BEIJING, Oct. 9 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Linkin Park fans
expressed regret at the cancellation of the U.S. band's upcoming China tour due
to lead singer Chester Bennington's injured back.
"You got to be kidding! I've been waiting for years.
Hope you will get well soon and come back," netizen Maggie wrote on Linkin
Park's website.
"Oh my God" and "Bless Chester" were the most common
messages after the announcement of the tour cancellation on Tuesday on the BBS
of the linkinparkcn.com site where there were more than 43,000registered Linkin
Park fans.
"It's much better to put off than to cancel the
concerts. Chester may come to China and try our acupuncture treatment," netizen
LP joked.
The organizer of the Shanghai-based Linkin Park Fans
Club, Johnny Mark, wrote on the BBS that although the tour was cancelled many
fans would still assemble on Oct. 12 to attend the "fans party" and sing
together the songs of the California nu-metal act.
"Chao, a fan from northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province planned to arrive in Shanghai as scheduled," Mark wrote. "I am so
touched, and we will sing their songs all night and we all hope for Chester's
recovery."
Linkin Park cancelled all five of its China dates
this month in Shanghai, Beijing, Macao, Taipei and Wuhan.
Taiwanese rock band Mayday was to open the shows in a
mixture of East meets West.
The news disappointed thousands of fans of both bands
in China. Some who do not live in the host cities had already booked train
tickets and hotel rooms and planned their schedule.
Bennington was under a doctor's orders to refrain
from traveling and physical activity, the statement said. The band's Oct. 6
concert in Las Vegas was also cancelled.
The concerts in China were organized to raise funds
for victims of the May 12 Sichuan earthquake that killed nearly 70,000. Linkin
Park said it would still donate to the reconstruction efforts in the quake-hit
region.
Qiao Guanyuan, a Shanghai college student, bought
tickets one month ago and planned to see the band with five friends, "I am a
super fan of Linkin Park and I am so upset."
He said he began listening to the band in high
school, starting with the group's first disc "Hybrid Theory," his favorite.
"I took the ticket with me for the whole month, and
now I am going to take a picture with it. We have only one Chester. We can wait
till he gets better."
The six-piece band is one of the most popular Western
bands in China, with two Asian-American members, Mike Shinoda and DJ Joseph
Hahn.
In November 2007, Linkin Park sold out its Chinese
mainland debut in Shanghai.