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Is the term "emo" changing?
Hey.
I searched up emo, and found out that it was a genre originated in the mid-80s hardcore punk. Now, people are using the term emo for ANYTHING that's related to emotion. They're calling bands like My Chemical Romance, Panic! At The Disco and Dashboard Confessional emo, even though they don't fit into the genre. But why is it so? That people (even the producers and the people working in MTV) keep calling bands "emo", though they're not part of the genre, when they even reject it? Is it because that the word "emo" is becoming a more generic term, or is it just misunderstanding? |
I'd say it changed quite some time ago.
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Ok, but excactly WHEN did it change, and why? I wanna know the reason My Chemical Romance is an "emo band" when they're not part of the emo genre.
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Given that I'm a complete outsider to this genre (never could get into the old stuff or the new stuff), I don't know how much mileage my opinion gets, but here's my observations. I'd say the changes came around the early '00's when the style was being integrated with several other remaining popular genres of the '90's, namely alternative rock, post-grunge, and pop-punk. From what I've seen and heard, what was considered emo in the early '00's wasn't very similar to the genre of the late '80's and early '90's except the emotionally charged lyrics. One thing that is noticeably different is the sense of style, if you google image search bands like Rites of Spring or Sunny Day Real Estate, you see they don't look like this. I think that's where most of the disdain comes from, not the music, I'm sure most people that look down upon it have never heard a song, but they see people that fit the stereotype all over the place and then make their assumptions on the music by that.
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Yeah, but Dashboard Confessional and My Chemical Romance are not part of the genre, old style or new style. It's just the labels, MTV and society that calls them emo.
(basically, the band is not emo, but the audience is) |
i just googled pics of My Chemical Romance and they look exactly like the "generic emo boy" that Pete posted
honestly i think most of society does not give two shits about them.... why are you so concerned with what they are labeled as? |
I think the easiest way to look at is hardcore in general changed drastically over the course of two decades, and emo changed commensurately with it. Genres do evolve over time and-- given enough time, tend to ultimately exclude, in pure criteria alone, that which created it. Emo is not a clearly defined genre to begin with. It's emotional hardcore, and since it was such a flavor-of-the-month designation for post-pubescent teens to designate the music they were listening to, it became even more vague. It's still quite vague.
I can assure you that if you took the time to search these boards you would stumble upon an epoch of Musicbanter history from about 5 years ago where you could cull enough discussion of this very topic to publish a fairly large book. |
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I think emo culture and music is interesting, and I want to get into it. I also want to learn the difference between the old emo music and the modern rock music with emo audience. |
http://www.musicbanter.com/hardcore-...on-thread.html
i suggest you start here :0 personally i never considered any of the music i listen to emo....but i noticed many people do....so i suggest looking into Jawbreaker and Texas Is The Reason |
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