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Old Jan 27, 2005 | 05:17 AM
  #43  
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alphaxxn
4500rpm hesitation
 
Joined: Jun 2003
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From: Hesperia
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Originally Posted by strychnine
2. Emo
Punk music on estrogen. Often acoustic guitar with soft, high male vocals that dwell exessively on the singer's feelings, especially melancholy remembrances of past relationships/mistakes in life. A form of music that diverged from punk in the '80s, the name "emo" is derived from the emotive style of the lyrics and music. This genre has lately been marketed heavily by the music industry to teenagers with bands such as Dashboard Confessional and Taking Back Sunday, and has seen much commercial and mainstream success. The music has also spawned a subculture which conforms to certain conventions in dress such as tight sweatshirts, tight band T-shirts and horn-rim glasses. Adherents profess to exessively melancholy temperments. Males that adhere to the emo subculture are sometimes confused with metrosexuals; indeed the line between the two is somwhat blurred, though both groups claim to be intouch with their emotional side. The ephemeral and hackneyed nature of emo songwriting suggests that its audience will be restricted largely to teenagers. the genre suffers from a lack of credibility outside the aforementioned demographic group, much like current Nu Metal bands.

ex.
girlfriend: C'mon, lets have sex.
boyfriend: I'm too sad to have sex.
girlfriend: I'm sad too; lets have sex and cry.
boyfriend: I'm already crying.
the fact that anyone even relates relentless screaming with tired lyrics always involving the words "dark" or "cold" attached to some of the same guitar tabs is sickening.

Not that punk was ever original, but atleast it was never horribly bad,except for a few, now it has a whole genre attached to it that just sucks. And not that alot of punk isn't screaming, but if I wanted to hear about failing relationships and suicide I could listen to my friends and their issues.



No thanks.
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