. I think in the past, I wasn’t, because I was focusing on certain things,” he said.

Deeply involved in photograph­y, Hahn recently held an exhibition in China.

“I have many interests. Of course the music is the main thing that people know me for. But I actually started with visual arts in college,” he said. “When I was young, I used to love comic books. I used to draw all the time.”

After studying visual arts in college, Hahn started work in special effects, designing imaginativ­e creatures and doing storyboard­ing for movies and TV.

“With film you have passage of time. That was the beginning of me,” he said. – The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

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 ??  ?? hahn (fourth from left), who studied visual arts in college, is responsibl­e for the artworks on some of Linkin Park’s albums. — Filepic
hahn (fourth from left), who studied visual arts in college, is responsibl­e for the artworks on some of Linkin Park’s albums. — Filepic

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