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American Football (Music)
- 124 statements
- 23 feature instances
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American Football (Music) | |
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AmericanFootball | |
American Football (Music) | comment |
American Football are a Midwest emo band from Urbana, Illinois, and easily one of the most iconic bands in the scene, originally active from 1997 to 2000. The band is made up of: Mike Kinsellainvoked: Lead vocalist and former bassist. He was formerly a drummer Steve Lamos: Drummer. Steve Holmes: Guitarist. Nate Kinsella: Touring bassist from 2014 onwards.The band's history traces back to 1996 when Kinsella, drummer for cult emo band Cap'n Jazz, and Lamos, a guitarist for many other bands, collaborated with brothers David and Allen Johnson on a couple of songs under the name of The One Up Downstairs. However, the band splintered before these songs could be released.note the Johnsons went on to form Very Secretary, and the One Up Downstairs recordings were later rescued years later by American Football's label, Polyvinyl Not wanting to give up music, Lamos and Kinsella later began playing with Holmes, forming what would become American Football.As you can see from the original years active, they weren't around that long. In their original run, they only had two releases: an EP and a full-length studio album, both called American Football. Whenever people talk about this band, it's almost always in regard to the second release.Initially, its release had a similar experience to works such as The Velvet Underground & Nico and In the Aeroplane Over the Sea — nobody really cared for it, nor did they pay any attention to it, and the band broke up shortly after its release, with Kinsella later working on the solo project Owen, and playing drums with Owls.note a band that is essentially a re-formed Cap'n Jazz minus bassist Davey von Bohlen, who founded his own cult emo band, The Promise Ring Over time, however, people began to listen to it and began to praise it for its mix of Emo, Math Rock, and indie. When the deluxe edition was released in 2014, demand was so great that it caused the website where people could order it from to crash. After 14 years apart, the group reunited the same year, adding Kinsella's cousin Nate as a bassist. The band has since toured the world, selling merchandise and even releasing a music video for "Never Meant", the first track off of the LP. In 2016, the band announced the release of a new album for the first time in seventeen years, also called American Football.In December 2018, the band released another single, "Silhouettes", for their third album — also titled American Football. This album follows a significantly different Dream Pop-oriented direction.Despite originally lasting for only three years, they're considered a landmark in both "classic" emo and 90s indie, as well as being considered essential /mu/core. They helped codify the Midwest emo sound, a brand of emo focused on twinkling guitars and heartfelt, confessional lyrics and vocals. | |
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2023-08-14T12:29:06Z | |
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American Football (Music) / int_18d15922 | type |
Title Drop | |
American Football (Music) / int_18d15922 | comment |
Title Drop: More often than not, a song's title would be the song's last lyric. The only exceptions are "You Know I Should Be Leaving Soon" and "The One with the Wurlitzer". On LP2, all the song titles are the songs' first lyric. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_1f59f683 | type |
Emo Music | |
American Football (Music) / int_1f59f683 | comment |
Emo Music: One of the bands that people most often think of when talking about the genre's "classic" era. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_22093e9b | type |
New Sound Album | |
American Football (Music) / int_22093e9b | comment |
New Sound Album: LP2 has a more straightforward indie rock sound, while LP3 takes things in a significantly more Dream Pop-influenced direction merged with elements of their first album. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_26a9afaa | type |
The New '10s | |
American Football (Music) / int_26a9afaa | comment |
The New '10s: Found more success and reunited in this decade. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_34e3784f | type |
Please, Don't Leave Me | |
American Football (Music) / int_34e3784f | comment |
Please, Don't Leave Me: "But the Regrets are Killing Me" and "Stay Home". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_34f6774c | type |
Concept Album | |
American Football (Music) / int_34f6774c | comment |
Concept Album: American Football's overarching theme revolves around the relationship between Kinsella and his college girlfriend, and despite trying to make it work, they know that it's dead by the time college finishes, if not dead already. Honesty, depression, regret, and trying to move on are recurring themes. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_38da8916 | type |
Uncommon Time | |
American Football (Music) / int_38da8916 | comment |
Uncommon Time: They do draw from Math Rock, after all. One example would be "But the Regrets are Killing Me", which is in 12/8. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_3b84b916 | type |
Band of Relatives | |
American Football (Music) / int_3b84b916 | comment |
Band of Relatives: Became Type 1 when the band re-formed, with Nate Kinsella joining his cousin Mike. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_4e3d253b | type |
Downer Ending | |
American Football (Music) / int_4e3d253b | comment |
Downer Ending: "Stay Home" is the penultimate track on American Football and is about being willingly shut away from society because of depression. The album then ends with "The One with the Wurlitzer", a very somber instrumental. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_5313c266 | type |
Bookends | |
American Football (Music) / int_5313c266 | comment |
Book Ends: "Honestly" both begins and ends with the lyric "honestly". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_6f77ef8e | type |
Anti-Love Song | |
American Football (Music) / int_6f77ef8e | comment |
Anti-Love Song: A good portion of "American Football". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_74149c93 | type |
Epic Rocking | |
American Football (Music) / int_74149c93 | comment |
Epic Rocking: "Stay Home" at 8:20, and "Silhouettes" at 7:22. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_8a24c94e | type |
Studio Chatter | |
American Football (Music) / int_8a24c94e | comment |
Studio Chatter: At the beginning of "Never Meant", you can hear the band warming up a bit as well as somebody saying "We're gonna keep that one, right?". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_b9561236 | type |
A Good Name for a Rock Band | |
American Football (Music) / int_b9561236 | comment |
A Good Name for a Rock Band: The band's name comes from a poster Steve Lamos' girlfriend pointed out while at a social outing, which said: "Come see American football, the most overpaid athletes in the world". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_ca834552 | type |
Self-Titled Album | |
American Football (Music) / int_ca834552 | comment |
Self-Titled Album: All their albums are called American Football. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_ca87e3ec | type |
No Name Given | |
American Football (Music) / int_ca87e3ec | comment |
No Name Given: Officially, their debut EP and second and third album are all titled American Football, though the EP is often referred to as American Football EP and said albums have the official subtitles of "LP2" and "LP3". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_d026cad8 | type |
Sigil Spam | |
American Football (Music) / int_d026cad8 | comment |
Sigil Spam: More like House spam. But following the band's revival in The New '10s, the house on the front cover of the debut has become sort of the band's "logo" in a sense. The house in question is a college-based house located in Urbana, Illinois and was taken by photographer Chris Strong and is strongly associated with the band since and considered a staple of a feel of the band's rural emo sound. The house became so famous it's considered an emo hot spot and the band themselves sell endless merch for it, even going as far as to do a Call-Back for the 2016 album with the cover being taken from inside the house. Sadly, the house was unable to return for LP3, due to it being placed for sale on Craigslist. Fearing this could eventually mean the demolition of the house, the band formed a pact together with the album cover's photographer and their label to plan on buying the house when the time came for it, which successfully came into fruition in 2023. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_ddbbcf6a | type |
Idiosyncratic Cover Art | |
American Football (Music) / int_ddbbcf6a | comment |
Idiosyncratic Cover Art: The cover to their long-awaited second album is a shot from inside the house shown on the first album. | |
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American Football (Music) / int_e563bf09 | type |
Insistent Terminology | |
American Football (Music) / int_e563bf09 | comment |
Insistent Terminology: Their album cover◊, as well as their merchandise, is displayed with the first line "americ", and the second line "anfootball". Subverted with the actual title of both the band and their works, it's simply "American Football". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_ed8d5372 | type |
Math Rock | |
American Football (Music) / int_ed8d5372 | comment |
Math Rock: Very much there: The time signature for "Never Meant", for example, switches between 3/4 and 4/4. | |
American Football (Music) / int_ed8d5372 | featureApplicability |
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American Football (Music) / int_f3cf057b | type |
Fading into the Next Song | |
American Football (Music) / int_f3cf057b | comment |
Fading into the Next Song: "Stay Home" into "The One With The Wurlitzer". | |
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American Football (Music) / int_fe5a3403 | type |
The New '20s | |
American Football (Music) / int_fe5a3403 | comment |
The New '20s: Still going strong with the new lineup. | |
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American Football (Music) |
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