Citations:emo


 * 2001, Joe Ambrose, Moshpit: The Violent World of Mosh Pit Culture
 * Hardcore, skacore, grindcore, emo, straight edge, punk, punk pop, were just some of the genres that swamped and replaced cock rock.


 * 2003, Peter Buckley, The Rough Guide to Rock
 * It was a blueprint for many of the emo/post-hardcore bands plying their 'emotional-hardcore' trade today. Any revolution has to start small and it was with


 * 2004, Doug Van Pelt, Rock Stars on God: 20 Artists Speak Their Mind about Faith
 * Emo as a genre had long since been established, but never had it been so poignantly defined. Unfortunately, nearly as quickly as they had appeared,


 * 2005, Michael Muhammad Knight, The Taqwacores
 * he wanted to sing in emo pop Newfound Glory bands but he snarled too much and never had his teeth fixed—to spot the real punks, he used to say,


 * 2006, Ben Sisario, Doolittle
 * their sundry names are a feast of hyphenation: lo-fi, math-rock, indie-pop, pop-punk, retro- rock, post-rock, noise-pop, emo — I guess emo says it all.


 * 2006, Ben Myers, Green Day: American Idiots & the New Punk Explosion
 * and-drugs stance of the straight-edge scene, to the more metal-minded bands and on to the cerebral post-hardcore and emotional (emo) hardcore scenes.


 * 2006, Andrew Beaujon, Body Piercing Saved My Life: Inside the Phenomenon of Christian Rock
 * Until recently, he recorded for one of emo's most popular labels, Jade Tree, and has as little to do with evangelical Christianity or Christian music as


 * 2007, Leslie Simon, Everybody Hurts: An Essential Guide to Emo Culture
 * But emo is more than a genre of music-it's the defining counterculture EVERYBODY HURTS is a reference book for emo, tracing its angsty roots all the way


 * 2007, Daniel Sinker, We Owe You Nothing: Punk Planet: The Collected Interviews
 * I see a lot of emo-bashing, but anger is emotion. When these people say, "I'm angry," they're Earth Crisis therefore is emo; Pantera is an emo band.