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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, July 31, 2006

Hey, got a pen? Write down this song title ...

By EDNA GUNDERSEN
USA Today

The emo subgenre, already baffling for its fuzzy boundaries and strangely named bands, now holds title to the longest and looniest song titles in the rock family.

The growing trend finds emo pop-rockers concocting abstract, ungainly song titles that are often clever and self-referential but rarely correspond to lyrics and may have only a peripheral relationship to the song's meaning.

Las Vegas group "Panic! at the Disco," whose "I Write Sins Not Tragedies" is heating up on radio, also drew notice for "The Only Difference Between Martyrdom and Suicide Is Press Coverage." And try leaving this one on a request line: "There's a Good Reason These Tables Are Numbered, Honey, You Just Haven't Thought of It Yet," a line never repeated in the song. Other examples:

  • Chicago's Fall Out Boy gets long-winded inscribing "Our Lawyer Made Us Change the Name of This Song So We Wouldn't Get Sued" and "I Slept with Someone in Fall Out Boy and All I Got Was This Stupid Song Written About Me."

  • Joan of Arc's latest release has such tracks as "I'm Sorry I Got So Drunk After My Solo Set in Tokyo."

  • Cute Is What We Aim For, of Buffalo, just arrived with "Sweat the Battle Before the Battle Sweats You."

  • Ohio's Hawthorne Heights includes "Where Can I Stab Myself in the Ears?" and "We Are So Last Year" on its current album.

  • Long Island band From Autumn to Ashes recently served up "The Funny Thing About Getting Pistol Whipped Is ..."

    Emo didn't invent the phenomenon. The Beatles did "Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey" in 1968, followed by Pink Floyd's "Several Species of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together in a Cave and Grooving with a Pict."

    Emo's fascination with marathon rubrics may be due to a mood upswing. "Emo is an outgrowth of the earnest singer/songwriters of the 1970s, and it started out sort of self-righteous but has evolved with some humor," says music consultant Tom Vickers. "Humor is a connecting force that resonates with the core audience."

    The downside is that casual listeners may not grasp or recall a polysyllabic nonsense title they hear once or twice, he says. "It's harder to remember when it's not a one-word title like Kiss or Faith, but these aren't necessarily bands going for top 40 airplay," Vickers says. "A lot of these songs are designed to show a nutty vibe."