Chester Bennington’s Mom Feels ‘Betrayed’ by Linkin Park Over ‘Hurtful’ Emily Armstrong Replacement
Linkin Park‘s recent reunion has sparked a lot of complicated feelings and opinions, the latest of which comes from late vocalist Chester Bennington’s mom.
In interviews with Rolling Stone published Thursday (Sept. 19), Susan Eubanks shared that she feels “betrayed” by the entire ordeal, alleging that no one in the band told her that they had plans to reunite, much less that they were adding Dead Sara’s Emily Armstrong as its new lead singer. “They told me that if they were ever going to do something, they would let me know,” she told the publication. “They didn’t let me know, and they probably knew that I wouldn’t going to be very happy. I’m very upset about it.”
Instead, Eubanks says she learned of the news — which Linkin Park announced via livestream Sept. 5 with plans to release a new album, From Zero, and embark on a tour — on Google, after which she tuned in to the stream to find Armstrong singing Bennington’s part in one of the band’s songs. “I’m just going to say it, [Armstrong was] screeching her way through a very high note,” she said, adding that she immediately clicked off and started crying.
“I feel like they’re trying very hard to erase the past,” Eubanks continued. “They’re performing songs that Chester sang. And I don’t know how the fans are taking it, but I know how I take it. And having [Armstrong] singing my son’s songs is hurtful.”
Eubanks also alleged that guitarist Mike Shinoda used to threaten to replace Bennington with a female vocalist — whose range might be more naturally suited for Linkin Park’s songs — when her son was still alive. “He often put Chester down,” she claimed of Shinoda. “He said Mike told him at rehearsal that, ‘If you decide you’re leaving, we’re going to replace you with a girl.’ And Chester was dumbfounded and hurt.”
Billboard has reached out to Linkin Park’s reps for comment.
Linkin Park’s reunion follows a seven-year hiatus that came after Bennington’s death in 2017. While some fans are happy to see the group back at it again, others took issue with the addition of Armstrong, be it her perceived inability to fill Bennington’s shoes or her past affiliations with Scientologist and convicted rapist Danny Masterson. The latter issue lead Armstrong to release a statement Sept. 6 distancing herself from the That ’70s Show actor, emphasizing that she hasn’t spoken to him since supporting him at a single court date in 2020.
Another person who’s spoken out against Linkin Park’s reunion is Bennington’s son Jaime, who also claims the band didn’t consult him ahead of its reunion and slammed Armstrong’s involvement as “quietly erasing [his] father’s life and legacy in real time.” Later, Jaime said that he’d received abuse online from Linkin Park fans in response to his comments.
For Eubanks, a better way forward would’ve been leaving Linkin Park’s previous work in the past. “Don’t put [Armstrong] out there to sing Chester’s songs and then act like this was always the way it should have been,” she told Rolling Stone. “Now you can just put out new songs. But don’t bother to put out Chester’s songs with Emily singing them.”
Hannah Dailey
Billboard