Aug 12, 2025 admin_bitlc Features, Music News, Reviews 0
By Harrison Kristoff
After seven long years away from the stage, Linkin Park returned to Chicago last night and delivered an electrifying and emotional performance at the United Center on their From Zero World Tour. This wasn’t just a comeback show, it was the unveiling of a new era for the Grammy-winning band, one that embraces the future while honoring the past.
The night marked the live debut of new vocalist Emily Armstrong to Chicago, formerly of the hard-hitting Los Angeles band Dead Sara and from what I can find, the first time the band has played in town since 2014. From the moment she strode onto the center-stage platform, it was clear she wasn’t here to imitate Chester Bennington, she was here to bring her own raw fire to the mix. Her voice tore through the rafters on classics like “Papercut” and “Given Up,” blending seamlessly with Mike Shinoda’s vocals while adding a gritty, soulful edge that made the songs feel both familiar and fresh.
The emotional weight of Chester’s absence was palpable, but the band handled it with grace. Between songs, Shinoda spoke candidly about their journey since 2017, thanking fans for “sticking with us through the silence” and promising that Chester’s legacy would always be a part of Linkin Park’s DNA. At several moments, archival footage of Chester appeared on the massive split-rig video walls above the stage, drawing both cheers and quiet tears from the crowd.
The stage production was nothing short of jaw-dropping. Set in the round, with the band performing from a central platform, a massive floating split rig hovered above them, half lighting array, half video wall, shifting and rotating to create an ever-changing visual canvas. Each song had its own visual identity, from glitchy, graffiti-inspired animations during “Faint” to an abstract storm of light and shadow for “Somewhere I Belong.”
The show unfolded in four distinct acts, each with its own pacing and thematic arc. Act I was pure adrenaline, charging out of the gate with fan favorites and a few of the new tracks that Armstrong made her own. Act II brought the first surprise of the night: Tim McIlrath of Chicago’s own Rise Against emerged to join the band on “One Step Closer,” his sharp-edged vocals sparking a frenzy in the sold-out arena. Acts III and IV leaned into Linkin Park’s experimental side, blending electronic textures with crushing riffs before setting the stage for an encore that felt like a cathartic release.
The encore belonged to “Bleed It Out,” which closed the night in a storm of energy, confetti, and one last defiant singalong. The crowd’s roar didn’t fade even after the band took their bows it lingered, like the feeling that something momentous had happened.
Linkin Park’s return wasn’t just a reunion, it was a reinvention. With Emily Armstrong at the mic, Mike Shinoda steering the vision, and a show that balanced spectacle with sincerity, the band proved they can carry their history forward without being trapped by it. Chicago got the first taste of this new chapter, and if last night was any indication, Linkin Park’s story is far from over.
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Setlist: Linkin Park live in Chicago at United Center – August 11, 2025
Act I:
1. Somewhere I Belong
2. Crawling
3. Cut The Bridge
4. Lying From You
5. The Emptiness Machine
Act II:
6. The Catalyst
7. Burn It Down
8. Up From The Bottom
9. Where’d You Go
10. Waiting From The End
11. Lies Greed Misery
12. Two Faces
13. Joe Hahn Solo
14. When They Come For Me / Remember The Name
15. Given Up
16. One Step Closer
Act III:
17. Lost
18. Good Things Go
19. What I’ve Done
Act IV:
20. Overflow
21. Numb
22. In The End
23. Faint
Encore:
24. Papercut
25. A Place For My Head
26. Heavy Is The Crown
27. Bleed It Out
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