Songwriter: Mark Wakefield Mike Shinoda

Producer: Mike Shinoda

[Intro: Laura Olsher]
Of course you know what a fuse is
It's a long piece of cord impregnated with gun powder
When you strike a match and light it
It burns, fitfully, spiraling to it's end
At which, there is a little surprise

[Verse 1: Mike Shinoda]
From the planet of Krypton
Ensuring super-emcees, you'll be ripped on (Ripped on)
You fell off, and it's my lyric sheet you slipped on
Get gone, spit on mics made in Hong Kong
Rock on, sing songs more mightier than King Kong or Donkey Kong
You think you want me or want this?
You want some? Hold your reputation for ransom
With these here, handsomely crafted tactics
To break a snake emcee like a cheap prophylactic
Galactic, spaced-out gabbing grabs attention
Got heads nodding like a Pez Candy convention
Briar patch raps gash tracks in sections
Kid says this and need witness protection

[Chorus: Mark Wakefield]
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here

[Verse 2: Mike Shinoda]
Yo, dig this, dig this
Yo, it's the junkyard, crooked letter C-I-En-tific
Duck us, the ruckus I'll bring stings your eardrum
Hear one line I let loose, find me fearsome
Opposing troops on my home front shall be gone
Testin' the eight hundred-eighteenth battalion
Shall I go on? Crews run like rebels
Enola Gay rhymes kick the notch up a level in intensity
Send back attacks that you sent to me
Blow up your spot with grenades that were meant for me
Empty three verses on thirty-three emcees
Swiss cheese your gear, puttin' shrapnel in the breeze
Bleed emcees of enemy companies
With my hand full of lyrics, talking ‘bout you want these?
Please, don’t even speak the name of Ken
On some go-go-Gadget mic shit
Put it down like pens for my friends and my fam
Better Dodge, or I’ll Ram
This mic shaft through the back of an emcee’s hand
With the strength of He-Man, a Cringer don’t want that
Close-bodies fill fields in hand-to-hand combat
Battle cats in cypher sessions of speech
Warfare of words flashing that cordless heat
Compete for an edge, lyrical shots get lit
Don’t question my intention when your bucket gets kicked

[Chorus: Mark Wakefield, Mike Shinoda]
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here
(Teflon metallic, syllaballic attacks)
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here
(I haunt emcees with these lyrical back smacks)

[Bridge: Mark Wakefield]
Should've told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so (Try)
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so
Why wait? I shouldn't have told you so

[Chorus: Mark Wakefield, Mike Shinoda]
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here
(Teflon metallic, syllaballic attacks)
Tryna say what I can't be sayin', I'll be here
(I haunt emcees with these lyrical back smacks)

Linkin Park

Hybrid Theory isn’t just the title of Linkin Park’s chart-topping debut album, but a career mission statement.

From day one, the same six players (lead vocalist Chester Bennington, drummer/percussionist Rob Bourdon, guitarist Brad Delson, bassist Dave ‘Phoenix’ Farrell, DJ/Programmer Joe Hahn, and keyboardist, guitarist, and co-lead vocals Mike Shinoda) built the band by fusing all their favorite styles of music into one unmistakable signature sound. With each album, Linkin Park defiantly challenges themselves and their fans by blasting into new musical territory. After setting the template for rock that incorporated hip-hop influences with Hybrid Theory and Meteora, they shifted gears completely and defied expectations with the polychromatic Minutes to Midnight, and again with the esoteric A Thousand Suns, before melding a piece of them all into 2012’s LIVING THINGS. With their 2014 release and heaviest offering in years, The Hunting Party, Linkin Park manage to capture their ever-innovative spirit with a hunger seldom seen in bands on their seventh album. One More Light (2017) is an interesting personal album, filled with a lot of emotion.

Unfortunately, on July 20, 2017, Chester unexpectedly died by suicide, shocking and saddening both fans and his own band members alike.