EVANESCENCE's AMY LEE shoots down rumor she is LINKIN PARK's new singer
But says she “might be willing to do it part time"
24-04-2024
In a new interview with Canada’s iHeart Radio, EVANESCENCE‘s Amy Lee was asked about the recent rumors that LINKIN PARK has recruited a female singer and some LP fans’ desire to see her step in as the replacement for that band’s late vocalist Chester Bennington. The interview took place in celebration of the announcement of EVANESCENCE tour through Canada with HALESTORM.
“That is an incredible compliment,” she said after being told that she was a fan favorite to fill the slot. “I have not heard that. No, I have not been contacted by LINKIN PARK or anything like that. But I’m a huge fan feel like our worlds, our fanbases are a lot of the same people.”
She continued: “That’s really sweet. We never… Well, did we play shows together? I don’t know if EVANESCENCE and LINKIN PARK were on a festival together or whatever. We met. We were in the studio at the same time. When we were making ‘Fallen’, I just briefly got to have a conversation or two with Chester. He was really sweet.
“But no, it’s not true,” she clarified in regard to the rumors that could be LINKIN PARK‘s new singer. “But that’s awesome. They should ask me about that. I don’t have a ton of free time, but I might do it part time.”
The rumor about LINKIN PARK recruiting a female vocalist was apparently started by ORGY frontman Jay Gordon who mentioned during a radio interview that he had “heard” that they were working with a “girl singer now”. When pressed, Gordon continued by saying: “Don’t quote me on that. I’m not sure who the singer is going to be, but I heard it was gonna be female. They might just try to move on like that. That ought to be interesting.” Jay later seemingly walked back his comments, writing in a Facebook post that he knew “nothing about any of that” and accused “people” of taking his words “out of context.”
During EVANESCENCE‘s 2022 tour with HALESTORM, Lee and HALESTORM frontwoman Lzzy Hale performed a cover version of LINKIN PARK‘s “Heavy” at every stop. Lzzy spoke about the decision to cover the track in an interview with the 105.7 The Point radio station. She said: “Amy and ) were lobbing a couple of ideas back and forth and then, all of a sudden, we landed on LINKIN PARK. And we thought, you know what? That would be really cool because inadvertently it would be a tribute to Chester, but also, everything that this song has been about, we’ve all been through that — everybody. And so it’s almost this like very church moment where you walk out onstage and you’re, like, ‘All right. This is my church. These are my people. We’re all doing this together.'”
LINKIN PARK has just released a career-spanning greatest-hits album, “Papercuts (Singles Collection 2000-2023)”. The record also features a previously unreleased track with Bennington, “Friendly Fire”, which was recorded during the sessions for the group’s final studio album, 2017’s “One More Light”. Bennington died later that year.
In a 2004 interview with Revolver magazine, Chester talked about meeting EVANESCENCE in the studio, and how Amy explained to him that her record label tried to make them sound like LINKIN PARK.
“I met EVANESCENCE in the studio when they were recording their record. We were both recording in the same building. I was talking to Amy. And she was nice. She said, ‘We’re having these problems. Everyone at our label wants us to be you.’ I told her that’s lame. She agreed. She said they went as far as wanting to ask (LINKIN PARK‘s) Mike (Shinoda) to do a part on a song. She said, ‘We knew he wouldn’t do it.’ So they’re running around trying to get guys in other bands to do it like he would. ‘ I told her to be herself and tell the label to put it where the sun doesn’t shine. But the next thing I heard was ‘Bring Me To Life’ with a guy that sounded just like Mike. It was a little upsetting.”
In a 2018 interview with SiriusXM, Shinoda spoke about how he was asked to guest on “Bring Me To Life” and explained why he turned it down.
“I remember when EVANESCENCE first came out, somebody from the record label said, ‘Do you want to be on this other band’s song? They have this song with a singer — a female singer — and there’s like, a rap part.’ And I turned it down without having even known anything about the band,” he said. “I didn’t know anything about the band, and we didn’t have anything to do with them. But I just — I just knew that, like, I did my thing in my band, and I didn’t want to do my thing in another band. And when I ended up hearing the song, I went, ‘Oh, I get it. I get why they wanted me on that song. Like, that would have sounded cool.’ I still — I didn’t want to do it, because I think, like, they have their own thing and the hardest part for EVANESCENCE was probably growing out of that moment, which they did gracefully. Part of it is just due to the fact that at the time, you know, they were writing cool stuff, and Amy‘s voice is just a great voice. I mean, she’s just got a very powerful voice.”