Up From The Bottom

Album: From Zero (2025)
Charted: 42
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Songfacts®:

  • One of the many things Linkin Park does well is write songs that capture the sensation of being stuck. "Up From the Bottom" is no exception. The song is an exercise in struggle, resilience, and self-reflection, with just a dash of impending doom for good measure. It's about feeling trapped, desperately clawing for a way out, and then realizing the walls are closing in anyway. Cheerful stuff, really.
  • The song takes a particularly dark turn in the bridge, where Mike Shinoda raps about a guy who grew up unloved by his parents, overlooked, and generally dismissed by the world.
  • Mike Shinoda co-produced "Up From the Bottom" alongside longtime Linkin Park guitarist Brad Delson, with Colin Brittain pulling double duty as both drummer and co-producer.
  • The song dropped on March 27, 2025, as the lead single from the deluxe edition of From Zero, Linkin Park's eighth album. Shinoda explained how it came together in a frantic burst of inspiration:

    "In between tours, the band got together at my studio. As we listened to demos, everyone kinda agreed we didn't have the song we needed. As we talked, I scribbled notes. When everyone went home, I started piecing things together at the piano. For days, I obsessively pulled at threads of unclear ideas, until a special one began to reveal itself. One of the most satisfying things I get to experience is the moment when I play a new song for my band - knowing it's unfinished, but confident it's going to be special."
  • The music video, directed by Joe Hahn, starts with the band playing in a massive, ominous-looking room, then quickly spirals into a series of surreal vignettes: Hahn in a coma, Brittain trapped in a prison surrounded by guards, Shinoda attempting to escape a concrete structure by literally clawing his way through the ceiling, Delson pacing endlessly, Emily Armstrong donning a bandana, and Dave Farrell locked inside a box while wearing a straitjacket. At one point, Shinoda hands his guitar to Armstrong, only to take it back at the last moment.

    Hahn described the video as "mind-bending," which is director-speak for "expect lots of metaphorical suffering." The imagery underscores the song's central tension: the cyclical nature of struggle and the exhausting push-and-pull of trying to break free.
  • In a fun bit of intertextuality, "Up From the Bottom" echoes a line from "Forgotten," a track from Linkin Park's Hybrid Theory album.

    From the top to the bottom, bottom to top, I stop

    Both songs wrestle with the idea of being trapped in a cycle, a recurring motif in Linkin Park's catalog. Similar themes can be found in:

    2000 "Crawling": Feeling trapped in one's own skin and emotions.
    2003 "Breaking The Habit": Trying to escape destructive cycles.
    2003 "Somewhere I Belong": Searching for meaning and belonging.
    2007 "Shadow Of The Day": Reflecting on finding light in the darkness.

    While none reuse the exact phrasing "From the top to the bottom," these songs share thematic parallels, emphasizing emotional struggles and resilience - a hallmark of Linkin Park's lyrical universe.

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