Mike Shinoda - Dropped Frames- Vol. 2 -2020- Mp... 〈Chrome〉

Fans, especially those who participated in the streams, adored it. For many, watching Shinoda build “Booty Down” from a single kick drum to a finished track was more rewarding than the final MP3 alone. The album’s true value is as a companion piece to the Twitch VODs, which remain archived on his channel. Shinoda’s solo work has always been an outlet for experimentation. Post Traumatic (2018) was a raw, vocal-driven grief album following Chester Bennington’s death. Dropped Frames (all three volumes) is its instrumental, lower-stakes sibling—music made not to heal a wound but to fill time, to connect, to play. Vol. 2 specifically sits between the rock energy of Vol. 1 and the ambient textures of Vol. 3, making it the most varied entry in the trilogy. Conclusion: An Album as a Process, Not a Product Dropped Frames, Vol. 2 is not Mike Shinoda’s masterpiece. It’s too slight, too tossed-off for that. But as a piece of pandemic-era internet culture , it’s invaluable. It captures the strange intimacy of watching an artist work in real time, the joy of collective decision-making, and the glitchy beauty of imperfect connection.

7/10 Best for: Background coding, late-night scrolling, or appreciating how art can emerge from chaos. Essential track: “Super Galaxtica” – pure serotonin in 2 minutes and 47 seconds. Mike Shinoda - Dropped Frames- Vol. 2 -2020- Mp...

If you’re looking for the MP3 files (again, likely what “Mp…” implied), they are available for purchase on Shinoda’s Bandcamp and all major digital stores. But consider watching the original Twitch streams first. The music hits different when you’ve seen the chat spam “BOOTY DOWN” in all caps. Fans, especially those who participated in the streams,

In the chaotic spring of 2020, as the world went into lockdown, Mike Shinoda—best known as the co-vocalist, guitarist, and producer of Linkin Park—found himself unable to tour or work on traditional studio albums. Instead, he did what he has always done best: adapt. Turning to Twitch, Shinoda launched a live-streaming series where he composed music in real time, letting chat decide key elements like tempo, mood, key signature, and even track titles. The result was a trilogy of instrumental albums, with Dropped Frames, Vol. 2 arriving on September 18, 2020 , just two months after Vol. 1. The Concept: Music by Committee, Controlled by Chaos Unlike a traditional solo album, Dropped Frames, Vol. 2 is a document of collective improvisation. Each track was born from a streaming session where viewers voted on parameters. Shinoda then built a beat, melody, and arrangement live, often finishing a song in under an hour. The “dropped frames” of the title refer not only to internet lag but also to the fractured, glitchy aesthetic of Zoom-era connectivity. Shinoda’s solo work has always been an outlet