

Who wrote “Burn It Down”?Īs usual the writing credit for this song is shared throughout the members of the band. Moreover “Burn It Down” has been certified double-Platinum in the United States. The song itself topped three Billboard charts (including Alternative Songs), the UK Rock Chart and music charts in Luxembourg and Poland. And this is outside of also charting in approximately 20 other countries, including Brazil and Russia. and MTV – held a contest in which fans were tasked with creating their own music video for “Burn It Down”. And the winner of this competition was a British-Canadian director by the name of Jem Garrard.

Moreover Linkin Park – in conjunction with Genero, Warner Bros. It was also during March of 2012 that the crew began filming the music video for “Burn It Down”. And J, Hahn, the turntablist for the band, directed this critically-acclaimed Linkin Park video.Īnd whereas it premiered on MTV on the date of, the video was actually teased, by cable-television network TNT. On “Living Things” also appears the hit track “ Castle of Glass“. Records on 16 April 2012. However, the band had begun creatively teasing this song the month prior to that. It was released in that capacity by Warner Bros. “Burn It Down” was the lead single from the Linkin Park album titled “Living Things”. In other words, these people are actually waiting to ‘burn down’ the same metaphorical structure they helped erect. Thus in the lyrics, when Linkin Park refers to an individual ‘burning’, what they are actually speaking to is that person’s fall from popularity. And the chorus is based on the idea that the selfsame people who ‘build up’ such a person are actually setting him or her up for a downfall. This song is actually based on the fickleness of pop culture, how a celebrity who is trending one moment can be totally ostracized or forgotten the next. Mike Shinoda’s Interpretation of “Burn It Down”Īnd the above brings us to the Shinoda’s own personal interpretation of this tune, as in what all this symbolism points to from the band’s perspective. But at the same time, amidst all of the highly-artistic imagery, there is also a discernible narrative. This is most evident in the song’s bridge. And this storyline depicts the singer as being victim of some sort of exploitation, specifically along the lines of being deceived, subordinated and in a metaphorical sense ‘struck down’. Indeed he is very much looking forward to the day when he has the opportunity to do the same to the person who at the moment is treating him so.
