Linkin Park’s Hybrid Theory became one of the defining rock albums of the 2000s, selling roughly 30 million copies worldwide and turning the band into global superstars almost overnight. But even inside an album loved by millions, not every song stayed meaningful to the people who had to perform it year after year.
For Chester Bennington, that song was reportedly “Runaway.”
The track captured the raw frustration, confusion, and restless anger that helped make Linkin Park connect so deeply with a generation of fans. Its lyrics were direct, explosive, and unmistakably tied to the emotional language of early nu-metal. In 2000, that honesty felt urgent. But as the band grew older, more experimental, and more artistically ambitious, Chester’s relationship with the song changed.
Mike Shinoda has spoken about how Chester eventually came to dislike performing “Runaway.” The problem was not the fans, and it was not the album’s legacy. It was that Chester no longer felt connected to the mindset behind the song. As Linkin Park moved into albums like A Thousand Suns, their music became more layered, conceptual, and politically charged. The band was no longer just writing about personal escape or teenage frustration; they were exploring war, technology, fear, identity, and the future.
Against that evolution, “Runaway” began to feel like a version of Chester he had outgrown.
By around 2012, Chester reportedly pushed to remove the track from live setlists. While fans still roared every lyric back at the stage, he was no longer emotionally invested in singing it. For an artist as intense and sincere as Chester, performing a song that felt disconnected from his present self could be deeply uncomfortable.
That tension says a lot about Linkin Park’s career. Their earliest songs became anthems because they were painfully honest. But honesty changes with time. What once feels like survival can later feel like a memory you no longer want to live inside.
Still, the irony is powerful: the very song Chester came to resist remained precious to fans because it captured a moment they never forgot. For them, “Runaway” was not outdated. It was part of the soundtrack to growing up.
Chester’s discomfort with the track does not weaken its legacy. Instead, it shows the complicated burden of creating music that millions freeze in time, while the artist keeps moving forward.