EmoEmporium
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Album Ratings 443
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Last Active 11-03-23 8:26 pm
Joined 11-03-23

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 Lists
05.21.25 1999: The State of Screamo - Abridged E04.15.25 1998: The State of Screamo - Abridged E
03.25.25 1997: The State of Screamo - Abridged E03.05.25 1996: The State of Screamo - Abridged E
02.21.25 The Shape of Screamo to Come01.08.25 2024 Emo Tier List + Ranking
06.12.24 Recontextualizing Third Wave Emo Part 405.10.24 Recontextualizing Third Wave Emo Part 3
03.07.24 Recontextualizing Third Wave Emo Part 2 02.27.24 Recontextualizing Third Wave Emo Part 1
01.08.24 Artists I Have Tickets For in 202412.27.23 2023 Emo LP / EP Tier List and Ranking
12.06.23 Emo In My Top 100 Songs of 2023

1999: The State of Screamo - Abridged Edition

Hey all, the end of the century is upon us and the genre has never looked better! The first two entries are Screamo Hall of Fame Inductees, 3-10 are HoF Nominees, 11-15 are Connective Tissue (splits) and 16 is part of Holy Grails (comps). 17-21 are additional releases. If you want to see these when they come out daily, follow on Reddit, FB or IG!
1Orchid
Chaos Is Me


Orchid unleashed one of the darkest and most explosive Emoviolence ever with this album, establishing absolute anarchy with dense, overwhelming guitar, complex rhythms, blistering tempos, intense emotive screaming and a wall of sound approach to production that you can easily get lost in. These studio choices mirror the chaotic nature of the songwriting, crank up the immediacy and add a foreboding atmosphere to songs that already feel dangerous to listen to.

Structurally, many of the songs on here are somewhat similar, but Will Killingsworth and Jeff Salene craft technical, memorable chord progressions and rapid-fire syncopation to differentiate the songs. These masterful arrangements are tied together by Jayson Green's brutal and harrowing vocal performance, imparting bitterness and anger with every syllable. Putting a bow on this package are brief respites of melodic guitar and calmer tempos which build tension and contrast the chaotic moments further.

Simply put, there may not...
2Combatwoundedveteran
I Know A Girl Who Develops Crime Scene Photos


CWV delivers a noisy and oppressive Emoviolence album with this, their sole full-length effort. The Grindcore and Powerviolence influences are more prominent than ever with the distorted, metallic guitar riffs and chugs operating at a near-incomprehensible level, matching the suffocating and cacophonous drum performance. Tying the whole package together is the personality-and-brutality-driven vocals of Chris Norris (with backup from Dan), bringing the entire concoction to a fever pitch.

The only reprieve you get while listening to this record are the various samples that bridge some of the tracks together. Even then, most of these samples are strong political statements (or something silly to the same effect).

This album is infamous for how deranged and stifling it is, integrating the heaviest of late 90s Hardcore and bashing it against their own fiery brand of Emoviolence. This release contrasts with Orchid’s 1999 classic Chaos Is Me on the production side, favoring the...
3I Have Dreams
Three Days 'Til Christmas


Taking the bones of Screamo with emotionally intense screamed vocals and dynamic song structures, I Have Dreams concocted a formula all their own with plenty of chugging Metalcore riffage and the melodic sensibilities of Midwest Emo. Many of the songs swing jarringly between driving, intense sections, brutal breakdowns and clean, slightly cheesy concentrations of vocal and guitar melody. The entire record is gently wrapped in immutable youthful energy and raw, confessional emotional outpouring.

The core of this band came together a year earlier, releasing a demo under the name New Ethic. Tragically, one of their guitarists would die young, leading to the formation of I Have Dreams and their sole release in 1999. This record serves as a tribute to their fallen friend, carrying on his musical legacy and allowing the young band members to express their deepest and saddest sentiments, the true basis of many great Emo artists.

Although a beloved cult classic now, it really took...
4Reversal Of Man
This Is Medicine


This record encapsulates suffering unlike anything before it, utilizing dynamic aggression, dissonant guitar and boisterous drumming. Most songs have only two gears: quieter, intense and dissonant sections that build the music up, and the most frantic and dissonant bursts of anger and chaos. Wrapping this gnarly package up are sinister screamed vocals, headed by Matt Coplon.

The entire listen breezes through in large part due to this album's impeccable sense of flow and kineticism; each track emanates with danger in equal measure to the energy put in, and, combined with the songs seamlessly bridging together, gives a small measure of accessibility to an otherwise unholy package.

This release solidified Reversal of Man as one of the great Emoviolence artists of the 90s. Its influence on the local scene and beyond, and the extraordinarily high musical standards they set, are still revered to this day.

This EP also demonstrates a different aspect of the genre than fellow...
5Kulara
5 Pieces Songs


The best word I can use to describe this sound is “disorienting,” as the musical complexity, masterclass dissonance and volume dynamics are all wrapped in this unique Progressive aura of experimentation. Slow, disharmonious sections composed from a tense atmosphere and a chilling melody will jarringly and frantically switch to a chaotic section of screaming and uncontrolled musical mayhem, a regular occurrence. It’s quite difficult to transcribe the sound of this beast into English, so I’m just going to recommend you listen for yourself and hear the magic unfold before your ears.

Following Envy’s 1998 LP, Japanese Screamo began to experiment and refine itself, and no artist in the country represented that better than Kulara. After a few middling Screamo EPs, this 1999 release defined them as true innovators in Screamo with this Prog-adjacent masterpiece. The experimentation on here is unlike anything heard before OR after, evidenced by how difficult it was to conceptualize the...
6Usurp Synapse
This Endless Breath


This Endless Breath is one of the nastiest Emoviolence releases of the 20th century, taking cues from both the dynamism of bands like Reversal of Man and the brutality of artists like CWV, meeting somewhere in the middle compared to those bands’ 1999 efforts. Harmony is very distant from this project, rooting itself in discord and depravity. Even when the Grindy blastbeats are held at bay, the tension in their quieter sections almost matches the intensity of their explosiveness. The brutal and hoarse vocal performance seals the deal by pushing the insanity of the music into overdrive.

This record is the very first blast of solo material for this infamous band, and it stands as some of their best. Their at-the-time unique approach to the genre fleshed out Screamo as a whole that much more. Even though the band is still kicking in one form or another, this contribution definitely flies under the radar in the grandness of Screamo Canon.

Usurp Synapse uses brevity and absurdism...
7Saetia
Eronel


This EP is riddled with uncommon time signatures, complex rhythms and melodies and passionate vocals, which says nothing of how maturely and expertly these elements are stitched together. Delicate guitars, subdued drums and gentle but active basslines define the more fragile and quiet moments on here, smoothly switching to distorted tones, boisterous drumming and wild bass with ease. The high-pitched shrieks from their earlier work return, but Billy Werner’s utilizes other impressive vocal techniques like shouting, crooning clean notes and spoken word, giving the music another cryptic layer.

Low-key, this is their best recorded material. It’s a testament to the increasing technicality and artistry of their music, even if these particular songs tend to go by the wayside when discussing Saetia and their material.

Being the band’s final recorded material for over a quarter-century, it was naturally the closest resemblance to what would become of this band - Hot Cross and Off Minor...
8Neil Perry
Neil Perry


Neil Perry's debut is noisy and unstable, resembling a thousand jagged shards of glass crashing across the fretboard. The songs tend to shift back and forth between boisterous mid-tempo heaviness and insane, nigh-indecipherable freneticism, switched jarringly in a Powerviolent manner. The manic vocal performance puts this over the top while the occasional clean arpeggio sneaks into the mix to fill the gaps.

Neil Perry's name is synonymous with Screamo greatness in the late 90s-early 00s, though this debut LP is the closest they've ever been to a proper solo release. From here on out, Neil Perry would only release splits with a who's who of Screamo royalty and sprinkle in the occasional single. They would later cement their legacy with an era-defining comp, which we will eventually cover. However, despite not making a large impact with this individual release, it deserves a mention among the other greats.
9Yaphet Kotto
The Killer Was in the Government Blankets


This record definitely gives off “Bay Area Screamo” vibes, though perhaps a hair older than some of the other NorCal classics. It takes the dynamic and emotional nature of Screamo, combines it with the melody, clean vocals, and riffs of late 90s Post-Hardcore, brings in a few elements of Emocore, and unveiled it to the world with this, their debut LP. There are tons of memorable riffs and strong melodies from the guitarists, seemingly the primary focus of this project, and the screamed / clean vocal combination amps the emotionality up severalfold. Some more traditional “Punky” moments come in where you can hear the blatant Emocore influence, contrasting the otherwise quite technical performance in most tracks.

Although not the first album (or band) you’d consider when discussing the legacy of Bay Area Screamo, this seedling of a concept would continue to get fleshed out by legends like Funeral Diner and City of Caterpillar. This enigmatic Hardcore cocktail would serve as the basis...
10You and I
The Curtain Falls


Compared to the precision metallic chugging of their last album, You and I incorporates messier production, more chaotic songwriting and less sharp guitar tones on their sophomore full-length. Despite the quiet-loud dynamics, You and I once again manage to instill their songs with boundless kinetic energy, aided by the powerful vocal performance that mixes screams and cleans. However, the lower volume shifts seem more solemn than before, perhaps giving this record the emotional edge. Taking cues from Indian Summer, much of the transitions between songs on this album sample an old Stevie Wonder song.

By 1999, You and I had already established themselves as the Screamo Kings of the LI-NJ Hardcore scene, even far outpacing bands like Saetia. With the release of their swan song The Curtain Falls, they further cemented this notion. Their popularity began blossoming, playing shows as far as Chicago, IL, New Bedford, MA and Nottingham, UK! However, this legacy would soon be paved over...
11Orchid/Combatwoundedveteran
Split


These two Emoviolence legends were both peaking in 1999, with CVW and Orchid delivering Hall of Fame-worthy LPs, shaping the genre in their drastically different images. For Combatwoundedveteran, this year would be the absolute pinnacle of their careers, releasing their celebrated LP, this split with fellow seminal Emoviolence act Orchid and one more insane split with Scrotum Grinder.

Meanwhile, Orchid’s unbeatable run of releases would only start here; Dance Tonight! was in the works for next year, along with the legendary Skull Split with Jeromes Dream and a swan song in 2002. By 2003, both artists would disband, leaving immense legacies behind.

This split moves a blistering pace, squeezing in seven songs in five minutes! CVW’s side is an absolute wall of sound from the frenetic instrumentation and manic screaming. The guitar is all-encompassing and the drums seem to suck the air out of whatever’s left. It’s very devastating and boisterous, even when not playing full-on Grindy...
12Jeromes Dream/July
Jeromes Dream / July


Jeromes Dream had just released their first split with Amalgamation in December of 1998, so this was still one of the earliest tracks they ever released. They would stick around for a couple of years before disbanding in the early 00s, whereby they’d release their signature material. Meanwhile, July is a duo with this one song and possibly a demo somewhere in the wild. They’re quite obscure.

Jeromes’ side opens with one of their typical ferocious Emoviolence intros with utter insanity on the guitar and drums. Jeff Smith’s signature destructive vocals complete the package, though there’s also a bit of a second half to this one; the back end of this track is mostly atmospheric noise with dynamic aggression. Meanwhile, July’s track is quiet, blessed with just a guitar, some keyboard and the human voice. These nearly six-and-a-half minutes of Post-Rock goodness with Emo-style vocals are beautiful, but contrast Jeromes’ side completely.

How this obscure band linked with Jeromes Dream...
13Usurp Synapse/Index for a Potential Suicide
Split


Both artists were relatively new to the scene, forming in 1998. Index released an EP in ‘98 while Usurp debuted their material in ‘99. Index wouldn’t last too much longer than the year 2000, while Usurp would stick around for a couple of years until 2003.

These two burgeoning Emoviolence acts have pretty different styles, but they come together perfectly in this cozy little package of destruction. Index for Potential Suicide utilizes synths (some more subtle than others) to layer their music and give it a unique twist. The core of the music is somewhat dynamic, switching from deep breakdowns to manic sections of pure chaos to some weird artificial sounds that are all out of place while simultaneously feeling right at home.

Usurp Synapse’s side features four songs that hover around the 1-minute mark but are played at such blistering tempos that there are tons of musical ideas on offer, with some room for cleaner, slower sections that counterbalance the rest of the insanity.

A...
14Joshua Fit For Battle/Love Lost But Not Forgotten
Joshua Fit for Battle/Love Lost But Not Forgotten


Both of these bands had only recently formed, both releasing their debut EPs and this split in 1999. Humble beginnings for two bands who would define the genre in the early 00s; Love Lost would release their unforgettable debut LP in 2000 while Joshua would have to wait until 2002 to get their moment in the sun.

Uniquely, Joshua Fit for Battle has the first track on this split, followed by two back-to-back entries from Love Lost but Not Forgotten. Finally, the album ends with another Joshua Fit for Battle song. Their styles are distinct, but it’s nice to have a sort of bookend to this thing. JFFB’s side is a bit slower and warmer than LLBNF’s tracks, featuring a tad more starkness in the dynamic contrasts. Love Lost has fiery moments of Emoviolence passion that fizzle out as quickly as they come, tinged with plenty of dissonance.

This particular split was a great harbinger of what’s to come for the genre in the early 2000s. LLBNF’s two songs were demos for tracks that wound up on...
15The Swarm/ForceFedGlass
The Self Destruct EP


Both bands formed in the late 90s, releasing the bulk of their discographies before the turn of the century. By 2000, both artists will disband.

The Swarm, tangentially related to the Screamo scene by way of guitarist Kyle Bishop, who does vocal duties for fellow Ontarians Grade, plays fairly straightforward Metalcore on here with a few traditional Punk leanings. Somewhat melodic, somewhat driving and brimming with energy and passion, their four tracks breeze through. ForceFedGlass’ two tracks are far more complex, noisier and more dynamic, playing their signature brand of blistering, technical Emoviolence with heavy, slow sections spacing out the chaos.

Although both artists would fizzle out soon after this split was released, it nonetheless catalogs these two distinct Hardcore artists from 550 miles apart at the end of their short-lived musical careers. While neither would be groundbreaking in their genre, they both remain underrated aspects of genres that would leave them behind.
16Song of Zarathustra
Discography, Vol. 1


Song of Zarathustra employs dissonance, syncopation, synths, noisiness, blistering tempos, and several vocalists to achieve their signature sound. Their earlier tracks are filled with personality and synthy sections, whereas their later work is a bit more straightforward but utilizes Screamo tropes very well, such as greater dynamics and more discordance.

Song of Zarathustra is a relatively unknown band in the grand scheme of Screamo, but this compilation excellently highlights a snapshot of Screamo from the Midwest. Sharing a scene with such bands as The Book of Dead Names and The Khayembii Communiqué, with whom they have some cross-pollination in their rosters, they showcase the power, ferocity and unique qualities of this area. Sadly, this excellent slice of American Screamo wound die out around 2003, where all three would disband.

The original vinyl run was pressed onto a picture disc (which is somewhat controversial) and was given about 3,000 copies. You can purchase it...
17The Khayembii Communique
The Khayembii Communiqué


Additional release
18The Red Scare
Capillary Lockdown


Additional release
19Kamara (SE)
The Embrace of One Last Moviekiss


Additional release
20Twelve Hour Turn
The Victory of Flight


Additional release
21Palatka
The End of Irony


Additional release
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