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  1. #51

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!


    gusto mo emo? tan awa ni...


    http://youtube.com/watch?v=TjmOK4TTvwg



  2. #52

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    unsa na bro? d mo work youtube dre

  3. #53

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by 4stringsamurai
    gusto mo emo? tan awa ni...


    http://youtube.com/watch?v=TjmOK4TTvwg


    Go Go Emo Rangers!! The Mighty Moshin Emo Rangers!!
    Hahahaha

  4. #54

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    ZORDON!

  5. #55

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    Got this off the web..



    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    "Emo" (or emocore) is short for "emotional hardcore." It is essentially a subgenre of hardcore punk music, tagged sometime in the mid-80's to describe a particular style of DIY bands wanting to escape the traditional standard of hardcore (Minor Threat era) and the violent scene at the time, giving way to a new wave of experimentation that would influence many bands to come. The term emo was derived from the fact that, on occasion, members of a band would become spontaneously and strongly emotional during performances. This term wasn't taken too lightly by some bands at the time, however.

    Rites of Spring are thought to be the first band labelled with this term, although Hüsker Dü's 1984 album Zen Arcade is often cited as a major influence for the new sound. While many bands of this genre came to play seemingly different music altogether, their influences are always rooted to original emo - the Washington, DC style, and regional scenes that spawned from it. Though describing the sound can't replace listening to the bands yourself, notable characteristics of emo music today are: "loud-to-soft" (sometimes chaotic) dynamics, twinkly melodic breaks, frantic/abrasive shouting or screaming, angry/abstract/introspective lyrics, low-end production, and exceptionally energetic live shows.

    The "DIY" punk ethic refers to the idea of 'doing it yourself.' Essentially, making and promoting music without major record label backing, and without any great level of "selling out". This means that you're not going to hear emo on the tv or radio, kids (ok, i found one exception). You'll find most of these releases on vinyl, and sold in independant record stories.

    "Screamo" was a term coined later to describe the transistion of hardcore emo bands in the 1990's who started playing a louder, faster, more chaotic style, including constant screaming with fast, harmonized guitars. "Emo" and "screamo" are essentially meant to describe the same style of music. While screamo is more reserved for modern bands, emo is often used in reference to original emo, or the entire genre at a whole. "Emo Violence," sometimes misinterpreted as synonymous with "screamo," was a joke term created by In/Humanity in an attempt to describe themselves and a sound formed during the emo-screamo transition (a play on the words emo & powerviolence). While similar to both chaotic emo and grindcore, emo violence is known to sound lo-fi, with vocals pushed past the point of normal sound, with occasional spoken words or singing.


    Most emo bands broke up by the 90's, examples are:

    Rites of Spring
    Moss Icon
    Gray Matter
    Indian Summer
    Current
    One Last Wish
    Maximillian Colby
    Sleepytime Trio
    Amber Inn
    Clikatat Ikatowi
    Inkwell
    Still Life
    Shotmaker
    Policy of Three
    1.6 Band
    Frail
    Julia
    Native Nod
    Heroin
    Unwound
    Portaits of Past
    Swing Kids

    Modern screamo is constantly in revival, with examples including:

    Orchid
    Saetia
    City of Caterpillar
    Funeral Diner
    Circle Takes The Square
    Ampere
    La Quiete
    Reversal of Man
    Usurp Synapse
    The Spirit Of Versailles
    You and I
    pg.99
    Jeromes Dream
    Hassan I Sabbah
    Envy
    Welcome The Plague Year
    Yaphet Kotto
    Neil Perry
    Sinaloa
    Stop It!!
    Pygmy Lush
    Daniel Striped Tiger
    Bravo ****ing Bravo
    Wow, Owls!
    Tristan Tzara
    Enoch Ardon


    After the first wave of original emo bands had nearly dissapeared, emo's influence could be found amongst a slew of new indie bands (Sub Pop Records, for example), who were known to mix Fugazi (a highly influential band who'd come to feature Minor Threat/Embrace member Ian MacKaye and Rites of Spring member Guy Picciotto) along with post-punk elements. This is sometimes referred to as a "second wave" or "post-emo indie rock."


    Examples of these post-hardcore/indie bands include:
    Sunny Day Real Estate, Christie Front Drive, the Promise Ring, Mineral, Boys Life, Sideshow, the Get-Up Kids, Braid, Cap'n Jazz, Joan of Arc, Jets To Brazil, Texas Is the Reason, Death Cab For Cutie, Jimmy Eat World, At The Drive-In, Saves The Day, and Weezer.


    Around and after 2000, a bastardisation* of emo terminology in turn created a fad in which had no relation with actual emo music. Showcased was a new scene of goth-like "emo fashion," stereotypes of crying and self-mutilation, and the words "emo" and "screamo" carelessly attibuted to pop-punk, post-hardcore, and dubbed-down metalcore bands alike. This is due pimarily to mainstream media, record companys, and the internet. Sometimes referred to as "popcore," "emobop," "mall emo," and "fake screamo" by those "in-the-know," none of these new bands beared resemblance to emo/screamo bands, and have hardly anything in common with them.


    With that being said, emo/screamo does not include the following bands:
    (this is not to discredit any band in particular musically)
    AFI, Alexisonfire, A Static Lullaby, Alkaline Trio, All-American Rejects, The Ataris, Brand New, Bright Eyes, Coheed and Cambria, The Early November, Emery, Fall Out Boy, Finch, From Autumn to Ashes, From First to Last, Funeral for a Friend, Hawthorne Heights, Matchbook Romance, My Chemical Romance, Panic! At the Disco, Saosin, Senses Fail, Silverstein, Something Corporate, The Starting Line, Story of the Year, Taking Back Sunday, The Used, Thrice, Thursday, or Yellowcard.


    *Emo bands have been referred to as such since the mid-80's. "Screamo" is a term first used widely in publications such as Heartattack and Maximum Rock'n'Roll to describe bands from the late 90's such as Orchid, Reversal of Man, Jeromes Dream, etc. that were playing what could be called "chaotic emo/hardcore." Because the term "screamo" is a much better catchphrase for larger publications, it was easily adopted and widely misused by other publications such as Alternative Press, SPIN, etc. to describe any pretentious pop-punk band that happened to add a screaming element to their music. Despite all this, in 1998 Teen People declared "emo" the newest "hip" style of music. After 2000, many new groups incorporating screams and sappy songwriting appeared on the mainstream for a so-called "third-wave of emo." NME Magazine is sometimes regarded as coining "screamo" as the hot new sound for 2003, and to identify to such bands as The Blood Brothers, The Used, Poison the Well, Thrice, Finch and Glassjaw.

  6. #56

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    dont forget "slashing of wrist in the a locked bathroom"..its so emo

  7. #57

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    emo?.. ako?... emo?.. ako?...

  8. #58

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by macho man
    dont forget "slashing of wrist in the a locked bathroom"..its so emo
    that's not the way emo is defined as emo purist says..gi-copy nko usob para mabasa nmo bai..basin gkapuyan ka ug basa tungod sa kataas

    qoute:
    Around and after 2000, a bastardisation* of emo terminology in turn created a fad in which had no relation with actual emo music. Showcased was a new scene of goth-like "emo fashion," stereotypes of crying and self-mutilation, and the words "emo" and "screamo" carelessly attibuted to pop-punk, post-hardcore, and dubbed-down metalcore bands alike. This is due pimarily to mainstream media, record companys, and the internet. Sometimes referred to as "popcore," "emobop," "mall emo," and "fake screamo" by those "in-the-know," none of these new bands beared resemblance to emo/screamo bands, and have hardly anything in common with them.
    :unquote

  9. #59

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    buckstab, agree ko nimo bay.

    back in the days, emo was a genre invented to "get-away"(for the lack of better term) from the bludgeoning punk rock / hardcore scene. sa ato pa, ang mga ubang mga banda saona nga napul-an na ug punk2x o ganahan lang mo-eksperimento sa ilang tirada, nagtukod to sila ug banda nga palahi sad ug trip bah. diha nagsugod ang emo. from that moment on, emo has been(or atleast known to be), if not a counter-culture, an offshoot of the punk rock sub-genre.

    then came the mainstream "swill merchants" who exploited and obliterated everything along their way. so in a sense, emo has been long dead just like grunge. killed by THE MAN.

    na-wa na ang ang sense sa emo which ,mind you, is not about slitting wrists and capitalizing unfounded sadness, depression, etc. it was about DIY and breaking away from the whole PUNK/HC Machismo...


    just my two cents worth...

  10. #60

    Default Re: Anything EMO - stop making other EMO related threads!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by balut_man
    buckstab, agree ko nimo bay.

    back in the days, emo was a genre invented to "get-away"(for the lack of better term) from the bludgeoning punk rock / hardcore scene. sa ato pa, ang mga ubang mga banda saona nga napul-an na ug punk2x o ganahan lang mo-eksperimento sa ilang tirada, nagtukod to sila ug banda nga palahi sad ug trip bah. diha nagsugod ang emo. from that moment on, emo has been(or atleast known to be), if not a counter-culture, an offshoot of the punk rock sub-genre.

    then came the mainstream "swill merchants" who exploited and obliterated everything along their way. so in a sense, emo has been long dead just like grunge. killed by THE MAN.

    na-wa na ang ang sense sa emo which ,mind you, is not about slitting wrists and capitalizing unfounded sadness, depression, etc. it was about DIY and breaking away from the whole PUNK/HC Machismo...


    just my two cents worth...

    yeah...i know...hehehe but i'm hitting on those frikkin posers here..if u know wat i mean..hehehe rumors are goin around that emo kids in the malls are slitting their wrist,crying,being lonely.wear make up,nagpasagpa ug buhok and scream para lang jud matawag ug emo...nindot man ang emo but ang naka bati kay ang mga tao ngaganhan ma emo..

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