Why is Emo popular again? (this is why it died)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @ThePunkRockMBA
    @ThePunkRockMBA  Год назад +98

    Thank you Helix for sponsoring! Visit helixsleep.com/punkrock to get 20% off your Helix mattress, plus two free pillows. Offers subject to change. #helixsleep

    • @hedlesssNYC
      @hedlesssNYC Год назад +1

      The music industry was gutted. Almost Everyone steals music. DUH! No lifestyle...no house....no car.....no women...no men...no talented people with half a brain

    • @passiveaggressivemayhemmus7642
      @passiveaggressivemayhemmus7642 Год назад

      It's weird nowadays, mango. With revivals, I question what's authentic to the message versus what's milking it. As far as the algorithm thing, it kinda gates you as well, in my opinion, because you spend hours on one thread. This is why I love the reaction scene for its diversity. That new format seems like the new "they did this as well" thing... it also shows the same themes and deliveries of other bands from different genres.

    • @moedark4390
      @moedark4390 Год назад

      Tickel me Emo, love that skit

    • @lilspicytuna
      @lilspicytuna Год назад

      It’s probably your fault Finn

    • @TrevorGintheplace2Be
      @TrevorGintheplace2Be Год назад

      Hi Fin, I love you channels. You are always ahead of the curve and have great insights. This idea of "Monoculture" is new to me and is a good explanation of how pop culture used to move when we were younger. I get that it might be over but I was wondering if you had any ideas of how it still manifests now? It seems there are still cultural moments that 90% of people can relate to/experience... I designed the Hellfire shirt design for Stranger Things and none of us expected that to take off the way it did. Metallica and Kate Bush had even bigger moments come out of the same show. What would you call this?

  • @nikolasschulz7121
    @nikolasschulz7121 Год назад +6079

    Emo and pop punk never died, we just have jobs now

    • @trippyvannoir.333
      @trippyvannoir.333 Год назад +140

      Facts thou 🌚🤘🏾🖤 Responsibilities can be a real debbie downer 🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @imazombieee8949
      @imazombieee8949 Год назад +16

      Haha tu' che

    • @trippyvannoir.333
      @trippyvannoir.333 Год назад +5

      @@imazombieee8949 💥🤺

    • @Jokerasmaw
      @Jokerasmaw Год назад +68

      Yeah I can’t really point to a time when there was a major dip in emo or post hardcore music being produced, in fact I think the bands that are still around from when we were younger are still evolving and producing good music, which is more than anyone could say about Guns N Roses or any hair band from the 80’s

    • @nikolasschulz7121
      @nikolasschulz7121 Год назад +12

      @@Jokerasmaw I loved the 10’s pop punk/ emo bands as well

  • @lithiumwhiskey1891
    @lithiumwhiskey1891 Год назад +970

    Emo will never truly die, the music is full of classics and there will always be sad people who relate to the music. It’s not something that just goes away.

    • @krokovay.marcell
      @krokovay.marcell Год назад +5

      That is true to other genres as well…so why THIS genre?

    • @lithiumwhiskey1891
      @lithiumwhiskey1891 Год назад +12

      @@krokovay.marcell Well a lot of the genres you are talking about haven’t gone away either

    • @joyiswhatIwantedtofeel
      @joyiswhatIwantedtofeel Год назад +1

      @@noneofureffinbusinessWhy do you hate pop music? Genuinely curious on the hatred of pop music in general ( I get hating today’s pop it’s nastier than garbage)

    • @quas3728
      @quas3728 Год назад +2

      exactly... it never died like some other genres. many genres got resurrected maybe because of spotify. boom bap (hip hop sub genre), nu metal, chipmunk soul style sampling, they got resurrected too.

    • @sonicboom577
      @sonicboom577 Год назад +3

      Lil uzi vert had BMTH on his latest album. Number 1 on billboard 200. Could be safe to say it's being resurrected with Kennyhoopla, Travis Barker, Sueco, so many more. But it's tough to say.

  • @martinalther6661
    @martinalther6661 Год назад +401

    Contrary to popular myth, I think a lot of young people appreciate older music. When I was in middle and high school, I had classmates who listened to bands like Queen and Aerosmith. I’ve seen plenty of young people ever since embracing The Beatles, etc. I think the whole “young person dismissing his parents’ music as ‘for old geezers’” is more a thing in cheesy sitcoms from the 70’s and 80’s than in real life.

    • @W81Researcher
      @W81Researcher Год назад

      Because it's gen z's idea to be the smartest ones in the room. Also young black students are branching away from rap and R&B to change the narrative of black culture. That's all their parents listened to.
      A frat boy proposed to his black girlfriend at an Eagles concert. I can only imagine what the old schoolers thought there.
      Gen Z is out to destroy college culture and the future with their political voting power. I can only hope businesses will not bow down to them.

    • @Beer-5
      @Beer-5 Год назад +9

      I was born in 2006 and I love listening to bands like Kiss, Metallica, AC/DC, blink-182, the offspring, motely crue, NO FX, Rancid, ect

    • @LovelyAngel.
      @LovelyAngel. Год назад

      I was that classmate, the only thing that intrigues me is why weren't you that classmate? It was so fun

    • @pushumonster
      @pushumonster Год назад +19

      I wanna vent a little bit about that myth. I think there some people from older generations who look down on new music, and will blame younger people for liking it. Then project that contempt on them and vicitmize themselves : "that is so sad that young people nowadays don't listen to REAL music anymore". They do, they are just also listening to other stuff because they are not as puritans as you, and also are not a monolith. Some people should learn the difference between "the music I like" and "the music that is objectively the only actual music/good music". (Not that younger generations aren't jugmental too)

    • @owlbusdumbledork9966
      @owlbusdumbledork9966 Год назад +3

      I was in high school during the peak of the emo craze, and I had a bunch of burnt CDs of all of these emo bands (and metal bands), but my dad also got me into Led Zeppelin and Van Halen back then, and I loved Hendrix. Now, in my 30s, I'm actually mostly into 80s new wave/shoegaze and '90s alternative.

  • @briansnc2008
    @briansnc2008 Год назад +301

    I’m hoping rock makes it way back to the mainstream already. It’s overdue to hear rock on the radio. All types of rock

    • @maleldil1
      @maleldil1 Год назад +22

      Why does mainstream matter anyway? Why listen to the radio when you can listen to Spotify/RUclips/whatever? The whole point of the end of monoculture is that the mainstream doesn't really matter anymore.

    • @brandongregori995
      @brandongregori995 Год назад +8

      Seriously, who chooses to listen to the radio these days? It's a last resort option.

    • @ciel1083
      @ciel1083 Год назад +2

      I hate how my area is nothing but country and rap because I like around poor black and white people.

    • @messibessi11
      @messibessi11 Год назад

      Idk what radio stations you listen to but the ones I listen to all play rock

    • @timklafke4712
      @timklafke4712 Год назад +4

      @@brandongregori995 I mean radio stations still play at plenty of public areas i think like grocery stores, clothing stores, etc. So it would be kinda cool to be hearing some rock shit on there. But otherwise yeah i agree most people (at least in my age bracket, early 20s) only uses spotify or other stream platforms. It's just so much better.

  • @octoberlaylow9177
    @octoberlaylow9177 Год назад +406

    I was born in 2007 and look !!!! I am so glad this style of music is coming back !! We’ve got the new all time low and ptv and fall out boy albums, new paramore, MCR is still here and banging!!!! These guys are my inspirations (I want to go into a career in music production). Im so glad I get to live in a generation with them alive and honestly??? 2023 has been the best year for music. i get to go through high school with these bands playing in my ears and I just think that’s the coolest thing.

    • @HoneyBakedHamlet
      @HoneyBakedHamlet Год назад +16

      Awww… you’re such a sweetheart! I’ve got a kid that was born the same year you were born lol. I’ve got a suggestion for you, if you like this stuff, look at early 2000’s nu-metal. It’s a bit heavier than this stuff, but I think you might enjoy it, possibly. Xx
      Edit: I also know a BUNCH of people who also like Ice Nine Kills, if you haven’t heard of them. I think they’re… horrorcore? Not entirely sure. But they get inspiration for their music from classic horror movies and it’s such a good and new angle of inspiration.

    • @OGamerGirl92
      @OGamerGirl92 Год назад +3

      That was my freshman year....Damn I'm old now.

    • @ladyindigo3672
      @ladyindigo3672 Год назад +8

      That's always an awesome feeling : ) Long bus rides, immersed in your favorite band, reading the lyrics just to realize you've been singing the chorus wrong haha. Red Jumpsuit Apparatus "Face Down"

    • @rossh2386
      @rossh2386 Год назад +6

      @@HoneyBakedHamlet don’t sell nu metal again please. It wasn’t good the first time around

    • @nanach6276
      @nanach6276 Год назад +3

      This makes me so happy:) Remember Emo is not only about being sad :)

  • @landmarkcreations1183
    @landmarkcreations1183 Год назад +604

    Thing about MCR is, it’s not like they are super old. I mean they are older but can still perform at a high level. A lot of younger people don’t look at them as “old” but just a great band that they can relate to (which is awesome)

    • @owensspace
      @owensspace Год назад

      Can I just say that “grab the devil by the horns and f*ck him up the ass” is such a rock and roll legend of a name for a song? Can I say that?

    • @AliciaGuitar
      @AliciaGuitar Год назад +35

      Gerard is 46 years old... old enough to be the father of a 26 year old. Most young ppl think over 40 is old because we are the same or older than thier parents. Most famous 40 year olds still color thier hair to cover gray, and i think younger kids dont realize how old ppl like MCR and Green Day really are cuz they still visually pass for being young.

    • @musical.theory
      @musical.theory Год назад +18

      @@AliciaGuitar Im 20. I attended MCR in Warsaw last year and it was the best. Neither I nor my friends think of MCR as "old" or "parents age", theyre just MCR that we grew up with. (Though I admit, while I dont remember it on daily basis, when I do remember that MCR/Eminem/etc are around 50 it feels funny).

    • @Eduardo-so9mk
      @Eduardo-so9mk Год назад +3

      My dude, mcr is like 20 years old, though I've seen a similar effecct with other bands like sabaton wich is also 20 years old

    • @lachlanhines7644
      @lachlanhines7644 Год назад +8

      Exactly. Frank Iero (Rhythm guitar for MCR) Is 41. That makes him 5 years Older than Billy Joe Armstrong when American Idiot came out.

  • @tpags7398
    @tpags7398 Год назад +390

    I’m confident that Emo never died, it just exited the public conscious after like 2009 and retreated back to the punk and hc scenes it came from with a lot of the revival bands of the 2010’s like the hotelier and snowing. Even now there’s a lot of kids and bands making incredible and forward thinking emo in the 5th wave

    • @chamomile8946
      @chamomile8946 Год назад +5

      Yup. Algernon Cadwallader 2008, Jack Senff bands and Snowing 2009, the bands that inspired them like kid crash was like 2007. Glocca Morra 2012. TWIABP 2013

    • @tpags7398
      @tpags7398 Год назад +2

      @@chamomile8946 the kidcrash is awesome. Love Algernon and Glocca and all those bands. I feel like there was some hardcore that ran parallel to those scenes to. Title Fight, Blacklisted, Dangers etc

    • @chamomile8946
      @chamomile8946 Год назад +2

      @@tpags7398 Definitely agree. Also haven’t heard of Blacklisted so I’m going to check them out! I think a big thing is pages like Sophie’s Floorboard, I feel like a lot of it was being shared together. From my experience, people that liked heroin and gouge away also liked TTNG and Don Cab which is something I’ve always kinda loved

    • @tpags7398
      @tpags7398 Год назад +1

      @@chamomile8946 that board is still up and has been a really big resource for me finding Screamo stuff especially that isn’t on streaming. That crossover makes a lot of sense to me.

    • @amador9682
      @amador9682 Год назад

      This dude fly up high of how based he talk

  • @oops6876
    @oops6876 Год назад +302

    Boy, let me tell you, nothing gets the Karaoke bar more riled up than singing Panic, FOB, My Chem, or Paramore. Every time without fail.

    • @TreeCookies
      @TreeCookies Год назад +4

      FACTS

    • @wallaceshawn-zk8iw
      @wallaceshawn-zk8iw Год назад +2

      I'd be pissed too...

    • @TheYagomestre
      @TheYagomestre Год назад +4

      I got you! Also, cast the stone who never went to a karaoke with a friend to sing the clean part while you do the screams in some metalcore anthem like Tears Don't Fall!
      Really good times.

    • @drewolfy
      @drewolfy Год назад +6

      Was in a backwoods Tennessee whiskey bar in the middle of the absolute sticks on a karaoke night and I busted out Ocean Avenue by Yellowcard and the guys were all like "I REMEMBER THIS ONE!" hahahaha

    • @Venomx-nb1jr
      @Venomx-nb1jr Год назад +2

      I think what really helps is how transcendent the pop punk sound was. Most of us as kids were exposed to southern rock and country and classic rock and something like nirvana or static X can be plugged into mcr or escape the fate and it’s the sound and the melodies that lie buried in our memory and all it takes is literally the right combination of notes to trigger those memories. It’s the free bird effect just updated. And all you have to do is go to any karaoke bar anywhere and watch what happens when don’t stop believing comes on.

  • @jasonswearingen5842
    @jasonswearingen5842 Год назад +144

    As far as the woman crying during MCR, I can feel that. I'm not the biggest MCR fan in the world but the Mall Screamo years was such a beautiful time to be a teenager. We were so passionate about the music, & so proud to be a part of the scene. I was there for the whole thing, I was 16 in 2002, & 22 in 2008. It was depressing when we started to age out of it because it will always be who we are deep down. It was really hard to let go. If I went to one of these shows today I'd probably get emotional too lol. It was more than just a phase. It will always live on in the hearts of those who lived it.

    • @idontlikedylan4068
      @idontlikedylan4068 Год назад +4

      I started crying when I saw snuffed on sight play

    • @darkmooink69
      @darkmooink69 Год назад +1

      It hit me when seeing evanescence and there were multiple others around me who it also hit. Amy lee made lots of people cry that day.

    • @AtZero138
      @AtZero138 Год назад

      Great Dude met, and became friends.. worked Merch booth for them at shows.. getting tackled randomly hahaha . Watching them get famous was crazy to be a part of.. and no I've never liked them.. we liked bands that don't sound like MCR.. he also loved you guy's "fans".. cheers from Huntington Beach CA.. @∅..
      Band we both liked.. at first meeting.. Since By Man,, Push to Panic..
      Also we used to laugh at the use of the term emo.. yikes..

  • @alexandrac591
    @alexandrac591 Год назад +147

    As an elder millennial reflecting on high school, I can assure you that there were always a few kids around who made their devotion to the Beatles a core part of their personality (with some of that "there's no good music anymore!" snobbery). And always, always a few kids who were jazz-only people with similar patterns. It's an ancient tradition.

    • @GhPadua
      @GhPadua Год назад +8

      I also knew these kids, I was one of them! lol
      Nowadays approaching my 30s I started to look back to emo music in the 2000s and appreciate it a lot more than I did back then, my brutal nostalgia for my highschool years also helps

    • @scottistrad
      @scottistrad Год назад +3

      Same is true with stuff like The Doors and Led Zeppelin

  • @tyrantla7120
    @tyrantla7120 Год назад +191

    I never stopped being emo.. im just old and emo now. I still listen to the same bands today.. Saved the Day, Silverstein, Thursday, Atreyu, The Used, From Autumn to Ashes.. etc..

    • @duploh
      @duploh Год назад +2

      🙏 Same. Those bands 🖤. In my car i even play those cd's from in my teens. No new albums 😁

    • @wavybaby999
      @wavybaby999 Год назад +2

      Same .

    • @Niccipotts
      @Niccipotts Год назад +4

      I just saw Atreyu last year! They will always be one of my favorites

    • @MichaelSaunier
      @MichaelSaunier Год назад +1

      Same list ❤️

    • @MichaelSaunier
      @MichaelSaunier Год назад

      @@Niccipotts same here. Took my 10 year old son who loves them

  • @idk-idc-idc6076
    @idk-idc-idc6076 Год назад +62

    for me personally (a 2001 baby), I was introduced to Paramore, Green Day, Breaking Benjamin, Avril, etc. from a young age, since elementary school. I loved it! Then went on to middle school listening to them and other bands like Pierce the Veil, Bring Me the Horizon, etc. Also 2000's teen movies featured many songs from this genre so that also exposed me to it.

  • @Rullehjem
    @Rullehjem Год назад +277

    I can't believe I'm so old that MCR is now classic rock.

    • @GaslightCatalyst
      @GaslightCatalyst Год назад +29

      I lived in a country town for a few years and the only rock type of radio station there was classic rock. They played Basketcase from Green Day 😭😂

    • @DaleKamp
      @DaleKamp Год назад +2

      @@GaslightCatalyst ^_^'

    • @DashsChannel
      @DashsChannel Год назад +6

      @@GaslightCatalyst A few years ago the local classic rock station in my own town played P.O.D. Make of that what you will :o

    • @standard-carrier-wo-chan
      @standard-carrier-wo-chan Год назад +5

      @@GaslightCatalyst Brooo I can't believe Dookie is now classic rock

    • @Xander1Sheridan
      @Xander1Sheridan Год назад +3

      everything from the early 2000's is now classic rock. It's funny and kind of bonkers.

  • @CALISPEC1
    @CALISPEC1 Год назад +35

    Emo will NEVER die because it was never just industry music, it was written for us by us, the kids who grew up in broken homes, with divorced parents who couldn’t get along or were afterthoughts to their parents or who had a parent in prison or even the kids that just felt like an outsider. Emo kids love Emo music because Emo kids wrote the songs 🤟

  • @MiyaBhika
    @MiyaBhika Год назад +81

    I’m gen Z (23) but I was in the tumblr emo scene and that’s what got me into it back when I was 11/12 and only when I turned 18 I had enough money to go to gigs😅

  • @megaascension2748
    @megaascension2748 Год назад +529

    As a member of older Gen Z (who I guess has been part of this?) I can explain. This started earlier than the past few years, this started nearly ten years ago with a lot of the tumblr core where there was a lot of people sharing their emotions and difficulties and angst. This ended up driving teens to listen to MCR, Fall Out Boy, and Panic, along with adjacent artists like Twenty One Pilots. 2015-16 saw Twenty One Pilots blow up, a big career renaissance for Fall Out Boy and Panic, and widespread hype over the MCRX trailer. While some left, others stayed and found other popular 2000s bands (Linkin Park and Muse) and more modern counterparts (Yungblud, Bring Me The Horizon). Then the pop-punk revival happened, and the combination of the state of our world, mental health deterioration from isolation, and increased openness of mental health, and more led to young people actively seeking out emotionally and socially relatable music, so the emo revival makes sense. Not to mention the less "typical" aesthetic many of these bands had. Not to mention the years of access to any music with the click of a few buttons through streaming.
    A lot of these bands still end up being relevant to Gen Z due to it just being good music, a dearth of popular rock bands today, and it reflecting the mental state of a lot of people our age. I see more modern bands getting popular in the next few years with their own own sound with these same people.

    • @lethybridtheorygolucastheo2191
      @lethybridtheorygolucastheo2191 Год назад +30

      "DormRoomLaser" Gen Z here. When you mentioned Tumblr core you've got to realize most of those Zoomers before discovering MCR, FOB and P!ATD were fans of Alt Pop/Indie Rock musicians and bands before they discovered this stuff (Most of them started off with Halsey, Arctic Monkeys, The Neighborhood, Lorde, Melanie Martinez, The 1975, MARINA, Lana Del Rey, Cage the Elephant etc). Those same people later on also got into Metalcore (Mainstream and underground). Most of the fanbase of it were mostly women.

    • @starknit
      @starknit Год назад +14

      i was actively in fan spaces during the whole top - fob - patd trifecta of madness during the mid 2010s. im older gen z but those times have become nostalgic to me now despite it happening less than a decade ago

    • @usualdosage7287
      @usualdosage7287 Год назад

      Yall are young but that emo Trinity band kid shit i can't do tbh real emo is shit lke sunny day real estate

    • @Regent192
      @Regent192 Год назад +8

      @@lethybridtheorygolucastheo2191 I agree on the Metalcore comment. The subreddit for r/metalcore went from 100k to 300k followers within the past 2 years

    • @AnthemUnanthemed
      @AnthemUnanthemed Год назад

      its almost like if you keep living in the same world not fixing anything and you just dump it on your kids, the kids have the same fucking issue the parents did

  • @DrBeauHightower
    @DrBeauHightower Год назад +227

    Agreed 100 percent with the end of monoculture

    • @ladyindigo3672
      @ladyindigo3672 Год назад

      Right? It makes me think just how much media controlled what we liked and talked about back then. People aren't falling for that sh*t nowadays. We have too many options.

  • @mrdeathbreath
    @mrdeathbreath Год назад +142

    You blew my mind when you compared emo being stuck in the 2000's to 80's metal. This is hands down one of the best videos you have created. Thank you always for your eye opening insight😊

    • @nmbnmbnmb
      @nmbnmbnmb Год назад +14

      There was a lot of 80s nostaligia in the 2000s. 70s in the 90s and so on. People tend to miss a decade 10 years after that decade ends.

    • @joaopedrosantos8668
      @joaopedrosantos8668 Год назад +1

      @@nmbnmbnmb Considering our average life span it kinda makes sense that it's around 10 to 20 years the nostagia movements look back to

    • @demivydE
      @demivydE Год назад

      80s metal is still alive. But the harder, thrashier, speedier, death metal version. I was the oldest person at the festival.

  • @lullaboo9278
    @lullaboo9278 Год назад +120

    As an "early gen z", I'm 23 and when these bands started being super popular I was too young for them to interest me (i was 6 when The Black Parade came out), maybe except for Avril Lavigne who I remember listening when I was around 9. I started listening to emo music when I was 14, in 2014, when emo was apparently dead, because I was entering teenagehood and everything was so fucked but these songs made me feel understood. To a shy, queer and weird kid, it couldn't make more sense to be into bands that talked about feelings in a deep and kinda dark way and that were considered dead. Now I'm an adult and still love these bands, but I listen to their music differently and it's cool to witness them becoming popular again!

    • @jameslopez3653
      @jameslopez3653 Год назад +19

      You took the words straight out of my mouth, as a fellow gen z kid who was born in 2001

    • @cocoacoolness
      @cocoacoolness Год назад +1

      I'm a similar age. I grew up with alternative music because thats what my parents liked. I got access to RUclips when I was 13 and that's when I had control to choose what I listened to. Algorithm wasn't as good then so I mostly found bands I liked through friends recommendations or when bands would do songs together. I still think there are lots of popular bands from the 2010s, I think this whole thing died when tiktok started instead of in the mid 2000s as suggested in the video

    • @jianxiongRaven
      @jianxiongRaven 10 месяцев назад +2

      Same gen z 2000.
      Felt good since we explored both sides , when media was transitioning onto online
      Social media wasn't as addicting and did what it was meant to do.
      Not addicting af

  • @ILoveJohnnyGat
    @ILoveJohnnyGat Год назад +25

    I'm a gen z emo and i am so envious of elder emos, i wish i could have been a teen back then since yes on tiktok you'll see a lot of gen z emos but in real life they're so rare 😭
    I feel the 2000s was the best time, other than the problematic stuff. But it was the start of the internet yk and people still went out. Things were more colorful, creative. the fashion was silly but good in a way and expressive. I feel that the music today does suck tbh. Emo stuff today is occasionally good but I mean other genres.

    • @Vamp1re_kitty
      @Vamp1re_kitty 4 месяца назад

      Literally 😭😭😭

    • @DmdMixZ
      @DmdMixZ 2 месяца назад +1

      It was a different time back then, technology drove this apart for sure.
      If someone had a new phone on their song we had full blown emo gatherings in the breaks at school, trying to share it with as many people as possible, sms were short and expensive, so often you'd just meet up if you just wanted to chat or try to call from the landline at home because there was no other way.
      A lot of people didn't yet have unrestricted access to the internet so ICQ and MSN or even Myspace haven't been constantly available to everyone.
      In short: If you wanted to talk to someone, you most likely went to go see them. It was more personal and instead of looking at a TikTok or Instagram feed, you had to rely on your friends to provide the fun stuff that you liked.
      Essentially who you surrounded yourself with decided what you got to see. You didn't just follow the right people on instagram and then sat there, quietly looking at your screen, nope. You went to see the people you know had the stories, magazines, movies, music and series to share that you wanted to hear or see.
      Sure, still happens today but it's a lot different.

    • @sober_katz
      @sober_katz Месяц назад +1

      as a fellow gen z teen i 100% agree. i wanna hang out with friends but my shyness and everyone being on their phones and disconnected from reality makes it so hard ;-;

  • @leilei_475
    @leilei_475 Год назад +288

    As a high schooler now, being into this music is nostalgic for me when i was a kid in the car with my parents. My dad even tells me about ozzfest, woodstock, tons of concerts he’s been to. It’s exciting and cool to bond with my dad over music from this era

    • @startervisions
      @startervisions Год назад

      Ask him about Emo music in the 90's...the stuff from that era was different than the 2000's...ruclips.net/p/PLvW9Mh8xihPtFxJ1onQsbapT3AXjmxeef

    • @melissas4874
      @melissas4874 Год назад +2

      I completely understand. I'm quite a bit older than you and I love some really old Stevie Wonder. Why? Because some of these songs were always on the radio during road trips or at amusement parks we visited. So it's nostalgia, but I definitely wouldn't listen to these songs if they sucked and I don't think you would either.

    • @ashtongarcia6894
      @ashtongarcia6894 Год назад +1

      @ghost mall lol as an 18 yr oldtbh it’s not rly considered “dad rock” I mean some dads listen to it but modern dad rock is like nickel back or Pearl Jam and there def still us that emo/scene hot topic crowd that wears Mcr band t’s and stuff. And you’re right w it sounding juvenile or for teens like you can’t listen to simple plan or someone and not think it was 💯 made for teens/pre teens. There still is that nostalgic factor tho since it was on the radio nd stuff tho

    • @PhilosophyXGamer
      @PhilosophyXGamer Год назад +1

      Hey thank you for this comment. Wholesome

    • @sole__doubt
      @sole__doubt Год назад +2

      @@ashtongarcia6894 What is Dad Rock? Im a father and thrash metal is what I listen to most of the time.

  • @janelilrattyrat2977
    @janelilrattyrat2977 Год назад +197

    I’m 13 and I’m actually heavy in the goth and emo scene (but present more goth rather than emo) and have quite a few friends who are goth/punk/emo etc as well. I think it’s honestly really fun and it feels like it’s kinda thriving at the moment because I keep meeting more and more cool alt teenagers! Feels absolutely great to have a community that is popular over multiple generations

    • @ishajac3637
      @ishajac3637 Год назад +11

      I'm really glad to hear that. I got to see MCR live for the first time in 2022, and I was quite nervous that their newbe fans would look at me like I'm the creepy old person at the joint. 😆 It wasn't like that at all. It was very warm and welcoming. But it's nice to hear that ALL are Welcome To The Black Parade. (See how I did that)haha😊

    • @theeffigymusic
      @theeffigymusic Год назад +12

      I'm honestly super glad that goth and emo are living on in the younger generation! If for no other reason than I couldn't afford cool goth clothes when I was a teen and now they're back at a time when I have a job haha

    • @kaydgaming
      @kaydgaming Год назад +2

      Bro… I’m crying rn cuz you’re articulating too well for a 2010 baby!!!

    • @camillegauthier1872
      @camillegauthier1872 Год назад +1

      Sooo cool to read that :) I'm an oldie emo who's 30 now and remember all the bullying at school just because it was soooo uncoool

    • @zacheatsworld
      @zacheatsworld Год назад +3

      I’m happy to see the younger folks getting into it! Honestly, I just wish y’all woulda experienced it back in 05-10. It just hit different back then.

  • @robwalsh9843
    @robwalsh9843 Год назад +126

    I think it's common for a lot of kids to reject the music that their parents liked until a certain age when they realize those songs were imprinted into their memory and they grow to love them. I rolled my eyes as a kid when my parents broke out into singing along with Elton John in the car, now I find myself loudly singing Yellow Brick Road in the shower(poorly).

    • @salac1337
      @salac1337 Год назад +7

      the "i heard pink floyd in my fathers car" pipeline is real

    • @michelleschmidt2419
      @michelleschmidt2419 Год назад

      I totally agree with you.

  • @x.strangewerewolf.x9461
    @x.strangewerewolf.x9461 Год назад +32

    I was born in 2005 and started listening to emo music in middle school (2018). I love that emo never really died because it helped me and a lot of other people form lovely memories! some of my mentors in their 30s went to the same MCR show as me and it was so nice to share this nearly-religious experience of seeing this band we’d bonded over with them. It’s so nice to see people of all ages enjoy something together.

  • @Noravk
    @Noravk Год назад +36

    I love MCR. And I remember that they were so criticized when I was younger (not only them, but all the emo culture), and I always thought "at some point in the future, people are going to see they're actually great and their songs are going to be hymns of the rock". This is that moment, people 😊.

  • @markcoroneos7811
    @markcoroneos7811 Год назад +40

    I missed almost every band i liked in high school due to lack of funds, so to see MCR when they came to Aus this year, and being able to take my son with me who loves them as well, was incredibly special. Singing welcome to the black parade together was something ill always cherish.

  • @mtaylorknowles
    @mtaylorknowles Год назад +88

    I graduated high school in 2008 and it’s kind of comforting to know nothing has changed.
    I can’t believe there are still classic rock kids though.

    • @cicada.k
      @cicada.k Год назад +9

      Graduated in 2014 and there were classic rock kids then too!

    • @Viper-dz2kw
      @Viper-dz2kw Год назад

      @@cicada.k 2019 and yep, I wasn’t one of them but there were, and I know a few at college as well

    • @usualdosage7287
      @usualdosage7287 Год назад +6

      I feel like kids definitely have more of an eclectic taste than previous generations, their are lots of creative genius in classic rock people just see it as dad music tho like the riffs and chord progressions are awesome

    • @JDVideosProductions
      @JDVideosProductions Год назад

      I went to a tiny school in the Midwest; Class of 2016. And my school had no culture. I was one of like two kids that listened to emo and alternative rock. Everyone else just listened to what was popular on the radio.

    • @glenhaven721
      @glenhaven721 Год назад +4

      I’m in middle school and I love both classic rock and emo :) I mean, I’m not emo myself, it’s just good music.

  • @Pandamonium626
    @Pandamonium626 Год назад +82

    I have been listening to MCR's first album for 18 years. It's my favorite album ever and I listen to it frequently, so emo will never die for me.

    • @tiffanyraeann
      @tiffanyraeann Год назад

      It’s such a great album. I hadn’t listened to it for years and still knew all the words and wondered why I ever stopped listening to it

    • @Pandamonium626
      @Pandamonium626 Год назад +2

      @Tiffany Sais lyrics rarely ever stick with me but the line "oh how wrong we were to think that immortality meant never dying" from Our Lady of Sorrows is something I've remembered for over a decade. And Demolition Lovers just touches me so deep I can't explain it.

    • @noparkingnoparking
      @noparkingnoparking Год назад

      among the liviiiiingggg

    • @bluenomadbruh
      @bluenomadbruh Год назад

      I remember that album came out before they signed with reprise. So every poser in 2005 referred to Three Cheers as their first album. Needless to say, I wanted to slap them. They really gave us, the true fans, a bad rap. I was called a poser but only as time passed, it became clear who was real and who wasn't.

    • @eaglesandowls
      @eaglesandowls Год назад

      MCR isn't actually emo. The band has even said this.

  • @tyc3581
    @tyc3581 Год назад +15

    i’m 21( about to be 22) and during the early 2000s my older brother was emo and i grew up listening to his music. I now go to emo events every weekend because my childhood was really great and it’s so nostalgic to relive that time in my life. Especially because being an adult sucks so i have to mentally be in my childhood in order to be happy 🙈🤪

  • @derhak727
    @derhak727 Год назад +10

    Emo never died in my house. Im 44 with young adult kids and its great we get to continue to go to the same concerts together. With the end of warped tour we moved on to sad summerfest. From taking back sunday to the maine and now broadside and magnolia park. My dad and i had a great music relatiionship w rock from the 70s and 80s. Im glad me and my kids have that same love to share

  • @mariemae2774
    @mariemae2774 Год назад +236

    personally, I remember seeing emo teenagers when I was little and thinking they were cool and how I wanted to be like them, and now that I'm grown and independent, I can finally indulge in these things and be what I thought was cool. My household was also very strict, so it's a manner of freedom for me.
    edit/addition: also, seeing more Black people represented in the subculture due to the broad reach of the internet (as opposed to the mostly white people i saw back then) is really nice for me, because I can take inspo from their braid styles for my own hair instead of feeling like I need to try and have straight hair. and there are more Black artists emerging in the scene and adjacent ones. (should out to Zulu and Meet Me @ the Altar) and I can find them because... internet access. I've found some Black artists from the era, but honestly, they were few and far in between from what I've seen.

    • @gilbyglibber
      @gilbyglibber Год назад +2

      Yeesss basically me

    • @AM-ti2yg
      @AM-ti2yg Год назад +8

      Yeah, the lack of any gender or race diversity back then was so bad that I honestly thought black people and women couldn't be hardcore or post hardcore, since there was next to zero representation of any minority.

    • @edenjamesis2398
      @edenjamesis2398 Год назад +3

      This! THIS! THIS!! is exactly how I feel too, as an adult I can indulge an be a better version of this and the beauty of black people also indulging in this culture/genre makes it better. I enjoy it, it does not have this stigma of "you are trying to be white" or "listening to "white" people music" but embracing the culture for what it is.

    • @GaslightCatalyst
      @GaslightCatalyst Год назад +4

      I think that’s how it was for us millennials too. Most of the pop punk bands music videos take place in a high school type setting, but they were in their 20’s. So us as teenagers identified with them and they knew we were apart of their audience. It’s all about unity and helping out one another. We absolutely hated being called Emo, it was used as an insult. Was either alternative or punk lol. Funny how things change 😂 i think it’s great

    • @aclstudios
      @aclstudios Год назад

      I'm 30 but this is how I am with 90s/Y2K type stuff. I was too little to get into it when it was popular and as an adult, wanted to emulate what I saw as a kid.

  • @theFailQuail
    @theFailQuail Год назад +27

    I'm 32 and my partner is 36. She has a 17 year old and last year we took her with us to Riot Fest in Chicago where MCR headlined the first day of the fest. It was a really wonderful time and super fun as she knew the songs better than we did and she was having the time of her life and really connected with it. It was really dope getting to be present watching a kid form a core memory in real time right in front of me in a similar way that I did.

  • @v00doozz82
    @v00doozz82 Год назад +36

    You’re right with the death of the monoculture. When I was in middle school and high school, even though it wasn’t music I listened to necessarily, I still knew all of the current popular songs. I couldn’t name you the top 3 of this year currently because I’m able to just play my phone with the music I like now and never have to hear things I don’t want to. Jersey shore was the hottest thing when I was in middle school and even though I never saw an episode, I still was aware of the characters, who they were and what not. Crazy how much technology has changed that

    • @ThePunkRockMBA
      @ThePunkRockMBA  Год назад +2

      Great example!

    • @Amethystxxxxx
      @Amethystxxxxx Год назад

      We must be close in age haha, but yeah. Definitely agree. Things were way different then. I’ve always been into emo/rock but still new the “hits”. Now I actively avoid songs I don’t like 😂

  • @RatzBuddie
    @RatzBuddie Год назад +20

    This revival is so interesting for someone like myself in their mid/late 20s. I sort of grew up with every band mentioned here, '70s to '10s. But they were also on their way out as newer bands and genres emerged in-line with modern social media and subcultures. Niches will find you and as long as you personally feel a connection to that, it's worth exploring and preserving

  • @corbinmiles5677
    @corbinmiles5677 Год назад +17

    Monoculture topic is something I’ve felt for a long time but never had the word/phrase to explain it. You could really do culture a favor by expanding on this! Thank you!!

  • @seastarbutterfly
    @seastarbutterfly Год назад +120

    100% My Chemical Romance. They left, it died off. They came back, It resurges. All the parents have been playing their songs to their kids in the car. Natural progression.

    • @Ervinabrahamian
      @Ervinabrahamian Год назад +1

      Terrible parenting, child abuse if you ask me

    • @destructionman1
      @destructionman1 Год назад +28

      @@Ervinabrahamian It'd be child abuse if you *didn't* show your kids good music, imo :)

    • @remembertofeelreal
      @remembertofeelreal Год назад +2

      yes i’ve heard all their hits through the radio especially when i was younger!!

    • @peach_tea_mystic
      @peach_tea_mystic Год назад +5

      @@Ervinabrahamian you must be fun at parties....

    • @gemin.r.j
      @gemin.r.j Год назад +1

      MCR was never emo though

  • @DevinThe242
    @DevinThe242 Год назад +37

    You’re 100% right about the death of the monoculture. Like this is a subject you should really expand upon and take on, cause you have a lot you can contribute on a cultural level by explaining this.

  • @1mlb704
    @1mlb704 Год назад +33

    You mentioned at the end that we miss the shared connection to a larger culture - I think that absolutely exists with a lot of us old enough to remember life before social media. It's a similar kind of magic as going to a busy mall during the holidays with your family. There's a certain kind of real world vibe/atmosphere to it that felt good back then and we want to relive it. I think that's what makes people so nostalgic towards things such as the emo scene. I'm doubtful that we will see massive collective cultural scenes or experiences like that ever again, which is kind of sad to think about.

    • @AshenvaleHuntress
      @AshenvaleHuntress Год назад

      🔥🔥🔥

    • @Amethystxxxxx
      @Amethystxxxxx Год назад +2

      I agree and think about this a lot. There are some things in life that we’ve experienced that kids today simply won’t. There’s something special about going to the mall at holidays like you said. Or even going to pick up a movie on a Friday night. I think people miss that simplicity and comfort, at least I do.

    • @Xander1Sheridan
      @Xander1Sheridan Год назад +2

      @@Amethystxxxxx those kids are so lucky. You forget how horrible so much was back then. Everything is really being glamorized like some hollywood production. The interconnectedness of today is so amazing and such a far better place to be than the total loneliness of the 90's and 2000's. Pretending everyone loved that monocutlure is absurd, lots of us hated it and mocked it as much as possible. When you can look around and find a bunch of people who like what you like, no matter what that actually is, it is such a better place to be than being a loner back then.

    • @justasplanned8023
      @justasplanned8023 3 месяца назад +1

      Maybe. The weird thing about culture is that it’s sometimes easy to miss its significance while it’s happening, and you don’t notice it until it’s gone.
      That’s why these waves of revival tend to happen I think. Once it’s all over people can look back on it and actually get a good look at it. Then they see it as being a cool thing that seems way more significant in hindsight than when it was actually happening.
      There really wasn’t anything to indicate that these bands would endure or be look back upon positively during the 2000’s. Emo/pop punk was often regarded as watered down and commercialised imitations of genres from the 1970’s and 80’s. Now it’s remembered as music that defined that era
      There’s probably artists right now you’d view as trite and commercial garbage but will be iconic in 20 years

  • @ace-kz9zd
    @ace-kz9zd Год назад +7

    I would fuckin love an episode on midwest emo. As an avid listener to all the pop punk, metalcore and emo, I've found such a love for midwest emo. It's such an interesting Mashup of genres that sounds so good. I found out after years of me adulting and my sister going through high school that we both share a love of the genre. Bands like Marietta, modern baseball, Michael Cera Palin, McCafferty and origami angel are doing such cool stuff right now

    • @mikesuarez5231
      @mikesuarez5231 6 месяцев назад

      so good bro. I listen to pop punk for short periods but i always go back to midwest emo

  • @Alma-yi7mb
    @Alma-yi7mb Год назад +10

    Im 19 and im a little too young to have experienced most of the emo bands in their prime. But when i was a younger teen and i was emo some bands were still relevant, like pierce the veil which i saw live, as well as twenty one pilots being really big for emos my age. After that period it was seen as cringe to be emo, and i feel like now it has come back in the form of nostalgia. And its almost like people who are my age now are old enough to be and dress as the people we looked up to as younger teens, like scene queens. I feel like thats why emo is trending again in my generation.

  • @deadcaliph6414
    @deadcaliph6414 Год назад +46

    I think what's missing in newer productions, even for many rock labels, is the sparing use of guitars in many bands that used to have them front and center. Even the Yungblud song you shared, the sample did not contain a clear guitar riff. And that's whats missing in most newer artists.

    • @sawtrapstunnaaa
      @sawtrapstunnaaa Год назад +2

      a song can be catchy and memorable without a single trace of a guitar and that’s always been the case, so i don’t think you have a point there. even using the example of modern rappers, almost ALL of them sample some sort of guitar in at least one of their beats, be it acoustic, midi, modulated etc. the whole “pop punk” sound and aesthetic has been something certain rappers gravitate to lately, as well as others who rap/scream over hella down tuned guitars (who also introduced that sound to rap fans who had never heard that before in a package they could enjoy).

    • @andreabruciati275
      @andreabruciati275 Год назад

      I agree, production nowadays shifted somewhere else

    • @deadcaliph6414
      @deadcaliph6414 Год назад +11

      I'm saying that many newer bands (i.e Imagine Dragons, 21 Pilots) that are perceived as 'rock' doesnt prioritize guitar, which I think distinguishes rock from pop. Their most popular songs are some flavor of EDM with live drums.

    • @usualdosage7287
      @usualdosage7287 Год назад

      Emo is a useless term now, seems more like an adjective than an actual genre or scene

    • @Home-u6g
      @Home-u6g Год назад

      ​@@deadcaliph6414 Those bands are often called emo and alt but not so much rock. Mainstream "rock" labels these days go to paramore, fob, green day, etc

  • @capnadorable5271
    @capnadorable5271 Год назад +271

    These are tumultuous times, now more than ever people are looking for something that reminds them of a time when things weren’t so crazy, when they didn’t have so many responsibilities, when they weren’t watching society around them devolve into chaos. That hit of nostalgia is like a drug these days lol

    • @brodylanetx
      @brodylanetx Год назад +3

      This!

    • @austintrousdale2397
      @austintrousdale2397 Год назад +14

      Things were quite crazy back then… it’s just that Twitter hadn’t yet blown up and the Boomers hadn’t discovered FB yet.

    • @benmartin8759
      @benmartin8759 Год назад +3

      to be fair, emo rock and pop punk were peaking during the bush era which was an insanely horrible time in america, but i do also understand where ur coming from

    • @capnadorable5271
      @capnadorable5271 Год назад +3

      @@benmartin8759 what I mean is, many of us that were into this music at its height were pretty young at the time, and while yes there was plenty of chaos then too, many of us were not old enough or mature enough to pay attention or care

    • @YoungDeathWish
      @YoungDeathWish Год назад

      the world is no different now, then it's ever been throughout history. every generation ever, believes they're living in unusual, tumultuous times. it's just more sensationalized now, because of the internet and social media, because everything is more connected then it's ever been

  • @kode-man23
    @kode-man23 Год назад +50

    My first official "I'm old now" moment was when somebody asked me "What was it like to BE THERE for the release of Black Parade?" Also, that album released right after I graduated high school so for every __ year anniversary of Black Parade I get to be reminded of how old that I am. Also this is one of your best videos man. Seriously great work once again.

    • @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560
      @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560 Год назад

      Dude I was 11 when Black Parade came out, 9 when 3 Cheers came out I get asked this a lot and it blows my mind definitely agree with the monoculture dying out theory, there are some forms of it as in cinema so I don't think it's dying out just shifting to a new medium, cinema in itself is cyclical (speaking personally I'm a small time local actor who took a 5 year break because of life but I did stage plays and short films in my local area worked with some local legends in my time, I'm working on a new project with a childhood hero of mine which I'm excited to talk about when the time is right, do not take this as an official announcement but yeah this is going to bey biggest project yet and if the landscape of cinema is going where I think it's going with the collapse of the superhero and blockbuster bubbles respectively I think I've positioned myself to be in the forefront of what's next if my prediction is correct and my predictions aren't normally wrong on this) but I also think in terms of music it's one of those things where it was the last generation of great showmen, every generation has their own Freddie Mercury, David Bowie, Kurt Cobain, Gerard Way, Lil Peep what does this new upcoming generation have yet? No one's climbed their way to the top in that regard because of the death of monoculture atleast in regards to music, maybe Yungblud because he started coming up just as monoculture collapsed but who will the next generation have? To anyone who asks does a generation need a figurehead? My answer is going to be contradictory, no and yes... Indulge me a minute and I'll give you my reasoning as to why... No because with the collapse of monoculture were seeing this amalgamation of subcultures and this acceptance from older generations (that I'm shocked I'm now part of, where the fuck did 2008 go?) I remember growing up there was the "war on emo" the Daily Mail (this extremely shitty English news paper, professionalism on my part be damned I call it how it fucking is, I may be a semi public figure and grew up in a time where opinions were given in a subverted way, fuck that I aim to be the antithesis of that I hate the Daily Mail for the reason I'm about to list and I stand by that) leading this almost witch hunt in England after the death of Hannah Bond, that lead to (atleast in England, I know it went on in other parts of the world for other reasons) the older generations hating mine seeing it as a cult, there was this major divide back in the day as I'm sure others from my generation can attest to (which for me personally seeing this nostalgia from this new generation is both heartbreaking and freeing in equal measure, heartbreaking because nostalgia is just looking at life with a rose shaded filter, this new generation didn't see the hatred mine did, freeing for that exact reason, and I think it's the same for generations that came before such as with metal in the 80s when the satanic panic was happening, hippies in the 60s, it's a very cyclical thing.)

    • @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560
      @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560 Год назад +1

      @c h yes that is a more micro part of a point I was trying to make in my comment, sorry I'm autistic (Asperger's and ADHD, breaks my heart that I have to apologize for being autistic I was born in the 90s when we had groups like Autism Speaks who claimed to "speak for" us yet called us an illness and advocated shit like electroshock therapy for autistic children around the time I was born up until I was 10, that kinda had an impact on how I saw myself personally) but one thing of that is for me if I'm making a grand point I find it hard to focus on the micro details so I look to other comments like yours to be like "yes some one else is saying what I'm trying to say but more succinctly"

    • @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560
      @thomasleongeorgerobertglad7560 Год назад

      @c h another thing that is interesting is the re-emergence of bands like All Time Low, Paramore and Fall Out Boy (and it feels weird to say to a smaller degree with My Chem but they released 1 song, one amazing song and the reaction damn near broke the internet, but the others have all recently released full albums) these bands have all released new albums after a period of experimenting (in All Time Lows case 2 albums Wake Up Sunshine was a incredible reinvention of old-school All Time Low while looking to the future) that while not being nostalgia albums, while not rehashing Nothing Personal, Riot, From Under The Cork Tree are reminiscent of those albums but also forward looking taking what made them stand out initially as artists and tweaking the formula to work for a new generation, I've heard the new Fall Out Boy album be compared to Folie or Infinity but it isn't, it makes reference to those albums but also includes funk and soul and disco elements (I think people should compare it to Patrick's solo music too especially SoulPunk but that's just my opinion I love SoulPunk and wish it got more appreciation) I think that's why these bands are re-emerging back when I was growing up we had the "emo trinity" which was a term I never got growing up but I understand now maybe because growing up in the initial rise I was growing with this subculture but now the above artists I mentioned have made these comebacks, this new generation have their figureheads, Fall Out Boy, All Time Low and Paramore have become the "trinity" for a new generation atleast from the outside looking in which I think is inherently interesting, I don't have any answers as to what that would mean culturally or creatively for the generation coming up that their figureheads are figureheads from the previous generation, I'll let others discuss that and philosophise on that but... I dunno man it's definitely an interesting thing to see because I don't think we've seen that particular phenomenon on as large a scale as this atleast in my lifetime if not longer

    • @brandongauger4050
      @brandongauger4050 Год назад

      I tell my kids all the time "I was there when 3 cheers came out. I was there when silverstein put out discovering the waterfront. I bought fall out boys from under the cork tree ON release day." Hahahaha

    • @_permanence
      @_permanence Год назад

      The Black Parade was cringeworthy and mainstream

  • @remakeyourself
    @remakeyourself Год назад +5

    The way you talk about and preach exploring different music, ideas, and styles and encourage people to be open to different groups/generations liking different things (or the same thing) is infectious. You've always got such a positive message.

  • @Mang0jo
    @Mang0jo Год назад +3

    I’m only 24. I’ve been listening to Emo music since I was 7 years old, mainly because of my dad. My dad was never really ‘Emo’ but was definitely the biggest influence of my music taste. We used to listen to MCR, All Time Low, and tons of others bands that were popular in the early to mid 2000s in the car together. Thanks dad

  • @cassandralyris4918
    @cassandralyris4918 Год назад +8

    So my eldest son (he's 20) is super into 80's & 90's hard rock now, and my middle child (she's 18) is super into Grunge and Emo. My youngest (he's 14) has only begun to dip his toes into music, but he's mostly interested in video game OST's. I'm one of those "Yeah I'll listen top pretty much everything, but at heart I'm an ALT Rock person", so it's been pretty great for me.

  • @ef.1411
    @ef.1411 Год назад +26

    Came for the video about a genre i've been into for 15 years, stayed for the absolutely wonderful analysis on today's cultural landscape.

  • @mschrage618
    @mschrage618 Год назад +17

    Honestly, this has been the happiest point in my life so far. 🖤
    So many bands that I loved at like age 15, MCR, PTV, FOB, B182, SOTY, AFS, etc, making new music, touring again now that I’m in my mid 20s and have the resources to really support them. I’ve gotten to see bands live that I never thought I’d get the chance to. 🤩 Our local Emo Night in my midwestern city is a monthly community gathering of over 300 people from ages 18-45. Everyone comes together to have a good time, I’ve even started a Facebook group for the local scene that’s grown to over 2,500 members in just a year! 🤯 Honestly I can’t tell you why this timeline is going this way, but I’m here for it, and I’m going to enjoy every moment 😎

    • @brandongauger4050
      @brandongauger4050 Год назад +1

      HH, Silverstein, Bayside, ADTR, all still put out banger records between their respective second albums and now as well. So them still putting out music has contributed to their staying strength. Bands that broke up and stayed broken up get alot less listens to these days, but everyone that was worthwhile stayed around

  • @Vic-Valentine
    @Vic-Valentine Год назад +19

    it is kinda weird getting used to alot of people going superhard on the aesthetic part (way harder than most people who were into the scene ever did) but dont care about the culture or music part of it, its just become a fashion trend, which is fine, since its hot, but its so different from what it used to be

  • @deannaa.491
    @deannaa.491 Год назад +5

    I was about 13 when I started listening to bands such as PTV, BMTH, etc. and I think when you’re a kid you just don’t have the freedom you want to feel completely yourself. Not to mention there weren’t many POC emo kids where I lived and my family thought I was literally the weirdest person ever, especially coming from an Afro American baptist Christian household. So after awhile of being “emo” i slowly transitioned back to wearing “normal” clothes and listening to more mainstream music because that’s what my family wanted. My parents did take me to warped tour but of course I couldn’t really enjoy it because I was a child and my parents had never heard of or liked the music I liked. I’m 22 now and I finally have the freedom to enjoy the music and the aesthetic that I’ve always liked but didn’t have the ability to participate in as a child. I’m going to my second rock concert ever this month (BMTH) and I couldn’t be happier!!!!!

  • @narccazest1083
    @narccazest1083 Год назад +17

    My family immigrated from Mexico to Texas some time in 2007, I was born in 2005, and due to us coming to this country with absolutely nothing, we grew up with a lot of old and hand-me-down stuff, so my sister always listen to older music. She was 7 years older than me. So much of my nostalgia for emo, screamo, post hardcore, nu, etc. comes from growing up with an emo sister, and revisiting this music with maturity and some memory of how those times were ( at least from my point of view) I proud to call myself emo

  • @l00nielaine
    @l00nielaine Год назад +57

    I'm almost 59 and listen to Emo ,especially MCR regularly. And I'm also introducing the younger generation to the music. I was also around when Punk began. Music is music, and therfore timeless.

    • @joebobhenrybob2000
      @joebobhenrybob2000 Год назад +1

      What's funny is, for years, I wouldn't check out My Bloody Valentine because I subconsciously assumed it was some Scenekid "emo" stuff - lol because of My Chemical Romance. I'm more of a Texas is the Reason, Christie Front Drive, Appleseed Cast (Mare Vitalis), Jimmy Eat World (Static Prevails), Planes Mistaken for Stars (eponymous EP) guy. Haha but as much as I may have shaken my fist at MCR and thrown on Godspeed You Black Emperor back in the day, now I'm grateful - thank god they play INSTRUMENTS!!! (kind of like taking another look now at the Star Wars prequels, after everything...) Good on them in all seriousness.

    • @KevinGarcia-fq3su
      @KevinGarcia-fq3su Год назад +1

      Listen to mom jeans

    • @eaglesandowls
      @eaglesandowls Год назад

      MCR isn't emo though

    • @joyiswhatIwantedtofeel
      @joyiswhatIwantedtofeel Год назад

      @@eaglesandowlsWell they are…

    • @eaglesandowls
      @eaglesandowls Год назад

      @@joyiswhatIwantedtofeel Nope. Even the band says they aren't.

  • @BackYardRejects
    @BackYardRejects Год назад +17

    i was raised by people who shoved mcr down my throat since the day I was born, mcr lead me down the emo pipeline during my year five and six days. now here I am at 16 loving emo music and culture and thrilled it's coming back 🤭. I went too the mcr tour, and now I'm buying tickets too go see pierce the veil! I'm super excited mcr was so freaking cool and I have a feeling ptv will be the same.

  • @smarre12
    @smarre12 Год назад +15

    As someone who loves emo and rock, we can stay in that era for all eternity

  • @inkbloodart
    @inkbloodart Год назад +2

    spot on, imo. it's funny, this vid has me reflecting on how the big bands we call "emo" these days were the reason most of the bands I was listening to as an "emokid" hard rejected the "emo" label and dropped the "emotional" from "emotional hardcore" and retreated back into punk, metal, indie music. (i'm from the Sweatervests era lol) (and no shade, MCR and AFI were scene darlings until they started using more techno instruments and doing bombastic stage stuff. hardcore rejected a lot of that in-face so people got salty; they still made solid tracks and had good lyrics.)

  • @robweissman5952
    @robweissman5952 Год назад +36

    20 year culture cycle...
    The coolest thing is always what was cool 20 years ago.

    • @wallaceshawn-zk8iw
      @wallaceshawn-zk8iw Год назад

      Ripped Jeans for one...

    • @FragginWagon76
      @FragginWagon76 Год назад +1

      Typically more like 30 years

    • @ecoRfan
      @ecoRfan Год назад

      I would say it’s more like a 16 or 17 year cycle. That would put us in 2006 or 2007 - right when the Black Parade was big, which came out in September of ‘06.

  • @gilbej91
    @gilbej91 Год назад +13

    I went to the MCR tour in Aus and there was definitely a good mix of elder emos and gen z kids. Made me super proud that music that meant so much to me is being shared and loved by a younger generation.

  • @thecringekid5744
    @thecringekid5744 Год назад +12

    As a gen Z'er myself I thini it's because a lot of us grew up watching people with emo aesthetics and it was most likely a goal of 8 year old us to look like that one day.
    Also speaking for myself, I really love MCR. And I really enjoy the aesthetic.
    And also also i can't find any new music I enjoy.

    • @Jdiag414
      @Jdiag414 Год назад +1

      Your spot on for older gen z. I was born in 01 and spent all my childhood excited to be old enough to dress emo. At 7 I was obsessed with everything emo.

  • @bec5886
    @bec5886 Год назад +5

    As someone who studies Media and Communication with a focus on cultural semiotics this is such an interesting video.
    Since I got into Metal I really do see the comeback of the mono and subcultures from the past.
    Im planning on having my bachelor's thesis on this topic since its so interesting. Social media has really distributed and widened musical tastes and aesthetics a lot. Its definitely refreshing to see some of the positive outcomes of "heavy social media usage"...

  • @KT22672
    @KT22672 Год назад +10

    There isn't enough new rock music, and newer rock bands have a hard time getting a strong fanbase going
    The lack of monoculture has its pros and cons, the cons being that every genre becomes a niche and the artists struggle to get by because there's never a "make it" moment

  • @jg5004
    @jg5004 Год назад +9

    I love hearing you talk and your take on things. It’s so refreshing hearing someone older talk objectively about something that can be as device as music and not be a “back in my day” kind of guy.

  • @violetraven9440
    @violetraven9440 Год назад +15

    my parents left high school in 90 and 94 and were both grunge/metal heads and even loved a lot of the stuff from the 2000's so i grew up with this stuff and wanted to see them live but now emo is peeking again so i am finally seeing pearce the vail and the used live for my first concert at 20 years old i am so hyped

  • @Neckverse
    @Neckverse Год назад +58

    I agree with you on basically everything you said in this video. It also explains why metal festival lineups look like they are frozen in time. Because they actually are. Those bands are the last ties to something like a „culture“. It gave and still gives people a sense of community which new music (for the most part) doesn‘t. I work in education and what always buffles me is that there are no subcultures anymore. It has its upsides like less exclusion based on music and fashion taste. On the other hand, you might have less opportunities finding a group of people that share your interests (at least when they are connected to alternative music). Emo is the very last subculture that came up like nu metal or grunge. That‘s why also kids nowadays are drawn to it.

    • @mariokarter13
      @mariokarter13 Год назад

      "Bandwagon's full puh-lease catch another. I'M A LEADING MAN AND THE LIES I WEAVE ARE OH SO INTRICATE"

    • @elfenlied_girl1238
      @elfenlied_girl1238 Год назад +1

      I feel like nowadays I only hear about kpop or alt/ rock music, could it be because those are the only subcultures that survived all these years? I feel like those are the only genres that I hear about all the time

    • @ashtongarcia6894
      @ashtongarcia6894 Год назад +1

      Yeah there’s nothing “new” that defines the 2010 or 2020s so far like grunge and nu metal did the 90’s and pop punk/emo did the 2000s and a lot of popular bands in rock now are just old bands still making music like bmth, falling in the reverse, motionless etc.

    • @visarar1727
      @visarar1727 Год назад

      Yea the sub cultures are weak ass gang bs

    • @nzvplc
      @nzvplc Год назад +3

      @@ashtongarcia6894 kpop

  • @carolinarodrigues6638
    @carolinarodrigues6638 Год назад +7

    I think nowadays it is more difficult without MTV, of course, but TikTok sometimes does its job EVEN with algorithms. I am seeing this happening with Bad Omens and Sleep Token and it is CRAZY how big they are becoming and bringing in new people into the genre. They are definitely gonna be the new big bands out there

  • @corbinmiles5677
    @corbinmiles5677 Год назад +9

    I think why electronic music festivals have survived is because it’s one of the only monoculture type of experiences left. Some DJs specialize in blending all types of genres in a set. I never thought of it that deeply but it’s really one of the only ways left to have a monoculture experience

  • @pnkflwrs5078
    @pnkflwrs5078 Год назад +40

    I think 2000’s emo scene is most deff back but the scene never really died just stayed low with modern emo stuff. Things like emo rap and the big love for “twinkly/midwest emo” bands keep stuff still alive from like 2014+

    • @brandenpalarz905
      @brandenpalarz905 Год назад +1

      @ghost mall love the hotelier and I agree. More of a revival of bands that fell off or never even made it until now lol. More so newer stuff that introduces people to older music

    • @usualdosage7287
      @usualdosage7287 Год назад +3

      I can respect twinkly emo since it's sort of a revival of old school 90s emo before scene people, but i don't get emo rap at all. Like they became the conformists

    • @findRED
      @findRED Год назад +1

      I think another part of it were the few smaller emo bands that stayed together during that time and continued to produce music, even if it was at a slower pace. I don't think Emery ever fully "quit", they just kept going and trying new (but still tied to emo) things.

  • @JAH-iu3yh
    @JAH-iu3yh Год назад +54

    Very thoughtful Finn. I think that larger cultural reach is most definitely missed. We are tribal in nature. But yeah that monoculture is needed to relate to each other, especially as Americans. Because now we do so through politics. *shudder*
    Can’t wait to see your son in a newsboy cap & dropkick murphys onesie, drinking from a jameson sippy cup.💚

    • @Superkirbeh
      @Superkirbeh Год назад

      Scene Kids are Proto Egirls/Eboys. And with Instagram and Tik Tok being so huge into that part of alt culture, it makes sense they’re into late 2000s aesthetic

    • @JAH-iu3yh
      @JAH-iu3yh Год назад

      @ghost mall You’re probably right but I can only speak for myself being American living through this political landmined landscape.

    • @charliekahn4205
      @charliekahn4205 Год назад +1

      @ghost mall Most other nations are nation-states with built-in monocultures. The US is kinda built to not have a monoculture, instead letting the culture change with every city block.

    • @charliekahn4205
      @charliekahn4205 Год назад

      @ghost mall If it weren't for America being so big and having as little of a national culture as possible, the Dropkick Murphys couldn't have existed

  • @CraigSimmonds
    @CraigSimmonds Год назад +65

    Finn, you need to put all this alternative music culture theory into a book! You're the only person I've seen talk about this stuff and it's so interesting.

    • @m_eliz83
      @m_eliz83 Год назад +1

      I'd buy a book on this in a HEARTBEAT

    • @kevinhibbard320
      @kevinhibbard320 Год назад +1

      Let's bring back the coffee table book!

    • @midnighttrain7844
      @midnighttrain7844 Год назад

      that's EMBA shit lol

    • @megmcguigan3857
      @megmcguigan3857 Год назад

      He needs to actually learn about goth and post-punk music because that seems to be a really weak point in his knowledge.

    • @CraigSimmonds
      @CraigSimmonds Год назад +3

      @@megmcguigan3857 Cringe opinion. Finn is actually the original goth and invented post-punk

  • @diceman1984
    @diceman1984 Год назад +13

    To me one band is both huge from the monoculture and in the current era. Bring Me The Horizon keeps getting bigger and bigger by each album and doesn't seem like they are stopping (yet). What they are achieving to me is super surprising.

    • @ictogon
      @ictogon Год назад +1

      sorry i cannot take them seriously because of all the shitty gigachad memes

  • @collinmorris
    @collinmorris Год назад +29

    You can’t kill what’s already dead 🖤 #emosalifestyle

  • @datweirdboi7800
    @datweirdboi7800 Год назад +16

    I was born during the golden age of Emo, the mid 2000's, and I grew up with emo, despite it dying slowly over the years. Now I'm 17, and am falling in love with emo and screamo and metalcore, especially the stuff from the 2000's, I'm even starting my own screamo/metalcore band soon!

  • @60degreelobwedge82
    @60degreelobwedge82 Год назад +21

    It's definitely weird seeing your kids dress the same way my wife and I did back in the 90s. Stranger Things definitely is a big influence with the nostalgia thing and its probably the closest thing there is to a mono-culture there is today. My wife and I watch it and identify with the kids because we were that age back then and its stuff from our childhood, our kids watch it and identify with the kids because they are the same age as them and their grandmother loves it too but is into the Winona Ryder/parents storyline because she was a single mother in the era the show is set. It has sent my kids down a rock music rabbit hole more than anything else.

    • @b00ks825
      @b00ks825 Год назад

      I bought a corduroy jacket the other day and my dad said « huh it's weird seeing corduroy come back into fashion »

  • @davidsykes6584
    @davidsykes6584 Год назад +7

    Half a century here, and I still love discovering new music. There are a few cases were new music really does seem to suck (Mumble Rap), but on the whole there is always new great artists either pushing the envelope or updating an old sounds, or both! For the record, I took my daughter to see MCR as she absolutely loves them, same with Sum 41, Twenty One Pilots and Muse, she's been loving the last year of music. She was however unhappy I didn't bring her with me to see RatM w/ RtJ. She loves music going back to the late sixties, so not all that different than me, who as a kid who would listen to music as far back as Glenn Miller or Buddy Holly. I get some kids don't want to listen to the music their parents listened to, but their are plenty of music loves that don't put a barrier up when they just want to enjoy good music.

  • @ervin9720
    @ervin9720 Год назад +1

    I'm 18, I started listening to rock music in general since I was a little boy and It stuck with me, I remember a long time ago listening to these bands with my father

  • @illuminatedsinger
    @illuminatedsinger Год назад +3

    I saw the revival come to life live in Detroit a week ago or so. Yellowcard was playing for first time to a crowd of 7k…and I think he cried. It was amazing to see a rebirth

  • @stewartdowouis9218
    @stewartdowouis9218 Год назад +79

    2005. That’s when I noticed suddenly EVERYONE was aware of the existence of iPods and were starting to listen to their own personally curated playlists. Saw the collapse of pop culture coming. No more Black Sabbath’s. No more Motley Crue’s. No more Nirvana’s. No more major rock movements. That, along side everyone’s ability to critique every record/music video/movie on public forums the second they were dropped made everything instantly less special.

    • @RoBoTrOnIc1001001
      @RoBoTrOnIc1001001 Год назад +5

      u musnt have been around for the soundcloud era. Peep, XXX, JuiceWRLD, Carti, lil uzi were the big names in 2015-2018

    • @Heksensang
      @Heksensang Год назад +3

      @@RoBoTrOnIc1001001 SoundCloud was like the rap version of MySpace lol loved both eras so much fr

    • @stewartdowouis9218
      @stewartdowouis9218 Год назад +1

      @Lil Rawri Right? I amaze myself sometimes.

    • @stewartdowouis9218
      @stewartdowouis9218 Год назад +4

      @@RoBoTrOnIc1001001 The average person was not on SoundCloud. lil uzi may be big among small groups of young people, but “back in my day” everyone knew the big pop stars. Everyone. From grandma to 3 year olds…everyone knew Madonna, Michael Jackson, Bon Jovi, LL Cool J, etc.

    • @FilmcreatorsSuperPlushMario
      @FilmcreatorsSuperPlushMario Год назад +2

      Speaking from someone who was only *born* in 2005, I don't at all agree that subcultures and people being able to voice their own opinions and have open discussions about the music they're interested in on public platforms makes things "less special", if anyhing I prefer it that way over having one broad monoculture where everyone caters to the same things and the same interests. Individuality is obviously important, and I'd rather have my own interests and listen to music artists that maybe not too many people are aware of instead of liking the same things as everyone else. There are a lot of things about this generation that I'm absolutely critical of, but the reduction of mainstreamism and monoculture is certainly not one of them.

  • @drantonkel150
    @drantonkel150 Год назад +7

    The 2016-2018 emo rap sound cloud wave helped the popularity resurface as well. Even though it was in a more modern way, the emo elements and roots were present.

  • @Artefracture
    @Artefracture Год назад +14

    Re: the observation of bands achieving some kind of legendary status after being written off as trendy crap when they first came out, I genuinely think they got to stick around and get better. To use a classic example, the change Ministry made from New Romantic pretty boys to intense junkie Industrialists happened in way less than a decade.

  • @pete.william
    @pete.william Год назад +4

    You’re definitely right about the monoculture thing. Every time I hear about some new celeb I have no idea who they are. I thought it was just a product of getting older but this makes me feel better about it haha

  • @akositayut
    @akositayut Год назад +35

    told you mom... it's not a phase.

  • @keithsoonoriginal
    @keithsoonoriginal Год назад +5

    I was 16 in 2002 and that makes me anti emo pretty much straight away since I remember talking about the dream about the world where monoculture doesn't exist anymore. It is kind of surreal that we almost have got to this point but in my view it is very good thing because it gives us all the chance to finally be yourself without a predjudice.

  • @GrAYvTrAnE
    @GrAYvTrAnE Год назад +8

    My niece (13) was talking to me(37) about how she likes emo and my eyes lit up and I was like "tell me more, what do you know about emo?!" We really connected over it and talked about all the bands I grew up with and who she listens to and if I can suggest any bands to her. Found out she likes Star Wars and Harry Potter, turns out shes a pretty cool kid lol. My daughter(8) asks me to play emo in the car the now.

  • @unashamedtruth1144
    @unashamedtruth1144 Год назад +7

    Dude, never would think this would comeback! Those were the days. Hanging out, singing along to music, no politics,no hating on peoples ideas or thoughts, not a worry in the world!

    • @Xander1Sheridan
      @Xander1Sheridan Год назад +1

      That's the part we need to bring back.

    • @PEPPACHICKEN
      @PEPPACHICKEN Год назад

      Now and days people mix politics with music and it's annoying

  • @assleypenn9309
    @assleypenn9309 Год назад +4

    Can you bring up the fact that back in the 2000's, being called emo was not something to celebrate lol

  • @sober_katz
    @sober_katz Месяц назад +1

    i was born in 2008 and i'm so happy it's coming back!!! i vividly remember seeing some people dress like this when i was a little kid in the early 2010s before it died out for a while. my oldest brother was kind of emo too. i also remember hearing a couple MCR songs on the radio growing up.
    my friend got me a little back into them about 1 or 2 years ago now. and just a few days ago i started listening to them a WHOLE lot more. now i'm wearing my striped arm warmers and wanna dye my hair black hah. i genuinely feel happier now though :)

  • @deraldiweihnachtskalender1757
    @deraldiweihnachtskalender1757 Год назад +14

    17:30
    As a 17 year old Emo/Metal Fan, this is exactly why i got into this stuff. I felt such a connection to the music and the fandom that i didn't even know existed before.

    • @yashdeveloper9449
      @yashdeveloper9449 Год назад +2

      I'm 18 and I confirm this fact 👍🏻
      And the strange part is I discovered this music culture all on my own, like no one irl knows the names of bands I listen to

    • @anti3415
      @anti3415 Год назад

      omg yes, im a gen z-er, there is a type of connection to the music and the fandom that i cant explain, it feels comforting like coming back home.

  • @timl9724
    @timl9724 Год назад +6

    Meme culture is the new monoculture. Most of us get hit with some aspect of a major meme at some point, though not all at once or in the same way. Often times I won't even know what a common meme fully references, until I look it up or I get exposed to some of its origin material months or years later.

  • @jessie6769
    @jessie6769 Год назад +10

    As long as you raise your kids right. Music from the past, whatever genre it may be, will never die.

  • @IMwhatisawoman
    @IMwhatisawoman Год назад +1

    As someone who just graduated high school. Me and all my homies in high school were OBSESSED with MCR, Green Day, Fall Put Boy and even Panic!

  • @kidd6845
    @kidd6845 7 месяцев назад +1

    I feel like one of the major appeals of getting into "older" music is that it's not trying to sell you much. Love Black Parade, might actually buy the CD and some merch today, but when an artist/a band releases new stuff, it's mostly "please buy my shit". Which is fine! Especially in the age of streaming, they have to sell stuff to not be entirely dependent on being sponsored. But whether its on social media or in real life, we're constantly bombarded with one entity or another trying to make us spend money on them. So getting into old music via yt or spotify is just low stakes, low pressure. Just enjoying some good music

  • @isetbudsonfire
    @isetbudsonfire Год назад +41

    As a 32 yr old I feel attacked 😂 but honestly my 11, 7 and 2 yr old love the music I grew up on. From pop punk, to emo, to metal core and grindcore and all that. I def think parents listening to the music they grew up with has a impact as well.

    • @Aircooledcorey
      @Aircooledcorey Год назад +2

      My 8 year old listens to Sum41 and Blink more than anything else.

    • @Darthnot
      @Darthnot Год назад +1

      ONI spy😶‍🌫️

    • @isetbudsonfire
      @isetbudsonfire Год назад

      @@Darthnot “out of the shadows..” became obsessed with ONI during the ODST days then it went 10 fold during hunt the truth..which coincidentally is the only good thing to come of halo in the last 10 years.

  • @knightpanda06
    @knightpanda06 Год назад +5

    As a gen zer,I also thought punks looked cool in movies and shows, I started to do research, now love punk rock. Also a example of a show would be regular show. There are a lot of punk references.

  • @sole__doubt
    @sole__doubt Год назад +39

    Its kind of weird that when a genre becomes less popular people say "its dead."

  • @gigibelle7465
    @gigibelle7465 Год назад +1

    What a great analysis. The "frozen in time" part really blew my mind. Thank you so much.

  • @cokebottles6919
    @cokebottles6919 Год назад +3

    I think there may be more good music getting made today than ever before, but nearly all current popular artists have a specific and similar electronic, pop, rnb sound. So if you want great rock, emo, screamo, or metal, you have to look back to these guys. Modern rock is around, but very limited. Oddly enough, these bands on the reunion tours made up the vast majority of music when I was a kid and it was hard to escape it. Just in a different popular era. Good music is good music and people will be listening to every era for decades.

  • @catz537
    @catz537 Год назад +6

    I'm 28 and I just recently started listening to MCR and Paramore's old songs again and I have to say I am thoroughly enjoying it. I've listened to them over and over during the past few days. Teenagers was playing in my dream last night lol

  • @PaganPolska
    @PaganPolska Год назад +4

    I went through a pretty big emo phase from like 2007 to 2011ish and now my daughter is going through one as well. It's pretty cool to see it live on through her generation ngl. All of the bands I jammed to when I was a teen she now loves and she even rocks the classic emo hair as well.

  • @crose772
    @crose772 Год назад +7

    forever grateful to have been a teen in the early/mid 2000s with parents who dropped me off at SO many iconic shows, one of my first being 2006 fall out boy… the resurgence of this era of music makes me so happy

  • @retromodpleb7732
    @retromodpleb7732 Год назад +1

    A 20 year old co worker told me he still plays original xbox. I think it’s great that some young people still appreciate early 2000s.