Connect with us

News

Deadliest day in Lebanon for decades as Israel firestorm kills nearly 500 after ‘uncovering new Oct 7-style plot’

Published

on

Deadliest day in Lebanon for decades as Israel firestorm kills nearly 500 after ‘uncovering new Oct 7-style plot’

LEBANON has suffered its deadliest day in a generation after almost 500 people were killed in Israeli airstrikes.

It comes just days after Israel wiped out Hezbollah commanders claimed to be plotting a devastating October 7-style massacre.

Smoke from heavy Israeli air raids billows from the southern Lebanese village of Taibeh

9

Smoke from heavy Israeli air raids billows from the southern Lebanese village of TaibehCredit: Alamy
Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Marjayoun, near the Lebanon-Israel border

9

Advertisement
Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike in Marjayoun, near the Lebanon-Israel border
A congested highway along the southern entry to Beirut

9

A congested highway along the southern entry to BeirutCredit: AFP
Cars sit in traffic as they flee the southern villages amid Israeli airstrikes

9

Cars sit in traffic as they flee the southern villages amid Israeli airstrikesCredit: AP
Israeli fighter jets fly over the port city of Haifa

9

Israeli fighter jets fly over the port city of HaifaCredit: AFP

Israel has vowed to do “whatever is necessary” to wipe Hezbollah from its northern border – sparking some of the heaviest cross-border exchanges of fire since hostilities flared last October.

Advertisement

Hundreds of Hezbollah targets were blitzed by Israel on Monday as the offensive to hunt terror kingpins – dubbed Northern Arrows – continues.

At least 492 were killed and 1,645 injured, including 35 children.

The grim death toll is the highest daily tally since the end of the 1975-90 civil war.

Ten of thousands of residents fled from the south in desperate search of shelter as Israel pounded Lebanon with bombs from the air.

Advertisement

The main highway out of the southern port city of Sidon was jammed with cars heading toward Beirut in a staggering mass exodus.

Families from south Lebanon loaded cars, vans and trucks with belongings and people, sometimes multiple generations in one vehicle.

As bombs rained down, children crammed onto parents’ laps and suitcases were tied to car roofs. Highways north were gridlocked.

Israel has warned residents in southern and eastern Lebanon to evacuate ahead of its widening air campaign against Hezbollah.

Advertisement

But the UK’s foreign office – while continuing to advise Brits to leave while flights are available – has stopped short of ordering an evacuation.

‘Escalation’ of cross-border attacks pushing Israel and Hezbollah to brink of ‘all-out war’

Fears of an all-out war in the region have been stoked by the escalation – with Lebanon still reeling from two deadly attacks on communication devices last week.

After almost a year of war against Hamas in Gaza on its southern border, Israel is shifting its focus to the northern frontier.

It is where Iran-backed Hezbollah has been firing rockets into Israel in support of Hamas, also backed by Iran.

Advertisement

Israel claims it has foiled a plot to stage an assault similar to the devastating October 7 assault by Palestinian terror group Hamas.

President Isaac Herzog said Hezbollah commanders killed in strikes on Friday in Beirut were meeting to plan a shocking massacre.

Israel’s Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said Israel is “not looking for wars” but warned its army is in “full readiness”.

Describing civilian casualties as a “tragedy”, he insisted Israel “makes vast efforts not to hit civilians and make every effort to mitigate harm to civilians”.

Advertisement

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meanwhile told Lebanese citizens: “Israel’s war is not with you, it’s with Hezbollah.

“For too long Hezbollah has been using you as human shields.”

Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike on the eastern areas of Baalbeck in the Bekaa valley

9

Smoke billows from the site of an Israeli airstrike on the eastern areas of Baalbeck in the Bekaa valleyCredit: AFP
Civil defense workers carry an elderly citizen who fled from the south as he arrives at a school turned into a shelter in Beirut

9

Advertisement
Civil defense workers carry an elderly citizen who fled from the south as he arrives at a school turned into a shelter in BeirutCredit: AP
Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system intercepts rockets fired from Lebanon

9

Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system intercepts rockets fired from LebanonCredit: Reuters
A man walks on a beach as smoke billows over southern Lebanon

9

A man walks on a beach as smoke billows over southern LebanonCredit: Reuters

The latest bloodshed has prompted the US to deploy more troops to the Middle East amid fears of an all-out war exploding on the Lebanese border.

The Department of Defense said “additional” service members will be joining up with the 40,000 fighters already in the Middle East.

Advertisement

A dozen US warships and fighter jet squadrons are also in the region on standby.

It is still unclear the exact number of troops being sent over or where they are being stationed.

The Pentagon has already bolstered its US Central Command since tensions in the Middle East reached boiling point almost a year ago.

An additional 7,000 troops were sent across in the wake of the October 7 attacks by Hamas.

Advertisement

Navy warships were quickly deployed across the region, with some in the Red Sea and another six warships in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Four squadrons of fighter jets are also in the Middle East, as well as advanced F-22 fighter jets, which arrived last month, Military Times reported.  

Their presence in the Middle East is designed to help defend Israel in their war as well as to protect US and allied assets.

The Pentagon’s General Pat Ryder also urged any US citizens to leave Lebanon as soon as they could.

Advertisement

And this morning, Hezbollah said it had launched several attacks on Israeli military targets, including an explosives factory 60 km into Israel, with the “Fadi” series of rockets.

It said it attacked the explosives factory around 4am (1am GMT) and the Megiddo airfield three separate times overnight.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief has warned the escalation between Israel and Hezbollah is “almost a full-fledged war”.

Josep Borrell said: “This situation is extremely dangerous and worrying.

Advertisement

“If this is not a war situation, I don’t know what you would call it.”

Pager and walkie-talkie strike

The spike in fighting follows the coordinated pager and walkie-talkie blitz last week with Israel sabotaging communications devices.

The attacks were aimed at Hezbollah and hit the terror group’s fighters and civilians in Lebanon and Syria.

The strikes, which hit Tuesday and Wednesday, killed at least 39 and left thousands more injured.

Advertisement

Doctors in Lebanon have been overwhelmed by casualties after two waves of blasts – with many left blinded.

Skilled physicians say they have never had to surgically remove more eyes before as Hezbollah’s boss labelled the strikes a possible “declaration of war” from Israel.

One of those injured was the Iranian envoy to the country who has reportedly lost an eye.

Hezbollah’s boss Hassan Nasrallah said the group intends to seek revenge for the attacks that “crossed over all the red lines” and will not stop until the war in Gaza ends.

Advertisement

Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said he “condemned the terrorist act of the Zionist regime… as an example of mass murder”.

Israel reportedly planted the explosives inside the pagers in a years’ long operation that involved firms in Taiwan and Hungary.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps has ordered all members to stop using any types of communication devices, Reuters reports.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Three questions for Jay Powell

Published

on

This article is an on-site version of our Chris Giles on Central Banks newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Tuesday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters

The last time the Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan and Bank of England all met in the same week, it was the BoJ’s hawkish hike that made the weather in markets over the days that followed.

This time, the Fed’s decision to start the cutting cycle with a half-point bang last week largely overshadowed the BoE and BoJ’s prudent holds, propelling the S&P 500 to new highs.

As is customary, the central bank’s chair Jay Powell took questions from journalists at the post-statement press conference. Yet the Federal Open Market Committee’s about-face on its previous guidance raises a host of other, harder-to-answer, ones.

Advertisement

Here are a few of the most important.

1. What does data dependency really mean?

Self-possessed and relaxed, Powell conveyed confidence, even optimism, as he explained the rate decision. “Nothing to see here,” he seemed to be saying. It worked: investors reacted positively, dispelling previous fears that they would read a large cut as a sign of panic from policymakers.

But his framing was a little disingenuous. With the half-point cut, the FOMC backtracked on earlier indications that it would start the easing cycle with a regular 0.25 percentage point move. Even more importantly, the new Summary of Economic Projections quietly introduced a major reassessment of what the central bank needs to do to keep the US economy on track for a soft landing.

The new GDP growth forecasts were basically unchanged from June. Inflation forecasts were lower and unemployment forecasts higher, but they did not indicate a substantially different economic environment to forecasts three months ago.

Advertisement

But the rate path that Fed policymakers think is required to get there is now much lower.

Powell would probably say that this is simply data dependency in practice: policymakers change their view as the data changes. “We took all of those [data] and . . . concluded that this was the right thing for the economy,” he said. Had he been challenged about the dot-plot revisions, he would have presumably given a similar answer.

But there are issues with this narrative.

The change between the June and September dot plots is big. Earlier this year, it took several months of bad inflation data for rate-setters to notch down their projected number of 2024 cuts from three to one. By contrast, the past few months’ labour market data, even if slightly disappointing, is not flashing red. “The labour market is actually in solid condition . . . you’re close to mandate, maybe at mandate, on that,” Powell said during the press conference.

Advertisement

It doesn’t sound like a solid basis to justify the major dovish shift that took place below the SEP’s surface. Was Powell accurate in saying that the Fed is responding to the data, or were other considerations in play?

2. Is the Fed losing the markets — if so, is that a bad thing?

The markets had seen the cut coming. Investors started seeing some chance of a half-point rate cut as far back as July, despite policymakers’ insistence that the Fed would, in all likelihood, ease only gradually. Ultimately, the traders’ call prevailed.

Believers in the Fed put clearly feel vindicated — and are doubling down. Markets currently expect it to reach its forecast terminal rate of 2.9 per cent in September 2025, more than a year ahead of the median rate-setter’s forecasts. In other words, they expect the Fed to deliver around eight cuts over the next 12 months or so. The Fed itself is projecting only six.

What might that mean for the Fed?

Advertisement

It could be that markets no longer believe the rate-setters. That would be rational, given how bad the dot plot has been at accurately predicting the Fed’s subsequent rate path. That raises the question of whether, if its decision-making truly is data dependent, the dot plot might not be ditched. Far from communicating policy clearly, it may be hurting policymakers’ credibility.

But overly dovish markets might be helpful in other ways. Powell said emphatically last Wednesday that the bank was not yet declaring victory over inflation. If markets keep financial conditions loose beyond the Fed’s own indications, the central bank can have it all: a stance that is “roughly balanced” between the two sides of its dual mandate, coupled with the stimulative effect of lower borrowing costs in the real economy.

The risk is that the reckoning, in the form of a big market correction, will eventually come. On a more positive note, anyone who is not bored with knife-edge 25-or-50 debates has plenty to look forward to.

3. How politically dangerous was the decision?

Presidential candidate Donald Trump is, to put it mildly, unusually attentive to Fed decisions. It surprised no one that he weighed in on the rate cut.

Advertisement

“It shows the economy is very bad . . . assuming that they are not just playing politics,” he said. Some, though not all, GOP lawmakers took the same view. Trump’s running mate JD Vance was uncharacteristically circumspect.

On the Democratic side, President Joe Biden called it a “declaration of progress” and attempted to link inflation’s decline to his administration’s policies. Vice-president and Trump rival Kamala Harris simply called it “welcome news”.

Powell has a strong record of defying political pressure on rate moves. Though his 2019 spat with Trump is most memorable, some Democrats have also unsuccessfully attempted to sway the Fed’s rate decisions.

But Trump has made overt threats to the Fed’s independence before. The decision to start the easing cycle on the eve of an extremely tight election is very unlikely to curry the central bank any favour with the volatile former president.

Advertisement

Something more to worry about if Trump wins in November.

The view from overseas

The Fed cut has also featured heavily in central bankers’ comments beyond US shores.

Start with the BoJ, which held rates on Friday. The central bank is on a gradual journey to normalisation, and markets have long considered Fed rates play a key role in its pace through their effects on the yen. The Japanese currency had long been seen as too weak, but following a flash market crash and rapid appreciation of the yen in early August, markets unwound bets on further BoJ increases next year.

At Friday’s press conference, governor Kazuo Ueda acknowledged that the BoJ would be watching developments in the US closely. “One factor we’d like to look at is whether the US economy will achieve a soft landing, or whether the slowdown could be a bit more severe,” he reportedly said, while reiterating that the BoJ would increase rates again if its economic forecasts were realised.

Advertisement

But markets did not really react, perhaps believing that the BoJ is worried about excessive yen strengthening as well as weakening.

At the European Central Bank, Italy’s Fabio Panetta, a dovish member of the governing council, seized on the US’s jumbo cut as a reason to deliver more easing in the near term. This argument is unlikely to have traction, not least because earlier this year Panetta had argued that the ECB should cut faster if the Fed’s stance proved tighter than expected.

The ECB arguably has little to fear from the spillover effects of a faster US cutting cycle: it would boost export demand for European products, driving growth, and strengthen the euro, which is disinflationary. If the Eurozone economy does not rebound as the governing council currently expects, the ECB may well accelerate its own cutting cycle in the coming months. But the Fed probably won’t have much to do with it.

What I’ve been reading and watching

  • Craig Coben’s fascinating article on how the German government mismanaged the sale of its Commerzbank shares, allowing UniCredit to swoop in and JPMorgan to earn a hefty fee.

  • This handy article from Politico unpacks which countries are up and which are down in Ursula von der Leyen’s new team of commissioners — and what her picks signal about the EU’s priorities over the next five years.

  • Should the Bank of England change its name? This is one of several provocative proposals about how to reform the Old Lady that Tony Yates would like Rachel Reeves to consider. FT readers can join in on the poll.

  • Lionel Barber’s profile of Masayoshi Son, investor and inveterate risk-taker whose career spanned 1980s Japan, the 2000s dotcom boom and the golden years of venture capital in the 2010s, but whose record has been blighted by a poor sense of timing (among other reasons). His bets are now on AI. But has he missed the train?

A chart that matters

Between profit warnings, botched forced labour audits and mass lay-off plans, European carmakers have had a terrible month. Once an engine of export revenue, employment and economic growth, the sector is now stalled, buffeted by competition from Chinese carmakers at home and abroad.

Advertisement

The EU is gearing up to raise tariffs on Chinese electric vehicle imports. A decision is expected in the next few weeks. But whether investors’ minds about the sector will change is another matter. The EU’s biggest auto names have been a major drag on the European stock index in the past few months, as the chart below shows.

Recommended newsletters for you

Free lunch — Your guide to the global economic policy debate. Sign up here

Trade Secrets — A must-read on the changing face of international trade and globalisation. Sign up here

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Money

Construction giant ISG collapses into administration, leaving questions over major projects

Published

on

Construction giant ISG collapses into administration, leaving questions over major projects

The eight arms of ISG’s UK business, which include its construction, engineering and retail branches, have all been placed in administration.

This article is for subscribers or registered users only

Already registered? please Log in to continue

Don’t want full access? REGISTER NOW for limited access and to subscribe to our newsletters.

Already registered or subscribed? SIGN IN here to continue

Check if you already have access from your company or university

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Abortion protests near clinics banned as buffer zones law goes live

Published

on

Abortion protests near clinics banned as buffer zones law goes live
PA Media Pro-life protesters stand in zipped up coats and hats and hoods holding signs urging women to rethink abortion choices. Neon hand-made pro-choice signs in counter protest are hung on a fence behind them.PA Media

Protesters can no longer stand near clinics and behave in ways that could influence the decisions of women and staff to access services

The MSP responsible for the introduction of buffer zones near abortion clinics has hailed the first day of the new legislation as “crucial”.

Green MSP Gillian Mackay was behind the bill which prevents anti-abortion protesters from gathering within 200m (656ft) of clinics where the procedure is carried out.

The zones, which are now live, were introduced as a result of Mackay’s Safe Access Zones Scotland Act, which was passed in June with the support of 118 MSPs from across the Chamber.

The law aims to stop the harassment of patients. There are now safe access zones at 30 health facilities around the country.

Advertisement
PA Media Gillian Mackay walks to the chamber in the Scottish Parliament, carrying a black folder. She is wearing a bright magenta jacket.PA Media

Green MSP Gillian Mackay has campaigned for the safe access areas for a number of years

The clinics affected by the bill include the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow, the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh and Dundee’s Ninewells Hospital.

Within the buffer zones, it is a criminal offence to behave in ways that could influence the decisions of women and staff to access services.

Stopping women and staff from entering the clinics or otherwise causing alarm, harassment or distress will also be an offence.

Anyone who breaks the new Safe Access Zone laws could be fined up to £10,000 or an unlimited amount in more serious cases.

Advertisement

Police Scotland will be responsible for enforcing the legislation.

Speaking as the laws came into force, Mackay said: “This is a crucial day for reproductive rights and healthcare in Scotland.

“I hope that it will be the end of the intimidation and harassment we have seen of people who are accessing healthcare.”

She added: “Right from the first moment I saw footage of the protests, I could see how much damage they were doing and how many people were being impacted by them. I knew that I had to do everything I could to stop them.

Advertisement

“Over the days and weeks ahead, I will be working with the Scottish government to ensure that patients and staff know where protesters can and can’t be so that they can report any activity that is against the law.”

Protection for women

Mackay praised the work of campaign groups such as Back Off Scotland, who supported her legislation, and also thanked the women who shared their “often difficult and traumatic stories” of protests outside clinics.

She said: “I hope that this is a turning point and the beginning of the end of the protests, and that nobody else will have to endure them.”

Advertisement

The Scottish government had also supported Mackay’s legislation, with the women’s health minister, Jenni Minto saying: “The introduction of Safe Access Zones is a crucial milestone in protecting women’s abortion rights.”

The minister added: “No one has the right to interfere in women’s personal medical decisions and the law now makes that abundantly clear.”

She praised Mackay and others who campaigned for the change, paying tribute to “the women who showed incredible courage in speaking up and sharing their experiences during the Bill process”

Minto said: “The new zones of 200m (656ft) around all abortion services will help ensure women have safe access to healthcare – free from intimidation. This law is about protection for women at a time when many will feel incredibly vulnerable around taking a deeply personal and difficult decision.”

Advertisement

Similar legislation will come into force in England and Wales on 31 October.

Autumn ‘vigil’ in Edinburgh

A number of groups and organisations have been involved with the events outside abortion clinics in recent years.

The biggest and most high-profile of these is 40 Days For Life.

Advertisement

They started in the USA and have grown to operate in 64 countries around the world.

Since 2014 the group’s supporters have turned out on a regular basis in front of clinics in Edinburgh and Glasgow.

Twice a year – during Lent and in the autumn – they hold what they call a 40 day “vigil” of silent prayer.

The group’s website is currently advertising the start of their autumn vigil at the Chalmers Street clinic in Edinburgh on Thursday.

Advertisement

The BBC has contacted the organisation to ask how this will go ahead in the context of the new law.

While 40 Days For Life is not an official Catholic Church organisation, individual churches and dioceses advertise and support the campaign, and other churches also meet outside clinics.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

My mother, the Persian cook who fed the New York art scene

Published

on

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Leila Heller’s mother was an excellent cook. When she lived in Tehran, Empress Farah Pahlavi – one of many family friends who sampled her cooking – suggested she write a cookbook. Then the revolution happened. Nahid Taghinia-Milani, known as Nahid Joon, left Iran in 1979 and ended up in New York with her husband and children. There her cooking took on greater significance: it became a means of preserving her heritage and bringing family and friends together. It also turned her into a star in the New York art world, thanks to a series of dinners she helped cater for her daughter’s gallery that became known as the tastiest invite in town.

Mashed lamb and mung beans, from Persian Feasts: Recipes & Stories from a Family Table
Mashed lamb and mung beans, from Persian Feasts: Recipes & Stories from a Family Table © Nico Schinco

“My mother’s legacy was her cooking,” writes Heller in Persian Feasts: Recipes & Stories from a Family Table (Phaidon), a new cookbook filled with her mother’s dishes. Among them, her Persian chicken salad, herb frittata, stuffed grape leaves, fesenjan (walnut, aubergine and pomegranate stew), braised lamb shanks and barberry rice. The founder of an eponymous gallery, Heller has been a fixture on the New York art scene since the early 1980s when she showed work by Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat. A dealer in Middle Eastern and Asian art, she opened a second gallery in Dubai in 2015. “[My mother] was a true artist,” she writes. “The abundant spices, fresh herbs and myriad ingredients were her paints; her sense of smell and taste were her paintbrushes.”

Advertisement
Leila Heller with her mother Nahid Joon
Leila Heller with her mother Nahid Joon © Courtesy of Leila Heller

Nahid Joon lived in a two-bedroom apartment on the Upper East Side. Her kitchen was designed by her cousin, renowned architect Nasser Ahari. The cabinets were modelled on walnut fittings from their kitchen in Iran, and Nasser fashioned special bronze fixtures for the handles, floral bronze work for the glass doors, and bronze hooks in floral designs above the stove for Nahid Joon to hang her utensils.

Pistachio soup
Pistachio soup © Nico Schinco
Kebabs with rice
Kebabs with rice © Nico Schinco

Over the years the room played host to many precious memories. Like the marathon cooking sessions that preceded Nahid Joon’s dinner parties for up to 120 when she hooked up her six large rice cookers on the floor throughout the house and played classical music, Persian songs or her favourite singer, Julio Iglesias, as she cooked. Or Thanksgiving dinner when the whole family gathered in that kitchen to cook and Nahid Joon served her Persian-style turkey with cloves and sour cherry rice.

Even the simplest meal became a feast. Heller recalls her son Philip going for dinner one evening and requesting his favourite burgers only to find she had made 12. “I only know how to cook for 12.” Such was her generosity that nothing went to waste. “She wouldn’t just make a chicken thigh for herself. She’d make a whole chicken and give the rest to the doormen,” says Heller. “A bottle of wine too. When the board for the building told her she shouldn’t be giving them alcohol, she started hiding the wine in Perrier bottles.”

Nahid Joon serves her Thanksgiving turkey dinner with albaloo polo (rice with sour cherries) and zereshk polo with advieh (Barberry rice with spices)
Nahid Joon serves her Thanksgiving turkey dinner with albaloo polo (rice with sour cherries) and zereshk polo with advieh (Barberry rice with spices)

The dinners at her daughter’s gallery took off in 2008 when Heller threw an event to coincide with a Chelsea Art Museum show on Iranian art. “It was a last-minute event. I couldn’t arrange catering,” says Heller. “My mother suggested we cook ourselves. She made six dishes: a few rice dishes and stews. I made six, including my famous shrimp salad. We brought them to the gallery.” Dinners in a gallery were rare at the time. Heller’s have since become a regular practice attended by big-name collectors, curators and critics as well as figures such as CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour, a childhood friend. “My mother would call me the next day saying, ‘You’re going to kill me. I can’t do this again.’ But when the time came, she always helped. She loved feeding people.”

It wasn’t just her daughter she cooked with. She cooked with her daughter’s friends too. “My mother’s friendships were multigenerational,” says Heller. “People came for advice and stayed to be fed.”

In 2018, Nahid Joon died after she was hit by a car on the pavement. She was 84 years old. “She left us very suddenly,” Heller says. Nine hundred people attended her memorial, including the doormen. She left behind 150 recipes, all organised, now finally made into a book. “It’s so bittersweet,” says Heller. “I wish she was here. When they sent me the first copy, I said, ‘Mama, this should be you. It’s your book. You made this happen.’ She would have been so excited.” 

Persian Feasts: Recipes & Stories from a Family Table by Leila Heller, with Lila Charif, Laya Khadjavi, and Bahar Tavakolian is published by Phaidon, £34.95

@ajesh34

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Travel

Baccarat X Ducasse: Parisian perfection

Published

on

Baccarat X Ducasse: Parisian perfection

Maison Baccarat and Alain Ducasse have unveiled their magnificent collaboration, Baccarat x Ducasse Paris, in the heart of Paris’ prestigious 16th arrondissement.

Continue reading Baccarat X Ducasse: Parisian perfection at Business Traveller.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Linkin Park’s new singer ‘not trying to be Chester Bennington’

Published

on

Linkin Park's new singer 'not trying to be Chester Bennington'
Getty Images Mike Shinoda and Emily Armstrong of Linkin Park perform in New York. Emily, in the foreground, closes her eyes and kneels as she sings into a mic, held in both hands. She has bleached blonde hair worn loose and wears a white and purple sweatshirt. Mike, in the background, plays guitar and sings while wearing an orange jacket. Getty Images

Emily Armstrong was revealed as Linkin Park’s new singer earlier this month

Linkin Park founder Mike Shinoda has insisted the band’s new singer is not trying to replace original frontman Chester Bennington.

The band announced a comeback earlier this month and revealed new music recorded with vocalist Emily Armstrong – a choice that has angered many fans.

Chester took his own life in 2017 and his son, Jaime, has accused the remaining Linkin Park members of “quietly erasing” his father’s “life and legacy in real time”.

Speaking to Radio 1’s New Music Show on Monday, original bandmate Mike Shinoda said their return was “not meant to be a redo or a rewrite of Linkin Park”.

Advertisement

The band have racked up billions of streams and are one of the best-known rock acts in the world.

Their 2000 debut album, Hybrid Theory, was named “one of the most important albums of all time” by Kerrang! magazine.

They announced their reunion with a comeback gig where they performed new music and some of their biggest hits, with Emily singing Chester’s parts.

“This is intended to be a new chapter of Linkin Park,” Mike told Radio 1.

Advertisement

“The old chapter was a great chapter and we loved that chapter.

“It ran its course and now we were faced with a challenge of: ‘well OK, if you start from scratch with another voice, what do you do?’”

Getty Images Mike Shinoda and Chester Bennington performing in 2015. They both sing, Chester with his hand on Mike's back as they lean forward off the stage. Mile wears a black cap and T-shirt, Chester wears jeans and a grey T-shirt, revealing heavily tattooed arms. Getty Images

Until now, Linkin Park had not released new music since former frontman Chester Bennington took his own life in 2017

Mike told host Jack Saunders he’d been meeting Emily – from hard rock band Dead Sara – and writing music since 2019 but the “intention wasn’t to start the band up again”.

“We were just slowly coming together and then eventually things just started to fall into place with Emily and with Colin our new drummer,” he said.

Advertisement

“We talked about putting her voice on things we’d already written that only had my voice on them.

“Once we did that, we were like, ‘that sounds really good, we should try that on even more songs’.”

The set list for their world tour, which lands in London later, includes a mix of new music and classic hits.

Getty Images Emily Armstrong and Mike Shinoda on stage in Hamburg as part of Linkin Park's From Zero world tour. Mike smiles at Emily, who's facing away from the camera, her long bleached hair loose down her back as she wears a pink sports shirt with her name and '0' on the back. Mike has cropped dark hair and a short beard and holds a guitar in one hand and his earpiece in the other.Getty Images

Mike praised new singer Emily, telling Radio 1 she’s “just 100% her”

Mike didn’t address criticisms from Chester’s family during the interview.

Advertisement

The singer’s mum told Rolling Stone magazine she felt “betrayed” and that she’d not been told in advance.

His son Jaime also criticised Emily personally, raising concerns about her alleged ties to the Church of Scientology and her past support of convicted rapist Danny Masterson.

Emily distanced herself from the former sitcom actor in a statement but didn’t address her links to Scientology – the controversial movement set up as a religion in the US in the 1950s by science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard.

Mike focused on Emily’s singing, saying “passion is the driver” of her voice.

Advertisement

“When she sings, it’s like the passion and she’s just 100% her, that’s the best part,” he said.

“She’s not trying to be Chester, she’s not trying to be anybody else.

“She’s her and that’s why it works.”

Despite the criticism, their lead single The Emptiness Machine peaked at number 2 in the UK Official Singles Chart and made it to 25 in Billboard’s Hot 100 in the US.

Advertisement

The band has also sold out gigs in London, New York and LA.

“We rehearsed more for this than we’ve ever rehearsed for anything in our lives,” says Mike.

“These shows are us figuring out our intuitive ways of how we move and play on stage and making it even more effortless.”

A footer logo for BBC Newsbeat. It has the BBC logo and the word Newsbeat in white over a colorful background of violet, purple and orange shapes. At the bottom a black square reading "Listen on Sounds" is visible.

Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Zox News Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.