Friday, November 6, 2009

Emo My Style Screamo My Genre


Emo (pronounced / i moʊ ː /) is a style of rock music is usually characterized by Musicianship melodious and expressive, often hugging the lyrics. He came in the mid-1980s hardcore punk movement of Washington, DC, where he was known as "emotional hardcore" or "emocore" and pioneered by bands such as ritual and embrace spring. Because the style is echoed by the punk bands in contemporary America, sounds and meanings shift and change, mixed with pop punk and indie rock and packed in the early 1990s by groups such as Jawbreaker and Sunny Day Real Estate. In the mid-1990s, a lot of emo acts come from the Central and Midwestern United States, and several independent record companies began to specialize in style.

Emo broke into the main culture in the early 2000s-platinum sales success of Jimmy Eat World and Dashboard subgenre adopted and the emergence of a more aggressive "Screamo". In recent years the term "emo" has been applied by critics and journalists for various artists, including the multiplatinum acts such as Fall Out Boy and My Chemical Romance, and groups as diverse as Coheed and Cambria and Panic at the Disco.

In addition to music, "emo" is generally more often used to indicate the relationship between fans and artists, and to describe aspects related to fashion, culture, and behavior.

Most people have a limited idea of what emo is horrible, just because the most important record in the development of most emo released on vinyl, in small amounts, and with limited distribution. But this is a very influential, so now you have a situation that many kids listen to the third and fourth-generation emo styles without even knowing it. I hope to expose people like great wealth of music before it gets easier to find all the time ...

I'll split the masses "emo" band into several different genres. As categorization effort, there will be exceptions, crossovers, and a tangential relationship. That's fine. The aim is only to put some general trends, general notes on the sounds, music and lyrics of the theme, and how to listen to them.

Some notes on nomenclature. There is no real consensus about what "emo" and "emocore" are, or if they are even different. Obviously these days what you're talking with terms like "punk," "postpunk," "no wave," "hardcore punk," "old-school/new-school," etc (although the difference between "hardcore punk "and" hardcore "lost on many people -" hardcore punk "is punk rock made heavier, faster, louder;" hardcore "is what happens when hardcore punk realize that they do not have to sound like punk rock anymore - still heavy, fast, hard, but with a different foundation.) I wish to draw a clear distinction between the categories, specify their names, and use them consistently. It's just that language.

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