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Where are your boys tonight? : the oral history of emo's mainstream explosion 1999-2008 / Chris Payne.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : DeySt., an imprint of William Morrow, [2023]Copyright date: ©2023Edition: First editionDescription: xv, 480 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780063251281
  • 0063251280
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Introduction -- Part 1. Close to home 1999-2000. Jersey basements & the Manhattan skyline -- The first fancy tour bus to pull up at the Manville Elks Lodge -- Long Island & the last silent majority show -- "If Pete wasn't playing for us, he was moshing for us" -- All the way down I-95 -- And out to the great wide open -- Part 2. Will you tell all your friends ... 2001-2002. Napster, the music biz & the biggest band to come out of Mesa, Arizona -- New Jersey, 2001 -- "At the time, they were Geoff from Thursday's weird friends" -- The Long Island lyric pool -- "If half the people hate you, the other half are going to defend you to the death" -- "It wasn't like we thought we were going places, because there was nowhere to go in Utah" -- "Better get a little glossier, or you're gonna fall behind the crowd" -- "It didn't matter that 99% of mainstream America didn't know who he was" -- Part 3. The match you strike to incinerate 2003-2004. Private jets & magazine covers -- "I remember playing Hollister. It was a riot at the mall, basically" -- "If you don't sign this band, you're gonna regret it for the rest of your life" -- "Love in the face of the apocalypse" -- New friend request -- Part 4. "The pinnacle of hype," 2005. Taste of chaos, 2005 -- Going down swinging -- The eye of the storm -- "Panic! at the Disco was like pouring gasoline on the fire" -- Never sleep again -- Part 5. It's an arms race, 2006-2008. "Bigger than emo" -- "Emo people are just like us" -- "As much mischief as we could" -- Bridge & tunnel -- The black parade -- In defense of the genre -- "It was a reckoning to have this young woman overtake the scene" -- Takeover -- The band in a bubble -- The end of the earth -- "They took the exclamation point off their name" -- "When your fans start dressing like you, you gotta find the next thing" -- "Total, complete transformation" -- Part 6. Epilogue. We'll carry on.
Summary: "Told through interview with more than 150 people, including bands, producers, managers and fans, a music journalist offers an authoritative, impassioned and occasionally absurd account of the turn-of-the-millennium emo subculture that took over the American music scene from 1999 to 2008"-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction New 781.6609 P346 Checked out 06/17/2024 33111011251424
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A "vivid and breathless" (Billboard) oral history of emo's takeover from 1999 to 2008, featuring My Chemical Romance, Fall Out Boy, Paramore, Panic! At the Disco, Taking Back Sunday, Jimmy Eat World, Dashboard Confessional.

If Meet Me in the Bathroom traced New York City's early 2000's rock scene, Where Are Your Boys Tonight? gives the inside story of the turn-of-the-millennium emo subculture that became bigger than anyone thought possible. There was Pete Wentz, the Fall Out Boy leader who launched a litany of scene-stealing bands and preposterous side-hustles, and Gerard Way, the wizard behind My Chemical Romance and The Black Parade. Panic! At the Disco and Paramore emerged soon after--a pair of intrepid outsiders who got massive playing by their own rules. As they ascended, MySpace took over the internet and the age of influencers dawned, with emo its choice aesthetic.

Music journalist Chris Payne experienced emo's mainstream takeover from sweaty crowds and mosh pits growing up in New Jersey. In Where Are Your Boys Tonight? he offers an authoritative, impassioned, and occasionally absurd account told through interviews with more than 150 people, from the scene's biggest bands, producers, and managers to the teenage fans who helped redefine American music culture.

Includes index.

Introduction -- Part 1. Close to home 1999-2000. Jersey basements & the Manhattan skyline -- The first fancy tour bus to pull up at the Manville Elks Lodge -- Long Island & the last silent majority show -- "If Pete wasn't playing for us, he was moshing for us" -- All the way down I-95 -- And out to the great wide open -- Part 2. Will you tell all your friends ... 2001-2002. Napster, the music biz & the biggest band to come out of Mesa, Arizona -- New Jersey, 2001 -- "At the time, they were Geoff from Thursday's weird friends" -- The Long Island lyric pool -- "If half the people hate you, the other half are going to defend you to the death" -- "It wasn't like we thought we were going places, because there was nowhere to go in Utah" -- "Better get a little glossier, or you're gonna fall behind the crowd" -- "It didn't matter that 99% of mainstream America didn't know who he was" -- Part 3. The match you strike to incinerate 2003-2004. Private jets & magazine covers -- "I remember playing Hollister. It was a riot at the mall, basically" -- "If you don't sign this band, you're gonna regret it for the rest of your life" -- "Love in the face of the apocalypse" -- New friend request -- Part 4. "The pinnacle of hype," 2005. Taste of chaos, 2005 -- Going down swinging -- The eye of the storm -- "Panic! at the Disco was like pouring gasoline on the fire" -- Never sleep again -- Part 5. It's an arms race, 2006-2008. "Bigger than emo" -- "Emo people are just like us" -- "As much mischief as we could" -- Bridge & tunnel -- The black parade -- In defense of the genre -- "It was a reckoning to have this young woman overtake the scene" -- Takeover -- The band in a bubble -- The end of the earth -- "They took the exclamation point off their name" -- "When your fans start dressing like you, you gotta find the next thing" -- "Total, complete transformation" -- Part 6. Epilogue. We'll carry on.

"Told through interview with more than 150 people, including bands, producers, managers and fans, a music journalist offers an authoritative, impassioned and occasionally absurd account of the turn-of-the-millennium emo subculture that took over the American music scene from 1999 to 2008"-- Provided by publisher.

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