emo vs. goth
- James Blast
- Banned
- Posts: 24699
- Joined: 11 Jun 2003, 18:58
- Location: back from some place else
possible, yet unflattering....
"And when you start to think about death, you start to think about what's after it. And then you start hoping there is a God. For me, it's a frightening thought to go nowhere".
~ Peter Steele
~ Peter Steele
- Izzy HaveMercy
- The Worlds Greatest Living Belgian
- Posts: 8844
- Joined: 29 Jan 2002, 00:00
- Location: Long Dark Forties
- Contact:
I was thinking more along the lines of 'Old Grumpy Loveable Silver Machine'!James Blast wrote:I was gonna ask the Boss for the rank of 'Watcher Of The Skies', but I think 'Old Git' would be more honest. Thanks Iz.
(when you hit the 20k post threshold)
IZ.
- markfiend
- goriller of form 3b
- Posts: 21181
- Joined: 11 Nov 2003, 10:55
- Location: st custards
- Contact:
Me too.scotty wrote:I'm of an age where emo still means :
I'm with Burn in the "Trad" timescale
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
- lazarus corporation
- Lord Protector
- Posts: 3444
- Joined: 09 May 2004, 17:42
- Location: out there on a darkened road
- Contact:
Doesn't Dawkins' concept of a meme include both a "once substantial" idea and a "cultural phenomenon"? A meme is just a transmittable idea which (like the gene from which the concept was extrapolated) may be successful or not - the term doesn't carry any inherent connotations of quality.itnAklipse wrote:Both are quite horrible when they become ("sub")cultural phenomenas. Which says nothing of the individuals in either. But still in most cases it does. i mean, a cultural phenomena is basically when something once substantial has been degraded to the level of a meme...
Anyhow (jet lag induced blathering aside), judging by the bands categorised as either/both of those terms these days, they're both crap.
- King of Byblos
- Amphetamine Filth
- Posts: 166
- Joined: 21 Jun 2006, 13:53
- Location: the Black Country, UK
- Contact:
scotty wrote:I'm of an age where emo still means :
I'm with Burn in the "Trad" timescale
that's what i thought too, till i saw them on t'tele WTF! it's nowt to do with the Gothic
"Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas – only I don't exactly know what they are!"
- King of Byblos
- Amphetamine Filth
- Posts: 166
- Joined: 21 Jun 2006, 13:53
- Location: the Black Country, UK
- Contact:
symptom i think; suddenly there are these things called emotions and then taking it out on the world-around-them for having them sees good.boudicca wrote: I'm still debating whether it's a cause or just a symptom of all that's wrong with the world at the moment... I'll get back to you when I do...
i could be really cynical and suggest that they have grown up in households with little mature emotional life.
...oh and the marketing £leverage gained by grouping vunerable teenagers and selling a 'lifestyle' choice to them
[or have i just undermined my argument ]
however, i think the emo kids probably have more chance of growing up human than the robots society wants to turn out
"Somehow it seems to fill my head with ideas – only I don't exactly know what they are!"
This is def. my heartland
I'd go for Emo too, I've developed a profound aversion against them.
Not goth, not faggot - Faggoth... worst of both combined in a whimpering teen. The worst: My Ex's new boyfriend is a mid 20s ( ) Emo... gotta love those uniform hair style and clothes....
I'd go for Emo too, I've developed a profound aversion against them.
Not goth, not faggot - Faggoth... worst of both combined in a whimpering teen. The worst: My Ex's new boyfriend is a mid 20s ( ) Emo... gotta love those uniform hair style and clothes....
If only I knew what emo sounds like...
- Carpathian Psychonaut
- Utterly Bastard Groovy Amphetamine Filth
- Posts: 902
- Joined: 21 Aug 2004, 19:18
- Location: Faaaar beyond the black horizon (Gateshead)
I always get very anal when it comes to polls like this.
I see the choice and my brain starts with things like "Is that old school goth or that new not-really-goth Goth ?" and "Have I got a proper handle on emo or am I thinking of the wrong thing ?"
Based on that befuddlement, and the fact I love loads of the old school (ie before many of the current bands were born ), I've voted emo.
Actually, thinking about it, there were many flavours of "goff" even just back then in yon olden days.........
{wanders off muttering to self about how confusing it is these days....}
I see the choice and my brain starts with things like "Is that old school goth or that new not-really-goth Goth ?" and "Have I got a proper handle on emo or am I thinking of the wrong thing ?"
Based on that befuddlement, and the fact I love loads of the old school (ie before many of the current bands were born ), I've voted emo.
Actually, thinking about it, there were many flavours of "goff" even just back then in yon olden days.........
{wanders off muttering to self about how confusing it is these days....}
.
You’ll Disappear Before The Next Star Rises
.
You’ll Disappear Before The Next Star Rises
.
Emo is less music than fashion and style... That's what's pissing me off so much
- Maisey
- Slight Overbomber
- Posts: 1870
- Joined: 28 Jun 2006, 20:19
- Location: Moving like a Parallelogram
Its a whole package. Its just very manufactured.
Goth tend to strive for indivuality but often get accused of being clones. Its nice to have people how really ARE clones to laugh at.
Goth tend to strive for indivuality but often get accused of being clones. Its nice to have people how really ARE clones to laugh at.
Nationalise the f**king lot.
- canon docre
- Overbomber
- Posts: 2529
- Joined: 05 Mar 2005, 21:10
- Location: Mother Prussia
so far no one could explain to me what exactly emo-music is and who makes it. I heard though they sing about emotions, that's why it's called emo. Well, everyone sings about emotions. Is Barry Manilow emo too? I mean I found "Mandy" pretty touching and who didn't?
Is Marilyn Manson emo because he wears makeup? Or the guys from Slipknot? I really dont get it. Can someone please name a band I heard of as an example?
Is Marilyn Manson emo because he wears makeup? Or the guys from Slipknot? I really dont get it. Can someone please name a band I heard of as an example?
Put their heads on f*cking pikes in front of the venue for all I care.
- Maisey
- Slight Overbomber
- Posts: 1870
- Joined: 28 Jun 2006, 20:19
- Location: Moving like a Parallelogram
I can help!
Ok, let me break it down for you.
First there was punk. Then, punk became all frill and no balls, so the 'real' punks made oi!
They moved to the US (mostly) and called themselves hardcore.
They played their instuments loud and fast and with agression. It was really hardcore.
Hardcore artists where typically pretty butch, with pretty butch angry lyrical content.
Some bands wanted to sing about personal stuff. Which is normal in most genres, but not hardcore. They became emotional hardcore. I am reliabley informed such a band is fugazi.
These bands would occansionally break down and cry due to the sheer personalness of the shows, thus the nancy boy stereotype.
This kind of watered down hardcore was more accessable, and soon the kids were listening to it.
It had a sence of fashion.
Apply the sence of fashion to pop music, you get emotional hardcore, minus the hardcore.
What you are left with is an origonal idea, that started out pretty useless, raped and beaten and washed out.
You are left with Emo. All label and fashion product, pretty much minus the inaccessable aggression of hardcore.
Recently it has been found, if you make any genre of music more soppy and accessable to kids that are trained to here whiney teenage agnst, and add the correct hair do, you can add "core" to the end of the genre, and therefore make it acceptable by the new wave of emos.
Thus "metalcore" being essentially a type of emo, though it bears little resemblance to the origonal genre.
Ok, let me break it down for you.
First there was punk. Then, punk became all frill and no balls, so the 'real' punks made oi!
They moved to the US (mostly) and called themselves hardcore.
They played their instuments loud and fast and with agression. It was really hardcore.
Hardcore artists where typically pretty butch, with pretty butch angry lyrical content.
Some bands wanted to sing about personal stuff. Which is normal in most genres, but not hardcore. They became emotional hardcore. I am reliabley informed such a band is fugazi.
These bands would occansionally break down and cry due to the sheer personalness of the shows, thus the nancy boy stereotype.
This kind of watered down hardcore was more accessable, and soon the kids were listening to it.
It had a sence of fashion.
Apply the sence of fashion to pop music, you get emotional hardcore, minus the hardcore.
What you are left with is an origonal idea, that started out pretty useless, raped and beaten and washed out.
You are left with Emo. All label and fashion product, pretty much minus the inaccessable aggression of hardcore.
Recently it has been found, if you make any genre of music more soppy and accessable to kids that are trained to here whiney teenage agnst, and add the correct hair do, you can add "core" to the end of the genre, and therefore make it acceptable by the new wave of emos.
Thus "metalcore" being essentially a type of emo, though it bears little resemblance to the origonal genre.
Nationalise the f**king lot.
- canon docre
- Overbomber
- Posts: 2529
- Joined: 05 Mar 2005, 21:10
- Location: Mother Prussia
Pretty disturbing story you tell me here, Maisey. All I can say is that my friend John Joseph would never ever cry onstage.
hardcore
- hard
+makeup
+ crying onstage
= emo
sounds all pretty goth to me.
hardcore
- hard
+makeup
+ crying onstage
= emo
sounds all pretty goth to me.
Put their heads on f*cking pikes in front of the venue for all I care.
- James Blast
- Banned
- Posts: 24699
- Joined: 11 Jun 2003, 18:58
- Location: back from some place else
Sorry Maisey, you're young and don't have a feckin' clue!Maisey wrote:I can help!
Ok, let me break it down for you.
First there was punk. Then, punk became all frill and no balls, so the 'real' punks made oi!
They moved to the US (mostly) and called themselves hardcore.
They played their instuments loud and fast and with agression. It was really hardcore.
Hardcore artists where typically pretty butch, with pretty butch angry lyrical content.
Some bands wanted to sing about personal stuff. Which is normal in most genres, but not hardcore. They became emotional hardcore. I am reliabley informed such a band is fugazi.
These bands would occansionally break down and cry due to the sheer personalness of the shows, thus the nancy boy stereotype.
and I do not want to be the bad man here, but you really aren't even close
"And when you start to think about death, you start to think about what's after it. And then you start hoping there is a God. For me, it's a frightening thought to go nowhere".
~ Peter Steele
~ Peter Steele
- Stumpy Pete
- Road Kill
- Posts: 40
- Joined: 04 Apr 2006, 18:27
- Location: Eating a pile of Meat. But I came in to wash my Feet. Famous Potatoes!
Emo is simply music by and for people who don't know how to f**k. It's not complicated.
I'm Stumpy Pete oh yes I am
I like to eat brains from a can
The other day I ate some yams
I'm Stumpy Pete oh yes I am!
I'm Stumpy Pete
So kiss my feet
They're made of wheat
I'm Stumpy Pete!
I like to eat brains from a can
The other day I ate some yams
I'm Stumpy Pete oh yes I am!
I'm Stumpy Pete
So kiss my feet
They're made of wheat
I'm Stumpy Pete!
- James Blast
- Banned
- Posts: 24699
- Joined: 11 Jun 2003, 18:58
- Location: back from some place else
Yes, and he now is a bigshot on The Sun (not the planet/star tho' that might be a start...). He was always one of the music journos I avoided because he could write the sentences, but talked complete and utter shite!Zuma wrote:Was it not Garry Bushell who tried to create "Oi" as an ego trip a long time ago in Sounds and it fell on its' arse?
A Complete and Utter Khunt!
IMO
"And when you start to think about death, you start to think about what's after it. And then you start hoping there is a God. For me, it's a frightening thought to go nowhere".
~ Peter Steele
~ Peter Steele
They do know! They don´t do it to protest against the parents!Stumpy Pete wrote:Emo is simply music by and for people who don't know how to f**k. It's not complicated.
You know, being against things isn´t what it used to be..
"These are my principles! And if you don't like the just says so, I have others, too!"
~Rufus T. Firefly
~Rufus T. Firefly
I find this to be very informative:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emo_%28music%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emo_%28music%29
Goth has no boundaries and actually means something. Goth is the most real music out there with music and lyrics that actually mean something not to be tainted by emo's typical "I cry at sunsets blah blah blah", emo is just a bastardized mainstream corporate version of Goth.
Sex Farm Woman
I'm gonna mow you down
Sex Farm Woman
I'll rake and hoe you down
-Spinal Tap
I'm gonna mow you down
Sex Farm Woman
I'll rake and hoe you down
-Spinal Tap
- weebleswobble
- Underneath the Rock
- Posts: 5875
- Joined: 09 Feb 2006, 06:57
- Location: The Bat-Milk Cave
- Contact:
F*ck 'em All
‎"We will wear some very loud shirts. We will wear some very wrong trousers."
- boudicca
- Sister Midnight
- Posts: 7427
- Joined: 15 Sep 2004, 16:15
- Location: embrace the margin
- Contact:
I think the thing that inspires the loathing of emo is just the level of self-pity it represents.
Yeah, of course getting incredibly angsty about not-very-much-at-all has been a feature of Being A Teenager since Being A Teenager was invented. And emo is not the first pop culture phenomenon to cash in on that - nu-metal, grunge and others already set the template. But I don't think it's ever been taken to such an extreme.
I see a great difference between emo and gothic, despite both genres' tendency to deal with the - shall we say, less cheerful side of life . To my mind, goth tends to approach things with much more maturity. A lot of bands may tackle grim subjects or the darker aspects of the human condition, but for the most part, don't wallow or glory in uselessness and misery. Subjects which are often very disturbing are actually looked at with objectivity and wry humour at times. This is also the case in some other genres that can cross over with goth... industrial, some metal, even country...
Emo, on the other hand, bleats and wails. It is not moving - quite the contrary. It's not the soul-splitting sound of an abandoned child howling alone in the dark, it's the impossibly irritating sound of a spolit child having a tantrum in a supermarket.
The inspiration is usually far less worthy of emotion than your average gothic ditty. While Nick Cave might croon with a gleam in his eye about psychotic obsessions and brutal murders, emo kids flail and scream about the standard ups and downs of being 15 and the girl you fancy not fancying you back 'cos you're not very popular.
It's a misnomer really, because the emotional scope of emo is extremely limited. These kids are raising their mundane personal difficulties to the level of apocalyptic drama... the world does not extend beyond their own self-important horizons.
Emo appeals to a more exclusively young age group than goth because most adults have seen enough of the world to realise that, at times, painful emotion has to be restrained. Adults can hopefully see far enough outside their own little horizons to realise there's rape, murder, famine, illness, horrific cruelty and death in the world. We realise that when really bad stuff touches a person's life, they have to hold back their tears sometimes, or else they might never stop crying.
Emo angers me because I see it as discouraging emotional maturity and discouraging its teenage adherents from learning to cope with their less pleasant feelings in life. It glamourizes victimhood and normalizes an incredible level of self-obsession and self-indulgence.
Oh and they have stupid hair. That's what it's all about, really
Yeah, of course getting incredibly angsty about not-very-much-at-all has been a feature of Being A Teenager since Being A Teenager was invented. And emo is not the first pop culture phenomenon to cash in on that - nu-metal, grunge and others already set the template. But I don't think it's ever been taken to such an extreme.
I see a great difference between emo and gothic, despite both genres' tendency to deal with the - shall we say, less cheerful side of life . To my mind, goth tends to approach things with much more maturity. A lot of bands may tackle grim subjects or the darker aspects of the human condition, but for the most part, don't wallow or glory in uselessness and misery. Subjects which are often very disturbing are actually looked at with objectivity and wry humour at times. This is also the case in some other genres that can cross over with goth... industrial, some metal, even country...
Emo, on the other hand, bleats and wails. It is not moving - quite the contrary. It's not the soul-splitting sound of an abandoned child howling alone in the dark, it's the impossibly irritating sound of a spolit child having a tantrum in a supermarket.
The inspiration is usually far less worthy of emotion than your average gothic ditty. While Nick Cave might croon with a gleam in his eye about psychotic obsessions and brutal murders, emo kids flail and scream about the standard ups and downs of being 15 and the girl you fancy not fancying you back 'cos you're not very popular.
It's a misnomer really, because the emotional scope of emo is extremely limited. These kids are raising their mundane personal difficulties to the level of apocalyptic drama... the world does not extend beyond their own self-important horizons.
Emo appeals to a more exclusively young age group than goth because most adults have seen enough of the world to realise that, at times, painful emotion has to be restrained. Adults can hopefully see far enough outside their own little horizons to realise there's rape, murder, famine, illness, horrific cruelty and death in the world. We realise that when really bad stuff touches a person's life, they have to hold back their tears sometimes, or else they might never stop crying.
Emo angers me because I see it as discouraging emotional maturity and discouraging its teenage adherents from learning to cope with their less pleasant feelings in life. It glamourizes victimhood and normalizes an incredible level of self-obsession and self-indulgence.
Oh and they have stupid hair. That's what it's all about, really
There's a man with a mullet going mad with a mallet in Millets
-
- Slight Overbomber
- Posts: 1732
- Joined: 16 Dec 2004, 01:02
- Location: Somewhere between Athens and Jerusalem.
- Contact:
Don’t ask me, disliking the idea of asserting your 'individuality' via sporting a silly haircut with slightly differing highlights to everyone else's, I currently dress like Woody Allen to purposely appear bland.