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LAMB OF GOD Guitarist Talks About Having LINKIN PARK's Chester Bennington On His Solo Album

"I was pretty blown away by that. And it was immediate."

"I was pretty blown away by that. And it was immediate."

Lamb Of God guitarist Mark Morton will release his debut solo record Anesthetic on March 1. The record will feature a wide variety of guests, including the late Linkin Park frontman Chester Bennington.

Morton and Bennington hit the studio together in 2017 and Morton tells Metal Hammer that he was pretty surprised the collaboration even happened. All it took was, as the cliche goes, Morton's people to call Bennington's people.

“I had my people call his people! It was one of those things where we were listening to the song like, ‘Who in our world would we have singing this?’ And Chester was the name that came out.

So we almost didn’t try, because it’s Chester Bennington, he’s such a superstar. We were kind of like, ‘Come on, we can’t get him.’ But if we hadn’t tried, we wouldn’t have got him, so we tried, we got his ear, I was surprised to find I was on his radar and all, but through Lamb I was.

He heard the song and he was in. It is a really good song. I’m sorry, I don’t know if I’m allowed to say that, but it’s a good goddamn song, right?

We had to iron out a couple of things legally and all that kind of stuff, but on the creative side, he was in from the jump. And I didn’t realize how in he really was, but when he showed up I did, and that was humbling for me.”

Morton says of all the guests that appear on his record, Bennington was the one who surprised him the most in the studio.

“He just had a lot of creative input at the ready when he came into the studio. That was my initial like, ‘Wow’. He had told me he really liked the song, and we had communicated, but I’d never really hung out with Chester until when we started tracking.

I was really impressed for a guy at his level, at the place in the career he was at, someone of his stature and celebrity, to have that level of humility and commitment to come in there and treat this like it would be a Linkin Park song, or his own song or whatever.

I was pretty blown away by that. And it was immediate. Fifteen minutes after we met, we were standing over a table, one on either side, each with scraps of paper and pencil, crossing off words and trying different rhyme schemes and stuff.

And then after the track was laid out, then we took a breath and started talking about more personal stuff – real-life shit. And yeah… he surprised me the most.”

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