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+ "page_snippet": "Fall Out Boy influenced a generation of bloggers, emo rappers and social media stars. So why don\u2019t they fit into the 2018 they created? And why is mainstream rock so terrible now?Neither band necessarily did anything wrong, but truly great musical chemistry is one in a million. Stump\u2019s first new beginning came on Live From Daryl\u2019s House, mere days after their hiatus. Patrick had never seemed happier. He was singing with Daryl Hall, of Hall & Oates fame - one of the iconic blue-eyed soul singers - performing each others\u2019 songs with lifelong session musicians. Rockstardom is about performing masculinity; and more often than not, he chose to toe the line of sexual ambiguity. A mixed-race, swooshy-fringed style icon for the 2000s, he did for hoodies and guyliner what James Dean did for leather jackets and plain white tees. This shouldn\u2019t be a controversial statement, but it is: Fall Out Boy have the most commercial and artistic longevity of any pop-rock band this millennium. They\u2019re one of the defining emo, pop-punk and top 40 acts of the 2000s. So why are they still treated like a punchline? From 2003 onwards, Fall Out Boy defined pop-punk\u2019s place in the cultural zeitgeist, only to disband just past their peak in 2009. They were one of the main acts who transitioned MTV/TRL culture to YouTube; the first band to be influenced by Nirvana and *NSYNC.",
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Music
The Last Of The Real Ones: the long half-life of Fall Out Boy
Fall Out Boy influenced a generation of bloggers, emo rappers and social media stars. So why don\u2019t they fit into the 2018 they created? And why is mainstream rock so terrible now?
Written by Richard S. He & Emma Goulding
38 min readPublished on
Poptimism Gone Wrong is a column that looks at the stories we tell about pop music, the artists we love to hate, and asks\u2026 what if we\u2019re wrong?
This shouldn\u2019t be a controversial statement, but it is: Fall Out Boy have the most commercial and artistic longevity of any pop-rock band this millennium. They\u2019re one of the defining emo, pop-punk and top 40 acts of the 2000s. So why are they still treated like a punchline?
From 2003 onwards, Fall Out Boy defined pop-punk\u2019s place in the cultural zeitgeist, only to disband just past their peak in 2009. They were one of the main acts who transitioned MTV/TRL culture to YouTube; the first band to be influenced by Nirvana and *NSYNC. In 2013, they reunited to the open arms of their fans, only to find themselves in a broader culture that had left mainstream rock behind\u2026 and an indie rock culture with no interest in crossing over to pop. Said singer Patrick Stump to Rolling Stone in 2015, \"We aren't the last rock band. But we're the last rock band that doesn't think that pop is a four-letter word.\" Why?
The first few waves of punk rock - from The Ramones to Fugazi - reinvented their scenes, then changed the course of rock history. But pop-punk was less intense, more ordinary. It played to a younger demographic - kids who couldn\u2019t just drop out to sharehouse or form bands; teens who discovered music not through tape-trading or indie record stores, but MTV, radio, and movie soundtracks. Through pop-punk\u2019s cultural and commercial peak - roughly 1994 (Green Day\u2019s Dookie) to 2007 (Fall Out Boy\u2019s Infinity On High), the genre was often dismissed as a fad - for 13 years.
Pop-punk spawned a loose collection of subcultures, known as \u201cscene\u201d culture - emo, metalcore, the kind of music you\u2019d associate with MySpace - that were even more disdained. If punk rock and hardcore were for young adults, scene was the kid brother who raided their closets and CD collections. Anyone older than 18 or so - the target demographic - wrote it off as mall-punk; faux-rebellion manufactured by major labels. Scene was viewed as a gateway drug: teens were expected to grow out of it, ditching their Hot Topic wardrobes and My Chemical Romance records in favour of something more \u201cserious\u201d.
Fall Out Boy
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But nothing lasts forever, especially teen fandom. Millennial scenesters, half a generation younger than their idols, eventually grew up. They went from high school and college to real jobs; from LimeWire to iTunes to Spotify; from LiveJournal and Xanga to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram. Many became writers themselves - canonising the albums they saw as iconic, while taking emo\u2019s regressive gender politics to task. Ironically, by the time they\u2019d come of age, all their favourite bands had broken up or lost their cultural relevance. Fall Out Boy are still making hits - but why have the 2010s been so terrible for mainstream pop-rock as a whole? And why do their 2000s records seem more influential than their current music?
M A N I A, their seventh studio album, comes as a necessary course correction after 2015\u2019s too-polished American Beauty/American Psycho. M A N I A barely sounds like \u201crock\u201d music, for the better. But do they still sound anything like the band they were at the beginning? Does it matter?
In 2001, long before he was an emo fashion icon or a tabloid fixture, the 21-year-old Pete Wentz had already spent years playing in Chicago hardcore bands. He was best known as the harsh vocalist in Arma Angelus, a surprisingly credible metalcore band whose legacy\u2019s been lost to time. Having grown disenchanted with the hardcore scene, Wentz resolved to form a pop-punk band. He switched from vocals to bass guitar, and recruited two-fifths of Arma Angelus\u2019 final lineup - 16-year-old guitarist Joe Trohman, and drummer-turned-singer Patrick Stump. Says former bandmate Tim McIlrath (now the frontman of Rise Against), \u201cPete was telling me at an Arma Angelus practice that he was starting a pop-punk band and they would be gigantic and take over the world\u2026 He was dead-set on that.\u201d
As for their name? It just kind of stuck. The band were yet to decide on a moniker when they played their first show (\u201cWe were basically booked as \u2018Pete\u2019s new band,\u2019\u201d says Stump), but \u201cFall Out Boy\u201d - named after Radioactive Man\u2019s sidekick in The Simpsons - eventually won out.
[At our second show] Pete said, \u2018Hey, we\u2019re whatever,\u2019 probably something very long. And someone yells out, \u2018Fuck that, no, you\u2019re Fall Out Boy!\u2019
Patrick Stump to Alternative Press, 2013
That youthful scrappiness made them utterly charming in the early days, long before they had any recordings to their name. Fronted by the then 17-year-old Stump, the unlikeliest of frontmen, they\u2019d play friends\u2019 living rooms with the same energy as 100-person shows.
But Fall Out Boy\u2019s earliest recordings weren\u2019t so auspicious. On their first release, the 2002 Project Rocket / Fall Out Boy split EP, they were clearly the inferior band - but they managed to poach Project Rocket\u2019s drummer Andy Hurley anyway. The 2003 follow-up, Fall Out Boy\u2019s Evening Out With Your Girlfriend, was no better - sloppily recorded in two days.
It\u2019s really hard to have that awkward time memorialised forever\u2026 I could go the rest of my life without listening to [Evening Out] and I would be alright.
Pete Wentz to NME, 2015
It was immediately followed by their true debut, Take This To Your Grave - an album that still exceeds all expectations. Mainstream pop-punk bands smoothed out their rough edges, and indie-emo bands played clean, Smiths-esque guitars - but Fall Out Boy still played like a punk rock band. They wrote melodic pop songs over heavy guitars and drums that showed their hardcore roots. Homesick At Space Camp, The Pros & Cons of Breathing: these were songs written by self-professed nerds, that rocked hard enough for jocks and metalheads. Stump and Wentz fought over their lyrics; and though Wentz took over sole lyrical duties on later albums, that creative tension made them stronger. Like Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, Morrissey and Johnny Marr, their dynamic would define the band\u2019s entire existence.
We were just four unsuspecting Midwestern nerds named after a moderately obscure Simpsons character, living life like the background characters in Ferris Bueller\u2019s Day Off. We were totally unprepared for everything that followed.
Patrick Stump, 2013
\"This is side one / Flip me over / I know I\u2019m not your favorite record\u201d, Stump sings on Dead On Arrival. They weren\u2019t playing at teen angst, like Simple Plan or Good Charlotte at the time. They weren\u2019t rockstars - they were underdogs you couldn\u2019t help but root for; fans like you, with diaries, guitars and very faint dreams. Many still consider Take This To Your Grave to be their best album - or at least the one they have the most emotional attachment to.
Where is your boy tonight? / I hope he is a gentleman
Grand Theft Autumn/Where Is Your Boy, 2003
They didn\u2019t get the girl, but they found a following.
2005\u2019s From Under The Cork Tree took them out of Chicago, from indie label Fueled by Ramen to major Island Records. Like countless bands before them, they crossed over using their image, drawing legions of young fans and driving purists mad in the process. The lead singles, Sugar, We\u2019re Goin Down and Dance, Dance painted two portraits of unrequited love and obsession. In Sugar, the nerd sleeps with the girl, but doesn\u2019t win her love - so he writes a song about her. He feels used, but still puts her on a pedestal. Taylor Swift took notes.
I\u2019m just a notch in your bedpost, but you\u2019re just a line in a song
Sugar, We\u2019re Goin Down, 2005
But Dance, Dance - their most musically ambitious song to date - is an urgent, double-time sprint that\u2019s more melodramatic than run-of-the-mill pop-punk. In the music video, a John Hughes/Revenge Of The Nerds teen comedy, the nerds not only get the girl, they take over their prom. Dance, Dance was morbidly thrilling, Sugar joyfully fatalist - two different angles on Fall Out Boy\u2019s dual psyches.
Emo isn\u2019t just short for \u201cemotional\u201d - it signifies emotional dissonance. Punk rock railed against the establishment, but emo was about the war inside your head, too. It\u2019s when you feel like a romantic, a poet of your private journals, but nobody else understands you. So you respond with self-deprecating irony, or real self-loathing - because no one can hurt you more than you hurt yourself. But if the girl of your dreams knew the real you, the dreamer behind the social outcast, everything would fall into place. Reality, compounded by sexual frustration, weighs down your youthful idealism.
And you're just the girl all the boys want to dance with / And I'm just the boy who's had too many chances
A Little Less Sixteen Candles, A Little More \u2018Touch Me\u2019, 2005
If The Catcher In The Rye\u2019s Holden Caulfield was the original emo, a cynical 17-year-old calling out adult \u201cphonies\u201d, Wentz was born several generations of irony later. \u201cWeighed down with words too overdramatic\u201d, his lyrics had a theatrical bent - he was calling bullshit on his own writing. He knew that irony alone won\u2019t fix you, but neither will self-pity. Perhaps that\u2019s why Fall Out Boy\u2019s lyrics have aged relatively well, compared to the more acidic fantasies of some of their peers.
Rockstardom began as a male power fantasy for musicians and their fans. Artists like Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin and Guns N\u2019 Roses wed bombastic music to hedonistic behaviour, putting no limits on either - except death. But as punk matured into alternative rock, songwriters turned their gaze inward. Morrissey, Kurt Cobain, Rivers Cuomo: their songs could be neurotic, but they were ambitious enough to want to front the biggest bands in the world. They looked like unlikely rockstars, but their personalities won us over.
I am one of those melodramatic fools / Neurotic to the bone, no doubt about it
Green Day - Basket Case, 1994
Fall Out Boy emerged from the latter tradition. Pete Wentz\u2019s lyrics were so precise they felt universal - to under-25s, at least. Pop-punk, more than most other rock movements, had a significant female fanbase. Girls could sing Fall Out Boy\u2019s songs from their own perspective back at a male subject - though at the time, unfortunately, rock had more room for female fans than women-fronted bands.
With Cork Tree, new fans started treating Fall Out Boy more like teen idols than traditional rockstars. Wentz emerged as a public figure, your eyes drawn to him in press shots and videos whether you liked it or not. Fall Out Boy, like early Beatles or Duran Duran, functioned much like a boy band: fans could choose which member they saw themselves in most; and Wentz knowingly played the bad boy and the sensitive poet.
By contrast, Stump - younger, shyer - happily played the frontman in the background. Wholesome in both voice and appearance, he was never seen without glasses and his signature trucker cap. If Wentz was your most articulate self, Patrick was the best version of you. He sang not like a rockstar, but like a friend you could always count on, voicing your emotions with generosity enough for the both of you. Fall Out Boy\u2019s songs, and their delicate balance of sympathies, couldn\u2019t work with a less likeable singer, or a less neurotic writer. Stump was the vocalist, but Wentz represented the band in every other aspect. They were two artists with very different looks and personalities, but the bond between them was the heart and soul of Fall Out Boy.
Fall Out Boy were crossing over, but they were always in between - never only pop or punk, always both at once. They might be the most famous Chicago punk band, while not exactly representing that sound. Nor did they fit in with emo traditionalists. Cork Tree had some romantic fatalism, but the songs weren\u2019t life-or-death - they were joyful, major-key. Fall Out Boy didn\u2019t see pop as a guilty pleasure, which made punk\u2019s gatekeepers furious - but it became their biggest strength.
None of the emo bands messed with us. They hated us. They wouldn't tour with us.
Patrick Stump to Rolling Stone, 2017
Teenage pop-punk is about wanting to escape. But what happens when your dreams come true? Breaking out of the pop-punk box meant leaving certain fans in their wake.
Be clearly aware of the stars and infinity on high. Then life seems almost enchanted after all.
Vincent van Gogh in a letter to his brother, Theo, 1888
In February 2007, three months after My Chemical Romance\u2019s similarly genre-defining The Black Parade, Fall Out Boy\u2019s third album Infinity On High debuted at #1 on the Billboard Top 200. It\u2019s an ambitious record right out of the gate: not only is Thriller, the opening track, named after the biggest album of all time; Jay-Z himself, then-president of Island Records, plays the band\u2019s personal hype man. His co-sign proved that Fall Out Boy had transcended pop-punk, even before the album came out. Thriller aspired to pop immortality, to be as big as Jay-Z or Michael Jackson, while paying tribute to the band\u2019s hardcore roots. They may have outgrown Chicago, but they were still there for the true fans.
I think it's amazing that Jay is having a conversation with our fans... Years from now, when I'm laying in some gutter somewhere, Jay-Z will still be on this record.
Pete Wentz to MTV, 2006
But can you imagine any current rock band writing a tongue-in-cheek song about how they\u2019re selling out? This Ain\u2019t A Scene, It\u2019s An Arms Race literally cuts their new and old sounds in half, seamlessly transitioning from R&B verses - a first for Stump - to a blistering, melodic pop-punk chorus. The music video depicts the band as bumbling, awkward rockstars, delivering laugh-out-loud lyrics that cheekily diss anyone who resents their newfound fame.
With Infinity On High, Fall Out Boy became a truly postmodern rock band. Emo was always an inherently funny concept - but Fall Out Boy were the first band to admit it themselves. They weren\u2019t selling out, however - they were embracing their notoriety. It only made them more famous: This Ain\u2019t A Scene peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100, and remains their highest-charting single.
Most modern rock bands - whether they\u2019re hard rock, indie, punk, metal - are too concerned about being seen as \u201cauthentic\u201d to break the mould. Fall Out Boy believed in themselves enough to not give a shit about the rock establishment. Isn\u2019t that what punk rock\u2019s all about?
Punk goes pop: it\u2019s a pattern that\u2019s repeated from The Velvet Underground to the Sex Pistols, Blondie to Green Day, Andy Warhol and Keith Haring to the entire new wave movement. But Infinity\u2019s closest predecessor could be No Doubt\u2019s 1995 breakthrough Tragic Kingdom, where the band dropped all pretenses at representing ska. Instead, they opened up their arrangements, unashamedly blending genres - new wave, punk, pop, reggae. And Gwen Stefani\u2019s charisma - like Pete and Patrick\u2019s - grew bigger than the idea of the band itself.
Thnks Fr Th Mmrs was Fall Out Boy\u2019s least conventional song to date, but it became their highest-selling single, going platinum twice. The arrangement, with an offbeat pizzicato string intro and a Latin-inspired bridge, was pure Patrick - working with legendary R&B producer Babyface. But its lyrics - a kiss-off to a former lover - and video, starring a young Kim Kardashian - were all Pete. Fame and notoriety, adoration and loathing: for the reality TV generation, these things were one and the same.
Wentz was never a great bassist, but he was so compelling as a lyricist and public figure that it didn\u2019t matter. Rockstardom is about performing masculinity; and more often than not, he chose to toe the line of sexual ambiguity. A mixed-race, swooshy-fringed style icon for the 2000s, he did for hoodies and guyliner what James Dean did for leather jackets and plain white tees.
To his fans, of course, Wentz was more than just a pretty face - although it certainly helped. He was as literary as Elliott Smith or Conor Oberst, but his lyrics were too tongue-in-cheek to ever come off as pretentious. He dropped diaristic confessions and future lyrics on his LiveJournal, as if they were one and the same; and his writing embodied the quippy, lowercase tone that defined pre-Twitter social media. Bridging the gap between Page Six and his peers in the scene, he spawned an online teen gossip culture whose personalities and websites soon infiltrated the established celebrity-industrial complex.
It's Wentz who hangs with Teen Vogue cover-girl types: Lindsay Lohan, Ashlee Simpson, Michelle Trachtenberg. \u2018I'm attracted to creative people and train wrecks, and there's no shortage of that in Los Angeles,\u2019 Wentz says. He hints at some sort of fling with Trachtenberg, but insists the other two relationships are platonic. \u2018Maybe in a different universe, we'd be some hot couple, but not in this one,\u2019 he says of Simpson. (Wentz may have his universes confused: At a Grammy party, he was filmed walking hand in hand with Simpson.)
Rolling Stone, 2007
To Wentz, the media was merely an extension of his LiveJournal. The hint-dropping worked. After a very public two-year courtship, he married Ashlee Simpson in 2008, and the two had a son before divorcing in 2011. At the time, the likes of Ashlee\u2019s sister Jessica, Paris Hilton and Kevin Federline were viewed as white-trash, second-class celebrities at best. Now, social media fame has become the norm for artists and wannabes alike. Their successors - from Kim Kardashian to Cardi B - have become archetypes for 2010s fame. By turning social media into an extension of his art and personality, Wentz played a huge part in its acceptance.
But by 2007, Wentz\u2019s notoriety had tipped the scales. His hacked nudes - which, in true noughties fashion, he snapped with his Sidekick - exposed the first penis many millennial girls ever saw. But not all publicity is good publicity. While the leak set tongues wagging in the online gossip realm, it overshadowed Fall Out Boy\u2019s music in the eyes of agnostics. The endless stream of Pete Wentz celebrity coverage only made the band bigger, but it came at the expense of his sense of self. Wentz\u2019s bad-boy image masked a deep melancholy: diagnosed with bipolar disorder at 18, he attempted suicide in a Best Buy parking lot in 2005. In hindsight, the harsh scrutiny of fame only compounded his internal struggles.
I spent my twenties as literally the most selfish person that I know... I didn't understand that three other people were making a choice to be there with me. They weren't there because they had to be.
Pete Wentz to Rolling Stone, 2015
An untalented asshole is just an asshole, but there was more to Wentz than his infamy. His volatile relationship with fame serves as a cautionary tale to younger generations not to repeat his mistakes\u2026but if they\u2019re anything like Wentz, they won\u2019t listen. In the long run, however, his artistry outlives his reputation.
Wentz and Stump can seem like one traditional rock frontman cut in half. Like Elton John and Bernie Taupin, singer and lyricist, Pete and Patrick always speak through each other in their music. It\u2019s as intimate a songwriting relationship as there\u2019s ever been - they\u2019re not just partners, but foils for each other\u2019s ambitions.
Pop-punk singers have a stereotype - high-voiced, nasal - but Stump is one of the genre\u2019s few truly great vocalists. He has an unusually rich, soulful tenor; though you may not have noticed it until the music opened up to accommodate his voice. Stump and Wentz sang and wrote in a way that emphasised lyrics and melodies equally, turning wordy lyrics into pop hooks that sound completely natural. Infinity\u2019s greatest joy is hearing Stump, who never intended to be a singer, discovering his full range in real-time.
The magic of Fall Out Boy is that you get sincere emotion and winking irony at the same time. It\u2019s a delicate balance - other singers would be too self-deprecating, or would sing the lyrics too straight. Stump gets Wentz\u2019s irony, but delivers his words with more passion and emotional generosity than the fatalistic Wentz ever grants himself. Pete\u2019s public notoriety and Patrick\u2019s delivery were two sides of the same coin: in life and art, the two were inextricable.
Through his imprint Decaydance Records, Wentz spawned his own scene around him. Bands like Panic! At The Disco, The Academy Is\u2026, and Cobra Starship became the next generation of pop-punk, more indebted to Fall Out Boy than to Green Day or blink-182. Modelled after Jay-Z\u2019s Roc-A-Fella, Wentz\u2019s Decaydance made him more than a bassist - it made him a businessman.
After nu-metal\u2019s collapse, rock, hip-hop and R&B were looking for new ways to cross over. Kanye West remixed This Ain\u2019t A Scene, It\u2019s An Arms Race seven months before Graduation cemented his rockstar status; Fall Out Boy featured on Timbaland\u2019s Shock Value album; and Stump covered Ne-Yo\u2019s So Sick solo. And at the 2007 MTV VMAs, Fall Out Boy played Rihanna\u2019s backing band on Shut Up and Drive.
As Stump came out of his shell, emo fell by the wayside. The backlash was in full swing - the Get Up Kids, one of Fall Out Boy\u2019s formative influences, even dissed the movement they helped to create in 2009. Either way, Infinity\u2019s lyrics were less concerned with teen melodrama, showing less anxiety over women and lovers. In between albums, Fall Out Boy covered Michael Jackson\u2019s Beat It, and Stump\u2019s production career veered further into the pop realm. If \u201cemo\u201d was a dirty word, pop was the way forward.
Infinity On High made Fall Out Boy a household name. But who could have known it would be the final peak of emo? The arms race was over - and Fall Out Boy had won. There\u2019d be many more pop-punk and emo albums, but none were half the cultural moment that Infinity was.
I think at age 27, I\u2019m ready to shed the term \u201cemo\u201d. As an adult, I think I\u2019d like to be called \u201csentimentally pessimistic.
Pete Wentz in Everybody Hurts: The Essential Guide to Emo Culture, 2007
2008 was a pivotal year for pop culture, marking the end of the Bush era and beginning a musical shift that would define the next eight-odd years. Taking cues from The Killers and the dance-punk revival, pop-punk and emo morphed into electropop: Metro Station, Cobra Starship. These new bands weren\u2019t writing confessional emo songs. They - and top 40 as a whole - began to embrace hedonism, bratty irony, and Europop-influenced synthesisers. Lady Gaga was ascendant; Katy Perry\u2019s I Kissed A Girl topped the charts the same month she played the Vans Warped Tour.
The only thing I haven\u2019t done yet is die / But it\u2019s me and my plus-one at the afterlife...
Thriller, 2007
Fall Out Boy soldiered on. Folie \u00e0 Deux, French for \u201ca madness of two\u201d, is an album about having to grow up as rockstars. The band\u2019s in a quarter-life crisis, trying to justify their ongoing existence. \u201cNobody wants to hear you sing about tragedy\u201d, sings Stump in the album\u2019s opening track - but in December 2008, many of their fans didn\u2019t feel the same way.
I\u2019m a loose bolt of a complete machine / What a match: I\u2019m half-doomed, and you\u2019re semi-sweet
Disloyal Order of Water Buffaloes, 2008
Disloyal Order Of Water Buffaloes is every bit as passionate an opener as Thriller. But while Thriller was about a band of underdogs overcoming obstacles, Buffaloes is about having already made it - and still having to live with self-doubt, forever. Being an artist means never getting comfortable. Instead of trying to stay young, Fall Out Boy embraced a more adult outlook - critiquing themselves, romance, and their fame. Though Stump was only 24 at the time, much of the younger fanbase couldn\u2019t relate to the band\u2019s concerns. Compared to Infinity On High, Folie was a commercial disappointment. But listening to Folie \u00e0 Deux today, it seems entirely uncontroversial. Fall Out Boy were every bit as honest in 2008 as they were in 2005. Their only crime was aging out of \u201cemo\u201d before their fans were ready to let go themselves.
Audiences openly hated it\u2026 That\u2019s not to say it didn\u2019t have its fans, but at no other point in my professional career was I nearly booed off stages for playing new songs. Touring on Folie was like being the last act at the Vaudeville show: We were rotten vegetable targets in Clandestine hoodies.
Patrick Stump, 2012
Having just had his first child, Wentz\u2019s mind was in an unfamiliar place. His confessions became more abstract, his metaphors more florid. If Wentz\u2019s lyrics were once the driving force of the band, Folie is where Stump\u2019s compositions took the reins. It marked a full shift away from pop-punk instrumentation, toying with more elaborate, Queen/Beatles-inspired arrangements.
Its lead single, I Don\u2019t Care, was an ode to millennial narcissism over a bluesy, glam-rock stomp - and the most straightforward song on the album. Folie\u2019s songs were pop-rock, but with a twist - full of odd digressions and guest appearances. Lil Wayne gurgles his way through an auto-tuned verse on Tiffany Blews; Debbie Harry and Elvis Costello - one of Patrick\u2019s biggest influences - show up, each sounding eerily like Stump. 20 Dollar Nose Bleed, a Broadway-worthy duet with Panic! At The Disco\u2019s Brendon Urie, likens their careers to the farce that was George W. Bush\u2019s presidency. Folie is full of astonishing vocal moments - Stump\u2019s belted climax in Headfirst Slide Into Cooperstown On A Bad Bet, the stacked harmonies in America\u2019s Suitehearts, the heart-pounding melodrama of (Coffee\u2019s For Closers).
What A Catch, Donnie, the album\u2019s centrepiece, is one of the most intimate songs of the band\u2019s career. Named after a morbid reference to Donny Hathaway\u2019s suicide, the song is a soulful power ballad about the crushing lows of depression, and the healing catharsis of music - each chorus showcases a jaw-dropping key change, where Stump\u2019s voice jumps over half an octave.
In the video, Stump plays the captain of a lonely fishing boat, his only friend an flightless seagull. He drifts aimlessly at sea, until he rescues the survivors - including his bandmates - from a nearby shipwreck. In the song\u2019s bridge, a cast of their peers - Brendon Urie, Gabe Saporta, Travie McCoy - reprise lines from old Fall Out Boy songs. The band were rolling an end-credits montage on themselves, with a bittersweet message: Fall Out Boy belongs to the people. Even before the video was released, speculation was rampant that they were signalling the end.
You're supposed to be a voice for people's lives \u2014 that's what art is really about... right? And how are you going to sing songs about life if you're not living yours?
Patrick Stump, 2013
The band officially went on hiatus in November 2009, after eight years together. At their last show, opening for blink-182\u2019s reunion tour at Madison Square Garden, Mark Hoppus shaved Wentz\u2019s head, an act of ritual cleansing. There was no bad blood between the members - it\u2019d just run its course. They couldn\u2019t write more heartfelt songs than What A Catch, Donnie, or (Coffee\u2019s For Closers). They had lives to live - and it was better to be apart than codependent. Believers Never Die, a compilation released immediately after their hiatus, captured the band\u2019s astonishingly fast progression: a celebration of their music, tinged with sadness.
If every band stopped at their logical endpoint, this story would end here. But life goes on.
Don't you get it? A hiatus is forever until you get lonely or old. I don't plan on either.
Pete Wentz, 2010
Joe and Andy - metalheads through and through - formed a supergroup, The Damned Things, with members of Anthrax and Every Time I Die. Wentz formed the producer/singer trio Black Cards with Bebe Rexha, now a popstar in her own right - before dropping her and inexplicably becoming a dubstep DJ duo. Black Cards mixed new and old: electropop with reggae influences, the sound of Wentz\u2019s Jamaican heritage. Neither band necessarily did anything wrong, but truly great musical chemistry is one in a million.
Stump\u2019s first new beginning came on Live From Daryl\u2019s House, mere days after their hiatus. Patrick had never seemed happier. He was singing with Daryl Hall, of Hall & Oates fame - one of the iconic blue-eyed soul singers - performing each others\u2019 songs with lifelong session musicians. For the first time, we got to see an older generation validating Stump\u2019s musicianship, playing the hell out of his humble pop-punk songs. Though Daryl Hall, funnily enough, couldn\u2019t quite nail the odd rhythm of Wentz\u2019s lyrics.
Away from Fall Out Boy, Stump realised his relationship with his own musicality. He lost weight and bleached his hair, looking almost unrecognisable. From his home studio in Chicago, he posted covers and originals on YouTube, playing and singing every part himself - an early example of YouTube\u2019s now-thriving DIY cover industry.
In 2011, first came the quirky Truant Wave EP, then Stump\u2019s true solo debut Soul Punk. Pop-punk bands have long drawn from the early \u201980s, via new wave and John Hughes; but Soul Punk\u2019s foundation was Prince and The Time - specifically the Dirty Mind, Controversy, 1999 era.
Largely self-produced, Soul Punk sounded nothing like Fall Out Boy - driven by lush synths, bone-dry drums, and Michael Jackson-influenced vocals. Stump wasn\u2019t just ahead of the current synth-funk revival - Bruno Mars, Mark Ronson et al - his take was totally unique. Nostalgia be damned, Stump found a new voice through new-old sounds.
Explode, Soul Punk\u2019s opening track, has a chorus as big as anything he ever sang in Fall Out Boy. But it\u2019s no anthem - it\u2019s a song about a man bursting out in rage at society\u2019s expectations. This was an album about dismantling hero worship, the kind of pedestal Fall Out Boy fans put the band on. On one hand, Stump sang: \u201cIf I\u2019m never your hero / I can never let you down\u201d. But on the other: \u201cYou can be your own spotlight / You can be the star, you can shine so bright\u201d.
Stump, like Fall Out Boy, was signed to Island Records - but he soon came up against the limitations of promoting solo and side projects. Music narratives are fickle: everyone loves the next big thing, or a faded star\u2019s redemption story. Soul Punk was simultaneously both and neither. You only get one chance at first exposure; Stump would've been better received as a completely new face.
In any case, Fall Out Boy\u2019s non-fans weren\u2019t paying attention; and most of the existing fanbase was too bitter from their hiatus to see its necessity, or to accept Soul Punk as anything but a detour. It didn\u2019t fit into an established niche, so its release was largely met with confusion.
People were calling me a sell-out while I was doing my solo thing. And I was losing lots of money. I was like, 'If I were selling out, I hope I could do a little better job at it.' I was doing this as a labor of love, and I've never gotten so much shit in my life ... I don't think I was bullied until I was 27. It just blew my mind how cruel people can be. They would pay to go to the shows just to heckle me. They'd even yell out, 'I liked you better fat!' I was like, \u2018That has nothing to do with anything. That was for health reasons, jerk.\u2019
Patrick Stump to Rolling Stone, 2013
Solo, Stump is a distinctive, often cynical lyricist, heavily influenced by Wentz even in his absence. But there\u2019s not the same crackling tension without him. They\u2019re musical soulmates, each other\u2019s muses - something that only became clear with their separation. It\u2019s never more apparent than on This City, the first single from Soul Punk. A vague attempt at a Chicago \u201cEmpire State Of Mind\u201d featuring Lupe Fiasco, the song\u2019s so concerned with being universal that it never actually names the city, nor earns its last-chorus key change.
It\u2019s one underwritten song, but the rest of Soul Punk is still fascinating - and wildly underrated. Stump sounds more comfortable in Fall Out Boy, a familiar home. But Soul Punk is closer to his own lifelong R&B influences. He belongs there, too; but the mixture\u2019s unstable, unsettled - Stump was still discovering his sound. Later Fall Out Boy would integrate some, but not all, of Soul Punk\u2019s progressions. It remains a promising debut without a true follow-up.
You know The Mask? The Jim Carrey movie where he puts on the mask, and he can be this superhero\u2026 and then he takes it off, and he's just this total nerd? I don't know what possessed me [to record Soul Punk].
Patrick Stump to Red Bull, 2018
What the fans didn\u2019t hear in the music, however, was the depths of Stump\u2019s depression. Stump was always naturally self-effacing, but Soul Punk inspired so much vitriol that it tainted what should have been a personal and creative high point. In 2012, Stump wrote a blog post confessing his existential frustrations, that some readers legitimately interpreted as a suicide note. \u201cEvery part of me wishes I hadn't written that thing\u201d, he later said in 2015.
The reality is that, for a certain number of people, all I\u2019ve ever done, all I ever will do, and all I ever had the capacity to do worth a damn was a record I began recording when I was 18 years old\u2026 If I am to be obscure and financially unsuccessful, there\u2019s nothing disheartening in that. The thing that\u2019s more disheartening is the constant stream of insults I\u2019m enduring in my financially unsuccessful obscurity.
Patrick Stump, \u201cWe Liked You Better Fat: Confessions of a Pariah\u201d, 2012
The note moved Wentz to reach out. The two experimented alone, writing songs until they knew it felt right. Pete, Patrick, Joe and Andy recorded an album in secret with producer Butch Walker, planning singles, videos, and a tour. In February 2013, after three years and three other projects, the only logical thing to do was get the band back together.
My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark (Light Em Up), the first single, seemingly came out of nowhere. It was completely new for Fall Out Boy: riffing on Kanye\u2019s POWER, the song integrated samples and hip-hop drums with Stump\u2019s newfound vocal confidence, creating a new kind of stadium-rock anthem from the ground up.
They called their comeback album Save Rock And Roll - a title at once tongue-in-cheek, ironic, and totally serious. They shed the cynicism of 2009, determined to make rock music that actually rocked - and felt current. Their success was anything but assured - who knew how the fans would react? In the last five years, the music industry\u2019s entire landscape had changed. Record sales were in freefall, streaming was ascendant; top 40 radio had shut out traditional rock bands. The cultural tides that led to Fall Out Boy\u2019s breakup should have kept them apart. But if you can\u2019t beat \u2018em, join \u2018em - and do it better.
And I cried tears you\u2019ll never see / So fuck you, you can go cry me an ocean / And leave me be
Save Rock And Roll, 2013
The album opens with The Phoenix, a war cry not driven by heavy power chords, but booming production, string samples, and dance-punk drums. Stump\u2019s voice, never more powerful, belts a message to himself: \u201cI\u2019m gonna change you like a remix / Then I\u2019ll raise you like a phoenix\u201d.
Live, Wentz often introduces Alone Together - an album highlight - as \u201c[a song] about how punk rock will never leave you alone, no matter what\u201d. Ironically, the music couldn\u2019t have less to do with punk - it\u2019s a heavily produced power-pop song where Stump indulges his R&B inflections, singing in a full, resonant belt. Alone Together may not be all that DIY, but it\u2019s a love song from the band to the fans, a community once again.
In 2007, Fall Out Boy crossed over from the pop-punk scene to top 40 radio. While retaining the spirit of their songwriting, they opened up their sound and expanded their appeal. In 2013, they reinvented themselves a second time. It\u2019s rare for any rock band to endure one cultural shift, let alone succeed because of it. Save Rock and Roll shared territory with R&B, hip-hop, EDM, and even folk rock. Young Volcanoes is an acoustic guitar-driven stomper in the wake of Mumford and Sons, Avicii and the Lumineers. But the song is uniquely Fall Out Boy, buoyed by the pure joy of being in each other\u2019s presence, making music once again.
We will teach you how to make boys next door out of assholes...
Young Volcanoes, 2013
Years before playlist culture became Spotify\u2019s driving force, they were writing songs to conquer as many platforms as possible. It was more than a marketing move - by embracing all their musical influences, Save Rock And Roll made a statement about how we listen to music in the 21st century.
Save Rock And Roll still feels like a thrilling musical and cultural moment. But its crowning jewel is The Young Blood Chronicles, a full-length visual album released out of order over a full year. Its eleven chapters assemble a feverish, post-apocalyptic narrative about the death of rock - like a \u201990s Guns N\u2019 Roses blockbuster directed by Quentin Tarantino or Robert Rodriguez.
Fall Out Boy are kidnapped by a band of music-hating vixens, tortured, and pitted against each other - metaphors for their career to date. A cast of musicians, past and present, play alternative protagonists on both the record and film. Big Sean raps Wentzian lyrics with more lechery than Stump ever did, while Foxes plays the only female romantic foil in Fall Out Boy history: \u201cI\u2019m here to give you all my love, so I can watch your face as I take it all away\u201d. Elton John plays God, a white-tuxedoed baritone singing opposite Stump\u2019s tenor, while Courtney Love plays the fascist cult villain - a tongue-in-cheek joke about her and Wentz\u2019s brand of infamy.
The Young Blood Chronicles finally establishes Patrick - a powerful, sympathetic actor - as the band\u2019s true frontman. Countless films and music videos have depicted rock iconography as a religion, but Fall Out Boy aren\u2019t afraid to commit sacrilege. The Young Blood Chronicles is a singularly strange work that\u2019s desperate for reevaluation.
Save Rock And Roll\u2019s success vindicated not just their decision to reunite, but their entire career to date - perhaps a little too well. Folie \u00e0 Deux felt like one endpoint, but Save Rock And Roll was so thorough a reinvention that it became another. What do you do after you\u2019ve made your musical and visual mission statement? Shot half a feature film? Fall Out Boy would never be underdogs again; Save Rock And Roll\u2019s success ensured they\u2019d have nothing to come back from. By the end of the era, it was hard to tell if they had saved rock and roll, or killed it.
Oh no, we won\u2019t go / \u2019Cause we don\u2019t know when to quit
Save Rock And Roll, 2013
In October 2013, they were still mulling it over. PAX AM Days - recorded in just two days, produced by Ryan Adams - served as a palate cleanser, taking the band back to their roots while showing how far they\u2019d come. With Patrick wailing over 90-second-long melodic hardcore songs, PAX AM Days was a combination we\u2019d never heard before, sounding more like Sleater-Kinney than Take This To Your Grave.
In September 2014 - just four months after The Young Blood Chronicles wrapped up, and a year before anyone expected any new material - Centuries premiered. Driven by a catchy but superfluous Suzanne Vega interpolation, it felt like a guaranteed hit. It was pure stadium rock, but synthetic, unfamiliar, and a little terrifying.
Recorded in three weeks, 2015\u2019s American Beauty/American Psycho took Save Rock And Roll\u2019s approach and cranked it to 11. Irresistible opens the album with one of the purest pop songs they\u2019d ever written. But their old quirks soon became forced affectations - the title track\u2019s bizarre electro synths, Uma Thurman\u2019s meme-rock. The album emphasises choruses over verses, spectacle over intimacy - and for the first time in the band\u2019s history, Wentz\u2019s lyrics become a mere launching pad for hooks. With Stump\u2019s newly weaponised belt over hyper-compressed production, non-fans must have felt like Fall Out Boy were fulfilling Rolling Stone\u2019s infamous 1979 Queen review:
Queen isn't here just to entertain. This group has come to make it clear exactly who is superior and who is inferior. Its anthem, \"We Will Rock You,\" is a marching order: you will not rock us, we will rock you. Indeed, Queen may be the first truly fascist rock band.
Dave Marsh, Rolling Stone, 1979
At the same time, the seeds Light 'Em Up planted had blossomed. ESPN used Centuries in an NFL playoffs commercial that aired so often that Wentz later apologised. Without even being sports fans, the band had become jock jam staples, their songs featured at countless sporting events. Who were they making music for? Had the old emos been replaced by a band of jock imposters?
For its flaws, American Beauty/American Psycho isn\u2019t a simple concession to top 40 radio. It\u2019s a committed, forcefully weird pop record - arguably their most divisive. Wentz himself lists it as his least favourite FOB album. It has its moments - Fourth Of July is lovestruck, urgent, while Favorite Record boasts youthful \u201980s sentimentality - but elsewhere, the scale of the productions steamrolls whatever soul there was in the songwriting.
The cumulative effect of all these militant rock songs is exhausting, but so many of them became hits that the album still comprises much of the band\u2019s live setlist. American Beauty/American Psycho became the third endpoint of the band\u2019s career - they couldn\u2019t possibly make this sound any bigger.
Fall Out Boy have gained and lost fans with each new release. From one album to the next, their arc feels like a logical progression. But jump across two - for example, Take This to Your Grave to Infinity On High - and they can sound like a completely different band. Fans disagree on where they first crossed the line, but on American Beauty/American Psycho, there was no turning back.
Fall Out Boy\u2019s appeal was that they made the intimate feel grand. But there\u2019s no room for pop-punk scrappiness in top 40 anymore, let alone punk ideals. In the 2010s, mainstream and grassroots rock split once and for all. Punk and alternative rock, once countercultures that infiltrated the mainstream, have become subcultures - looking inwards, not outwards.
The last decade has had few mainstream rock zeitgeist moments, none of which were driven by the charisma of a true rockstar personality. Were Somebody That I Used to Know or We Are Young even rock songs? The few surviving rock bands - Maroon 5, Coldplay - have lost their rhythm sections to drum samples and synth basses, becoming glorified solo acts in order to keep up with pop production trends.
When did the punks stop being mad? / They penned love songs while we got had / The hippies sold out, traded pot for coke / Moved to the \u2019burbs, found God in a vote
Patrick Stump, \u201cDance Miserable\u201d, 2011
Being a teenager is about feeling larger-than-life emotions, often to the point of embarrassment. But adulthood comes with responsibilities - finance, relationships, parenting. Even rockstars have to grow up eventually. How can younger fans possibly relate to those life experiences, let alone how they change your relationship with art? Older listeners typically stop keeping up with new music, choosing to relive the sound of their youths.
Once a band hits their second decade, their options are limited. They can stare down stagnation, writing new songs with diminishing returns, playing the odd anniversary show for nostalgia\u2019s sake. They can break up - maybe they never made it as big as they wanted, or never made enough money to supplant their day jobs. Either way, reality overrides the pure idealism of making art. Or they can diversify, becoming a business.
Surviving as a musician in the 2010s requires a constant stream of content and publicity. You can\u2019t get rich off royalties alone, so you create multiple revenue streams: brand sponsorships, placements in film, TV shows, video games, commercials. Genuine creative experiments turn into content for the sake of content - and if you\u2019re getting paid for it, then why not?
Fall Out Boy\u2019s last few years have been polarising, but the thing is, they\u2019ve endured well - not just compared to their peers, but all rock bands historically. My Chemical Romance show no signs of getting back together; Weezer flit between rock for adults and goofball pop; and blink-182 minus Tom DeLonge are making shamelessly careerist pop-punk. Rock bands rarely score top 40 hits well into their second decade, but Fall Out Boy\u2019s inescapability makes them a target - to non-fans, why won\u2019t they go away? Why do they deserve success over your favourite band?
Watching a band rise to fame, fulfilling their creative potential, feels breathless. But once they\u2019ve found their ceiling, the long half-life - the rest of their career - isn\u2019t so romantic. Life goes on. Narratives are rewritten; a new generation of fans only knows Fall Out Boy since their reunion. Centuries has a staggering 346 million Spotify plays, but is Fall Out Boy at their most anonymous. How many of those listeners will be curious enough to delve into their back catalogue, even with their discography at their fingertips? Music coverage favours the present, and hindsight isn\u2019t always 20/20. Nostalgic anniversary pieces rarely do more than scratch the surface of records we understood better in the moment.
But the influence of Fall Out Boy\u2019s first decade extends beyond their current music, or even mainstream rock as whole. Fall Out Boy spawned Cobra Starship and Gym Class Heroes, who spawned Katy Perry, 3OH!3, LMFAO, and now The Chainsmokers - the only dance act writing truly confessional, explicitly emo pop songs in the late-2010s.
Pete Wentz, more than anyone, was the missing link between Morrissey and 2010s hip-hop. Wentz may not have been a rapper, but like Kanye, Drake and The Weeknd, he understood the connection between rappers and rockstars - that a star\u2019s charisma isn\u2019t just about swagger or cockiness, but vulnerability, too. It\u2019s Post Malone covering Basket Case, sounding like both the emo kid he grew up as and the rapper he is now. It\u2019s Marshmello x Lil Peep (R.I.P.), legitimately sounding like Kurt Cobain doing trap ballads. It\u2019s the genre-agnosticism of twenty one pilots, or Halsey\u2019s stadium emo-electropop.
Wentz\u2019s shifting tastes in music, fashion, and image defined pop culture\u2019s arc over the last 15 years. Born in 1979, now 38, he could be the oldest millennial. He\u2019s gone from metalcore screamer to pop-punk bassist, pop-rock to electropop, online infamy to real celebrity influence. He\u2019s played so many roles: bassist, lyricist, de facto frontman, designer, author, businessman, tastemaker, husband, father, best friend, villain.
Fall Out Boy were part of the generation that usurped alt-rock and nu-metal - but they\u2019ve now been usurped by their next generation. It\u2019s easier for kids to be influenced by music - new or old - than for established bands to catch up with trends. Still, older bands need to live on tension, not contentment. How do you evolve with the times, away from the establishment, while retaining rock \u2018n\u2019 roll\u2019s spirit?
I only wrote this down to make you press rewind / And send a message: I was young and a menace
Young And Menace, 2017
2018\u2019s M A N I A answers that question: Young And Menace, the first single, takes EDM, rock and soul, and smashes them against each other. It\u2019s one of the strangest songs the band\u2019s ever written, and more importantly, it feels genuinely dangerous.
M A N I A is a motivational album about the joy of being in a band; the thrill of being alive, feeling everything. The band incorporates fresh influences and collaborators: the Latin beat on Hold Me Tight Or Don\u2019t; Nigerian dancehall singer Burna Boy\u2019s verse on Sunshine Riptide; and especially Sia, who leaves her unmistakable mark on Champion - the rare inspirational song that admits that life can be intolerable.
Stylistically, this is the album Wentz was born to make, and Patrick more than rises to the occasion. M A N I A\u2019s strongest moments transcend the rock palette - Church and Heaven\u2019s Gate are shimmering stadium-soul productions that push Stump\u2019s voice to new heights. Unlike each of their last three albums, M A N I A doesn\u2019t feel like an endpoint. It feels like a new beginning, built not on grandiose production, but in the spirit of global collaboration and openness. Even Joe and Andy, edged out on American Beauty/American Psycho, feel like they belong again.
When you're a teenager and you're angry, you give somebody the finger and you\u2019re like, \u2018I hate you forever\u2019... Being an adult is having to sit with that person and have a nice, polite dinner, while hating them the exact same amount. We're all still exactly as angry as we ever were. You just channel it in different ways.
Patrick Stump to Red Bull, 2018
It\u2019s impossible to make music from the same underdog perspective forever - and that\u2019s okay. But rock culture, especially punk and indie, is built on the notion that the underdog\u2019s always right; that commercial appeal is inverse to artistic ambition. But it\u2019s disingenuous to say that bands should toil in obscurity forever, or that you can stop successful artists from ageing. There is no fountain of youth. Fall Out Boy can\u2019t replicate Take This To Your Grave - and even if they could, why would they?
But what do they owe the fans who want to hear them play Dance, Dance for the thousandth time? On one hand, they refuse to look back; but watching Wentz pull his signature lick-lick-salute every time he plays Sugar, We\u2019re Goin Down, you might think otherwise. Is it muscle memory? An affectation? Pandering to nostalgia?
I found the cure to growing older...
I Slept With Someone In Fall Out Boy And All I Got Was This Stupid Song Written About Me, 2005
And all the good old boys are playing bad new songs / On the country station while the city moves on / The hot young things, they don\u2019t age like wine / I\u2019m on the bad side of 25
Patrick Stump - Bad Side Of 25, 2011
Fall Out Boy made it in 2007. We\u2019ve been living in their future for 11 years - and they\u2019ve now been back together for longer than they were on hiatus. Most bands only ever have one core idea. But they, and we, have to keep asking - what next? Is it better to burn out or fade away? Do you play it safe, or change with the times and risk alienating your fans? Populism and centrism have become dirty words. But what\u2019s wrong with a little populist centrism, if you get to be one of the biggest rock bands in the world? If you get to define punk, emo, rock and pop, all at once?
What significance does Fall Out Boy hold for two generations, let alone the future? Fall Out Boy\u2019s music has never stopped shifting, but neither has our relationship with it. Even now, revisiting Take This To Your Grave or From Under The Cork Tree inspires more than nostalgia. Each song feels like a living thing; their lyrics and emotions play out in real-time with each new listen. Their songs had complexities and influences beyond \u201cemo\u201d, that only seem more obvious in hindsight. Looking back\u2019s not empty nostalgia, as long as you\u2019re living in the present.
Pete and I attacked the Lost Astoria / With promise and precision, and a mess of youthful innocence
Saturday, 2003
Fall Out Boy still end every concert with Take This To Your Grave\u2019s Saturday, an ode to endless possibilities. Pete and Patrick almost always speak through each other, except on Saturday - the rare song penned by Stump alone. \u201cMe and Pete / In the wake of Saturday\u201d, he sings, as Wentz screams alongside him - a gesture of unconditional love; an acknowledgement that, for all they\u2019ve endured, their bond hasn\u2019t changed. For three-and-a-half minutes, fifteen years in the spotlight flash before our eyes, as our memories merge with theirs.
Fall Out Boy are not the last rock band left standing, but they are one of a kind. Is their story still being written? As long as we\u2019re still asking.
And this crystal ball / It\u2019s always cloudy except for / When you look into the past...
Thnks Fr Th Mmrs, 2007
Richard S. He is a pop songwriter and producer in ELLE, and an award-winning critic. You can follow him at @Richaod.
Emma Goulding is an emo kid turned normie, an industry research editor and an armchair music critic. Please forward all grievances to @Richaod.
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+ "page_snippet": "Fall Out Boy. Soundtrack: Big Hero 6. Fall Out Boy is a rock band from Chicago formed by hardcore punk veterans in 2001. After meeting at a local bookstore discussing the metal band Neurosis, Pete Wentz, Joe Trohman and Patrick Stump decided to start a pop punk band, eventually bringing drummer ...Fall Out Boy. Soundtrack: Big Hero 6. Fall Out Boy is a rock band from Chicago formed by hardcore punk veterans in 2001. After meeting at a local bookstore discussing the metal band Neurosis, Pete Wentz, Joe Trohman and Patrick Stump decided to start a pop punk band, eventually bringing drummer Andrew Hurley into the fold. The band released their first chart topping album \"Infinity on High\" in 2007, followed by \"Folie \u00e0 Deux\" the next year. Citing exhaustion in 2009, the band went on indefinite hiatus while pursuing other interests. Since returning in 2013, all of their albums have all debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart with numerous hit singles. They didn't have a name for their band and they asked a crowd that they were playing for what their name should be and someone yelled out Fall Out Boy and it stuck. The video for \"This Ain't A Scene; It's An Arms Race\", thought up by bassist Pete Wentz and director Alan Ferguson, is a parody of all the rumors and scandals the band has been tied to.",
+ "page_result": "Fall Out Boy - Biography - IMDb
Fall Out Boy is a rock band from Chicago formed by hardcore punk veterans in 2001. After meeting at a local bookstore discussing the metal band Neurosis, Pete Wentz, Joe Trohman and Patrick Stump decided to start a pop punk band, eventually bringing drummer Andrew Hurley into the fold. Their 2003 debut album "Take This To Your Grave" was an underground success, leading to a major label release in 2005, "From Under The Cork Tree", which spawned two Top 10 singles. The band released their first chart topping album "Infinity on High" in 2007, followed by "Folie \u00e0 Deux" the next year. Citing exhaustion in 2009, the band went on indefinite hiatus while pursuing other interests. Since returning in 2013, all of their albums have all debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 album chart with numerous hit singles.
They didn't have a name for their band and they asked a crowd that they\nwere playing for what their name should be and someone yelled out Fall\nOut Boy and it stuck.
Original names also considered for Fall Out Boy were: Short Story,\nUnhappy Ending and Forget Me Not
The video for "This Ain't A Scene; It's An Arms Race", thought up by bassist Pete Wentz and director Alan Ferguson, is a parody of all the rumors and scandals the band has been tied to.
Nominated in two categories, Best Group Video and Viewer's Choice, for\nthe 2006 MTV VMA's for their song Dance, Dance. They won the award for\nViewer's Choice.
For the album Infinity On High, each member of the band wrote their own\npart for the songs. However, Patrick acted as the maestro for it\nall.
Please enable browser cookies to use this feature.\u00a0Learn more.
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+ "page_name": "Fall Out Boy Artistfacts",
+ "page_url": "https://www.songfacts.com/facts/fall-out-boy",
+ "page_snippet": "Artistfacts for Fall Out Boy - facts, trivia, and bio information.Fall Out Boy is the fourth band Andy Hurley has been in with Pete Wentz. \"Trohmania\" is the name given to Joe's spinning guitar move, often seen during live performances. This name was derived after Joe gave Pete stitches, because while he was spinning, he hit Pete in the face. >> Anna from Paris, Txfall out boy is a good band, and while i have to agree that pete is hott... so is joe!! ahh! lol, i just think they are a good rock band, and thats all they need to be. Sally from Wheeling, Wvpete wentz is hott!see more comments \u00b7 Zach Hanson was just 11 years and 7 months old when \"MMMbop\" topped the Hot 100, making him the youngest group member to co-write and perform a US #1 single. Formed in 2001, the name \"Fall Out Boy\" was chosen when the band asked the crowd in their second show what their name should be and an audience member shouted out \"Fallout Boy,\" the name of The Simpson's fictional superhero, Radioactive Man's sidekick. The band wasn't even aware that the name was a Simpsons reference. Pete Wentz writes most of the band's lyrics. Patrick Stump was once the primary source of Fall Out Boy's lyrics, focusing more on his high school experiences, but as Wentz took over that role, Stump focused on writing the music. >>",
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Fall Out Boy is from Wilmette, Illinois (a suburb of Chicago). Formed in 2001, the name \"Fall Out Boy\" was chosen when the band asked the crowd in their second show what their name should be and an audience member shouted out \"Fallout Boy,\" the name of The Simpson's fictional superhero, Radioactive Man's sidekick. The band wasn't even aware that the name was a Simpsons reference.
Pete Wentz writes most of the band's lyrics. Patrick Stump was once the primary source of Fall Out Boy's lyrics, focusing more on his high school experiences, but as Wentz took over that role, Stump focused on writing the music. \n >>\n
\n Suggestion credit: Phill - Columbia, SC\n
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Fall Out Boy has toured with multiple bands, including Taking Back Sunday, Less Than Jake, blink-182, Panic! at the Disco, Midtown, Hawthorne Heights, The All-American Rejects, The Academy Is..., The Hush Sound, October Fall, From First to Last, Play Radio Play and Gym Class Heroes.
Andy Hurley didn't join the band until after the album Evening Out With Your Girlfriend was released.
The title of the band's second studio album, From Under the Cork Tree, is a phrase taken from the popular children's book The Story Of Ferdinand by Munro Leaf. Wentz always liked that Ferdinand didn't want to fight in the ring, but would rather sit beneath the tree and smell the flowers. He thought that was a good metaphor for life.
Patrick Stump was born Patrick Martin Stumph. Before joining FOB, he was a drummer in many bands during his school years including Public Display of Infection, grinding process, and Patterson. He comes from a musically inclined family. His father, Dave Stumph, is a folk singer, and his older brother, Kevin, is an accomplished violinist.
They have played secret shows under the name of Saved Latin.
Joe Trohman is the tallest member of Fall Out Boy, standing 5'10.\" He is also the youngest.
In 2005, Wentz published a book entitled The Boy With the Thorn In His Side, which is a story based on nightmares he had when he was a child. The title is a reference to a track on The Smiths' record The Queen is Dead. He has another book titled Rainy Day Kids.\"
Trohman is a Star Wars fanatic and a video game enthusiast.
Stump's guitars of choice are Epiphone and Gibson SGs. Hurley plays C&C Custom drums and Sabian cymbals.
Fall Out Boy is the fourth band Andy Hurley has been in with Pete Wentz.
\"Trohmania\" is the name given to Joe's spinning guitar move, often seen during live performances. This name was derived after Joe gave Pete stitches, because while he was spinning, he hit Pete in the face. \n >>\n
\n Suggestion credit: Sara - Austin, TX, for all above\n
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Hurley and Wentz were on Peta's Sexiest Vegetarians List for 2006. \n >>\n
Wentz runs Clandestine industries, which started as a way to sell a book he wrote that was inspired by his childhood nightmares. By 2005, they were selling clothing, and were so successful doing so that they partnered with DKNY and opened a store in Chicago. \n >>\n
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Pete Wentz's clothing line, \"Stay Gold\" is a reference to Johnny's letter to Ponyboy in the novel The Outsiders. \n >>\n
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In 2007-2008, they played in six continents, and tried to play all seven and get listed in the Guinness Book of World Records. The tricky continent was Antarctica, which they planned to play two days after a concert in Santiago, Chile, but weather didn't cooperate and they couldn't get there. \n >>\n
\n Suggestion credit: Bertrand - Paris, France\n
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Pete Wentz married singer and actress Ashlee Simpson, the younger sister of pop singer Jessica Simpson, on May 17, 2008. They had a son, Bronx, together. On February 8, 2011 Simpson filed for divorce citing \"irreconcilable differences.\"
Wentz became a father for the second time when his girlfriend, Meagan Camper, gave birth to Saint Laszlo on August 22, 2014. They explained their son's unique name to People magazine. \"I think at some point, the name Saint came up because we thought he'd be a saint if he waited to arrive until his dad was home from tour, and he did,\" the pair said. \"The name suits him.\"
In 2012, after some lean years when the band was inactive, Stump wrote a disheartened missive on his blog, referring to himself as a \"has-been\" and explaining that his failed solo album was causing him financial and emotional distress. After reading the post, Wentz contacted Stump and they put the band back together, mounting an improbably comeback with their 2013 album Save Rock and Roll, which went to #1 in the US.
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Comments: 14
Dr. Death Defying from Battery Citytbh we have no choice but to stan
Cherann from SeattleI had enjoyed a couple Fall Out Boy songs for 7 years. When I got a music app and listened to a playlist with only Fall Out Boy, they became my new favorite band! My taste in music is very eclectic running from big band, through country, classic rock, a bit of hip hop sprinkled in and some Avenged Sevenfold. 63 years young!
Ron from Insbrook Apartment's They didn't get the name from the Simpson's and honestly that's a s--tty way for them to claim it.
Geoff from Warren, PaEvening Out With Your Girlfriend was actually a mini-LP, NOT an album.
Shadow from Depression, VaActually LISTEN to their songs before trashing. That's all I can say. I have never seen ANY pictures of the band yet I love them. I may be a teenage girl, but I can't stand fangirly stuff. And I have none of that inside of me. FOB is great, so shut up.
Sc from Anchorage, AkWow. First of all, if you have Fall Out Boy, then why are you typing comments on their Artistfacts page? Second of all, did you ever think that not everyone is an obsessive Jonas Brothers teenie-bopper? And there is WAY more to being "emo" than the type of music you listen to. Fall Out Boy isn't even "emo", so you should know your facts before you bash such a great band.
Joey from North Barrington, IlThank you Isabelle for breaking the mold and proving someone wrong. I wish I knew why people feel inclined to write on a band's comment page if they hate the band though. Oh yeah I'm neither a teenager (as Michael seems to refer to) or a girl, and FOB is one of my favorite bands...they aren't emo, and they have more talent than many other bands out there, people are just too ignorant and self centered to realize that.
Isabelle from Stockholm, SwedenOooh, 'Emo' music how scary. Well, since I am 14 and a girl no one'll take me seriously but whatever. I like these guys and their music because of the music. Not because of their looks. Surprising, huh?
Michael from Morris County, Nji hate fall out boy nad the whole emo music scene. its so whiny and are only popular because of a bunch of teenange girls who don't know what music is and listen to them because they find them attractive
Lola from Ft. Collins, CoWhen I met them, I asked them why they wrote such deep lyrics, and they said there songs arn't really that deep... they just end up turning out that way. It was totally unintentional.
Dominique from --, Nythis is a good band...pete is so cute! i just think that they should never change...they're awsome the was they are now...
Colleen from Mankato, MnDamn, the tallest guy in the band is 5'10\"???? those guys are short!
Anna from Paris, Txfall out boy is a good band, and while i have to agree that pete is hott... so is joe!! ahh! lol, i just think they are a good rock band, and thats all they need to be.
The White Stripes song \"We're Going To Be Friends\" is very innocent, but Jack White feared it would be interpreted cynically. It wasn't, and was even adapted into a children's book.
\"Ghosttown\" was Madonna's 45th chart-topper on the Dance Club Songs chart, breaking the record for the most #1s an artist has tallied on a single Billboard chart.\r
\"Ho Hey\" by The Lumineers spent 62 weeks on the Hot 100, tying with Lifehouse's 2005 single \"You And Me\" for the longest stay on the chart for a song by a rock band.
\"Heart of Glass\" was Blondie's first foray into disco, which turned off some fans. Debbie Harry said they did it because they \"wanted to be uncool.\"
A look at the good (Diana Ross, Eminem), the bad (Madonna, Bob Dylan) and the peculiar (David Bowie, Michael Jackson) film debuts of superstar singers.
Tom stopped performing Thompson Twins songs in 1987, in part because of their personal nature: \"Hold Me Now\" came after an argument with his bandmate/girlfriend Alannah Currie.