Linkin Park lead singer Chester Bennington, who sold millions of albums with an ever-changing mix of hard rock, hip-hop and rap, was found dead in his home near Los Angeles on Thursday, the Los Angeles County coroner said Thursday. He was 41.
Coroner spokesman Brian Elias said authorities are investigating Bennington's death as an apparent suicide at Palos Verdes Estates, a small coastal city near Los Angeles but no additional details are available.
Band co-founder and producer Mike Shinoda said on Twitter he was ``shocked and saddened.''
``Chester Bennington was an artist of extraordinary talent and charisma, and a human being with a huge heart and a caring soul. Our thoughts and prayers are with his beautiful family, his band-mates and his many friends,'' Warner Bros. CEO and Chairman Cameron Stang said in a statement.
The Grammy Award-winning group sold 10 million copies of their 2000 debut, ``Hybrid Theory,'' and then another 4 million with 2003's multiplatinum ``Meteora.'' Both albums explored feelings of frustration and fury.
Bennington's voice could soar with piercing strength or descend to a whisper. Rolling Stone once called it a ``shrapnel-laced howl that sounds like it comes from someone twice his size.''