fallingintotheatlantic
fallingintotheatlantic
☆*゚¨゚゚・*:..゙Gnack¨゚゚・*:. ☆
17 posts
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fallingintotheatlantic · 10 months ago
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Whitney of Days N Daze playing Blue Jay
This song is so emotional and hits even harder with her emotion in this video
This isn’t my video but it’s beautiful and i absolutely love this song
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fallingintotheatlantic · 10 months ago
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febuary.
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fallingintotheatlantic · 11 months ago
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band i play in ʕ•ᴥ•ʔ
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lovelace ❤️🎀 etta’s basement oct 5
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fallingintotheatlantic · 11 months ago
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House show fundraiser for Palestine relief 05/10/2024
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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band i play bass in🖤
thanks sam for the pictures<3
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Lovelace, scramz from Newfoundland
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Zine I just made.
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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band i play bass in called doberman
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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life jolt setting up at the skate comp
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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mcr shirt bootleg
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Pictures I took at a basement show in downtown St. John’s a little over a year ago
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Headless, sleeping soundly
Love Lost but Not Forgotten was an emoviolence/ screamo band from St. Peters, Missouri, and were active from the years 1997 - 2002.
Formed of a mix of ex-members of other screamo bands, Love Lost but Not Forgotten’s music is characterized by a chaotic mix of sheer emotion and violence expressed in their songs, as well as their unique shrieky vocals (which later went on to inspire bands like The Number Twelve Looks Like You).
Since their breakup in 2002, they have performed 3 reunion shows in 2005, 2008, and 2010. 
This band is probably my favorite screamo band of all time, please check them out if you haven’t already (s/t is fucking amazing).
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Class War, 1983.
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Pat the Bunny, playing solo as Wingnut Dishwashers Union, performing Ain't Nobody's Business at the Blast-O-Mat in Denver, Colorado. 7/27/09.
— Video credits to Aaron Saye on YouTube —
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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Power of noises and vaginas - a thought
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For two decades now, post-hardcore has been considered a sub-genre descended from hardcore, which in turn was considered a sub-genre descended from punk, and which in turn... well, it's not important to put musical genres and sub-genres into boxes purposely organized to fit people and their ways of dressing and other useless aesthetics promoted by media/digital cultures. But for two decades now, post-hardcore has been asserting itself as a well-defined genre, with well-defined textural characteristics, as well as certain types of chords and experimentalist riffs in the nostalgic-depressive world, heartfelt screams with a poetically sad story to tell in the most imperfect and dirty way possible, where D.I.Y. is valued in the various arts that embrace recorded and live music.
In 2003, music researcher Jessica Hopper wrote the review "Emo: Where the Girls Aren't" for a column in Punk Planet 56. It was already in the cradle of the emo thing at the beginning of the century that we noticed an absence of girls at concerts - at first there was no mention of them playing or making music, but even their absence from the public as listeners / active participants in this subculture and community. Girls began to enter this world in a very controversial and unrevolutionary way, but always with all the freedom.
Obviously, through the promotion that took place on the internet on the various platforms, the genre reached more stages, more people, more musical cultures and gained a large structure. Girls (like everyone else) start going to these places, often through an interest they already had in other genres such as indie, punk, metal, etc., and as soon as they buy a ticket to go to a concert, we have a group of 50 young men talking about love, depression, nature and other "weaknesses" seen through the eyes of toxic contemporary masculinity. And girls are welcome here. They will always be welcome until they start making music out of fear, because in punk they've already had the chance to revolutionize themselves and post-hardcore/screamo gives voice and space to boys who also suffer from prejudice.
Hopper talks about this band that dedicates a song (Strike Anywhere - Refusal, 2001) to the girls about their problems and lives, and claims that we need more of that: protection and respect. But this hasn't happened and girls still don't feel encouraged and empowered: they are an inspiration for the experiences and texts of this subculture, they are desired as artists and recreationists, and even though they aren't sexualized or repudiated in all cases, they feel obliged to get on the boys' knees to make it too, perhaps even better. A fight against meritocracy, male dependency in order to learn or be promoted and supported, where we are ALL programmed to think that we have a sex organ between our legs and that public reception is influenced by this: either in a positive or a negative way.
«And so I watch these girls at emo shows more than I ever do the band. I watch them sing along, see what parts they freak out over. I wonder if this does it for them, if seeing these bands, these dudes on stage resonates and inspires them to want to pick up a guitar or drum sticks. Or if they just see this as something dudes do, because there are no girls, there is no them up there. I wonder if they are being thwarted by the FACT that there is no presentation of girls as participants, but rather, only as consumers – or if we reference the songs directly – the consumed. I wonder if this is where music will begin and end for them. If they can be radicalized in spite of this. If being denied keys to the clubhouse or airtime will spur them into action».
- Jessica Hopper (2003)
Girls are not yet part of this music, or at least not in a direct or comfortable way. Perhaps through music promotion, the organization of concerts, photographs and poster designs, perhaps through their words adopted by these boys or the desires and utopias of an all-embracing subcultural milieu that, although they may all agree and share the same idea, refuses to accept that they are not welcome altogether, completely. Perhaps they are, but ever since men began to dominate this music or all music, they have needed reasons to pick up a guitar without the issue of sexual gender being brought into the listening experience or even to politics. Would it be better to ignore the gender issue at all costs (until this argument is normalized) or to promote the importance of giving girls a voice to help empower them, as has been happening in punk and hardcore (until this issue becomes part of the contemporary elements of screamo)? Maybe no one has the answers, but the reality is that girls continue to enjoy and consume this music without drumsticks in their hands.
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fallingintotheatlantic · 1 year ago
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starting my band "lowercasenospaces" to fit in with the gang
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