This article has been imported from chorus.fm for discussion. All of the forum rules still apply. Last week’s article in this series felt like a turning point. 2001 was the year I left home, went off to college, experienced 9/11, and turned AbsolutePunk into a website about more than just two bands. And now, looking at 2002, the years start to blend into a period that’s less defined by where I was in school. Previously, each year correlated well with each grade of school, but now in college, things are more mixed. 2002 is roughly sophomore year of college, but there are parts of it anchored to the surrounding grades as well. This leads to my memory being slightly blurred when trying to pull what exactly happened when together; however, one thing is crystal clear. 2002 is a year when pop-punk and our scene absolutely exploded1 in popularity. It’s 2002. I’m 19. I’m now in my second year in sunny southern California, and I am playing a part in all its stereotypes. Bleached blonde tips, puka shells, hoop earrings, Atticus, Rip Curl, and Macbeth clothing pouring off me like surfer wannabe syrup. I’ve been indoctrinated into the slang. I now know it’s “soda” and not “pop.” The previous summer back home was one of the most interesting in my life. Everyone coming back from their first year of college and meeting up, almost itching to show off the changes. The shy kids who are now the life of the party. The previously unpopular groups are bursting with confidence after a year away from the chains of high school labels. The roles and friendships rekindled. And everyone wants to share their drinking/smoking weed stories. Everyone has become a mini-mixologist in their first year away and is dying to tell you about it. It’s glorious; it’s hilarious; it’s summer. And now, as I start the new school year, I feel like I’m settling into college life. My college roommate and I install an air conditioning unit in our dorm room that is so old it looks like it’s part of the building. While everyone else gets in trouble for their new, modern units, we go unnoticed and spend the year with the only air-conditioned room in the entire hall. I also discover that the cable TV that runs through the dorm (that we’re supposed to pay for) is simply a box in the ceiling that you can just plug right in if you have the right cables and adapters. So we do. And we now have free cable. It’s a year of immaturity, hijinks, and tales that we re-tell time and time again while laughing at the absurdity of our youth. I honestly can’t believe some of the stuff we got away with. And around us, there’s a pop-punk utopia blossoming. Not that far away, Drive-Thru Records is pumping out the height of their catalog (teamed with MCA Records). [deep breath] The Starting Line release their debut album, Midtown release Living Well is the Best Revenge, New Found Glory release Sticks & Stones, Home Grown release Kings of Pop, Allister releases Last Stop, Suburbia, Something Corporate drops Leaving Through the Window, Finch releases What it is to Burn, and The Early November release their EPs. [exhale] Holy. Shit. And that’s just the stuff related to that label. Around it, we have Thrice and Taking Back Sunday expanding my tastes in a harder direction. The Used and My Chemical Romance releasing debut albums as the scene and screaming — soon dubbed screamo — become more intertwined. We have Tom DeLonge and Travis Barker releasing a Box Car Racer album that I reviewed in embarrassing fashion. We have The All-American Rejects and Simple Plan dropping their debuts. We have Good Charlotte blowing up with The Young and the Hopeless, Sum 41 following up their smash hit with Does This Look Infected?, and countless new bands bursting onto the scene, such as Knockout, Name Taken, Over It, Northstar, AutoPilot Off, and Audio Karate. When I put together this week’s list of albums that helped define my musical tastes, I just started laughing at how ridiculous it is. I got up to 50 albums, the vast majority of which are scene classics, and am practically delirious. I mean, look at it: All American Rejects – All American RejectsAllister – Last Stop SuburbiaAnti-Flag – MobilizeAudio Karate – Space CampAutopilot Off – Autopilot Off EPBad Religion – Process of BeliefBowling for Soup – Drunk Enough to DanceBox Car Racer – Box Car RacerBright Eyes – Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the GroundButch Walker – Left of Self CenteredCoheed and Cambria – The Second Stage Turbine BladeColdplay – A Rush of Blood to the HeadDashboard Confessional – MTV UnpluggedDays Away – The Feel of It EPDon’t Look Down – FiveFinch – What it is To BurnFoo Fighters – One by OneFrou Frou – DetailsGlassjaw – Worship and TributeGoldfinger – Open Your EyesGood Charlotte – The Young and the HopelessHome Grown – Kings of PopJunction 18 – Heroes from the FutureKnockout – Searching for Solid GroundLucky 7 – Lucky 7Midtown – Living Well is the Best RevengeMillencolin – Home from HomeMy Chemical Romance – I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your LoveName Taken – Hold Your Breath, You Know How LongNew Found Glory – Sticks and StonesNorthstar – Is this Thing Loaded?Over It – Timing is EverythingPunk Goes Pop CompilationRecover – Ceci n ‘est Pas RecoverRemember Maine – The Last Place You LookSimple Plan – No Pads, No Helmets…Just BallsSlick Shoes – Slick ShoesSomething Corporate – Leaving Through the WindowStrung Out – An American ParadoxSum 41 – Does This Look InfectedTaking Back Sunday – Tell All Your FriendsThe Early November – For All of ThisThe Starting Line – Say It Like You Mean ItThe Used – The UsedThrice – The Illusion of SafetyThursday – Five Stories Falling EPTravoltas – Endless SummerTreble Charger – DetoxTsunami Bomb – The Ultimate EscapeYellowcard – The Underdog EP What I take away most from this collection is that the music scene is starting to move between pop-punk extremes. One side is getting more poppy; the other is getting a little more edge to it. Some bands walked this line explicitly, a band like Finch, where they would have choruses as big as those found on a Simple Plan record, but then add some screaming in for good measure. And then you have Thrice and a more technical and metal influenced sound while Taking Back Sunday is doing this screaming Lifetime thing that practically turns the music scene on its head when it comes out. It’s hard to overstate what a transitional album Tell All Your Friends was for our little music scene at the time. It was an album that became an instant favorite for many the first time it played. An almost immediate, “yeah, that’s my favorite thing ever” reaction. It had a swagger, a pull, a draw that put the band on the top of everyone’s list in what felt like overnight. I was, of course, obsessed. So while one half of me is being pulled to this new The Used/Finch/Taking Back Sunday/Thursday/Thrice kind of music, the other half is finding feels in the piano stylings of Andrew McMahon and Something Corporate, or the lyrical and musical flourishes of Bright Eyes. To me, this year felt like an expansion of my tastes. Like being in a garden and seeing the beauty in the cross-pollination spread around me. And it makes sense that at this same time, I’m expanding the website to talk about more and more artists. I’m into more music than ever, there’s life-changing stuff being released on the regular, we’re going to shows all the time, seeing incredible lineups, and I can barely keep up with it all. And this genre of music is exploding in popularity. Hell, Avril Lavigne drops her debut, Let Go, in June, and I think that’s when I knew we’d crossed some kind of rubicon. And, to go along with it, the internet has given us the ability to amass a massive collection of mp3s, and we’re very close to the debut of the iPod and being able to have all of that music with us at any time. I’ve long said that Fall Out Boy’s popularity explosion (coming soon to a weekly article near you) was a massive reason for AbsolutePunk’s popularity spike. Still, it’s these previous years that played a significant role as well. I often felt like we were the only ones paying attention to this kind of music, and then it hit big, and all of us were over in our little world going “told you so!” as the bands we were championing were being discovered by major labels, radio, and MTV. This five to six-year run right here is the heart of my musical and professional journey. Everything is tied to these years, these bands, these songs. And it’s where I go from begging labels to send me advanced CDs, to being told by my college’s mailroom that I can no longer get mail sent to me because they don’t have the capacity to process everything coming in. It’s where I go from being obsessed with everything Drive-Thru Records is doing and refreshing their homepage on a daily basis, to sitting in their offices talking about their bands and their upcoming marketing plans and how we could work together. It’s starting a Blink-182 fan-page, and all of a sudden being in a weird bar that scrawled giant X’s on my hands as I’m listening to this Box Car Racer album over the speakers for an official listening party and having no real idea how I got from point A to B. The internet got popular and more mainstream, the bands I liked got popular and more mainstream, and now all of a sudden this fun silly hobby of mine is very popular. And I’m still just a dumbass college student playing pranks with my friends,2 being an idiot with relationships, and living by the good ‘ole “fake it ’til you make it” credo. 2001 was a year of transition — a year of leaving home, losing innocence, and trying to discover me. 2002 was a year of embracing every part of “the new me.” I was shedding the skin of who I was or thought I was, in high school, and enjoying the new skin that the freedom away from my parents and my old friends provided. In hindsight, I probably enjoyed that freedom a little too much. I pushed the limits of “how little can I study and still pass this class” the same way we pushed the boundaries of how many electrical devices we can plug in at one time in a dorm room.3 But this period I also can’t help but romanticize in my memory. Fewer obligations. Sunny weather all the time. Summers by the pool. Late nights teaching myself how to code. Giant Costco sized bags of Hot Tamales in my desk drawer that my college roommate still mocks me about. I feel blessed and recognize now the privilege of these years. As I sit here in a room tinted by the yellow smoke-filled skies under a year of global pandemic, I can’t help but feel a sadness for the 18 and 19-year-olds that don’t get to go back to college and experience this part of their lives in a similar way. Those were the years that helped me learn how to be on my own, how to make decisions for myself, and trust myself in making the hard decisions. Mistakes were made. Box springs were thrown off the balcony. And music was played oh so loud. But AbsolutePunk was becoming something at the same time, and the music blowing my speakers to bits, and inviting hall-mates on the regular to stop by and ask for a copy of whatever I was playing, was god damn life-changing. I’ve put together a playlist for Spotify and Apple Music containing some of my favorite music from 2002. Please consider becoming a member so we can keep bringing you articles like this one. dot net↩Why we devised a game that included throwing water on each other at unsuspected times around campus; I’ll never really understand.↩The answer is too many. In the first few weeks of school, we kept blowing the circuit breaker for our hall. This led to us figuring out how many devices our neighbors had plugged into what sockets to optimize our room, run the wires to different plugs, and keep from overloading it.↩ more Not all embedded content is displayed here. You can view the original to see embedded videos, tweets, etc.
Really great year, still LOVE a lot of these albums 1. Taking Back Sunday - Tell All Your Friends 2. Weezer - Maladroit 3. Something Corporate - Leaving Through the Window 4. Box Car Racer - Box Car Racer 5. The Used - The Used 6. The Starying Line - Say It Like You Mean It 7. Matchbox Twenty - More Than You Think You Are 8. Midtown - Living Well Is The Best Revenge 9. Bright Eyes - "Lifted" or "The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground" 10. Finch - What It Is To Burn 11. Jason Mraz - Waiting For My Rocket 12. Pepper - Kona Town 13. Desaparecidos - Read Music / Speak Spanish 14. Sum 41 - Does This Look Infected? 15. Unwritten Law - Elva 16. The Queens of the Stone Age - Songs for the Deaf 17. Nickel Creek - This Side 18. Darren Hayes - Spin 19. Sigur Ros - ( ) 20. Bowling for Soup - Drunk Enough To Dance
@Jason Tate I totally have nostalgia for this feeling those first few summers back home after college were such a specific time period, but amazing
What’s really funny to me at this time was the odd invisible line that separated “credible” bands like New Found Glory, The Ataris, The Starting Line from “sell outs/poseur” bands like Good Charlotte, Simple Plan and (to an extent) Sun 41. It all ended up a wash in the end but was funny how every scene, regardless of how counter-culture it wants to be, still has a hierarchy.
I remember walking into the VIRGIN RECORDS store in Chicago while on Spring Break senior year of high school in 2002 picking up that Taking Back Sunday album. We jammed it on repeat whole way home to Michigan.
Sticks and Stones came out sometime in the summer of 2002 and that is all i listened to for pretty much the next 30 days after that. Remember that pretty vividly. In early fall that year i purchased the Finch and SoCo albums and spun those to death.
2002...For some reason the first thing I think about is hearing "Betrayal is a Symptom" by Thrice and how it changed everything. I was already into heavier music but this song had the heart, the anger and the purpose all in one. I think this is the year I put away my nu-metal albums except for the Deftones. Also, memories of overplaying "Vampires Will Never Hurt You" by MCR. Emo had become more and more popular. Meeting friends at a party who wanted to put on some Coheed & Cambria! Then finding out about TBS, Finch, The Used, Thursday, Glassjaw.
2002 rules 1. Taking Back Sunday - Tell All Your Friends 2. Something Corporate - Leaving Through The Window 3. Hot Rod Circuit - Sorry About Tomorrow 4. Eminem - The Eminem Show 5. Glassjaw - Worship and Tribute 6. The Starting Line - Say It Like You Mean It 7. The Used - The Used 8. New Found Glory - Sticks and Stones 9. Box Car Racer - Box Car Racer 10. My Chemical Romance - I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love 11. Pepper - Kona Town 12. Queens of the Stone Age - Songs For the Deaf 13. Thrice - The Illusion of Safety 14. Finch - What It Is To Burn 15. The Get Up Kids - On a Wire 16. Interpol - Turn On the Bright Lights 17. Jurassic 5 - Power in Numbers 18. Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot 19. GZA - Legend of the Liquid Sword 20. Alexisonfire - Alexisonfire 21. The Distillers - Sing, Sing Death Horse 22. Sum 41 - Does This Look Infected? 23. Simple Plan - No Pads, No Helmets... Just Balls 24. Goldfinger - Open Your Eyes 25. Good Charlotte - The Young and the Hopeless
2002 was such a transitional year for me and my friends. I remember we never looked at music in any special way. We'd listen to bands like Nickelback, Puddle of Mudd, Theory of a Deadman. I still recall going over to a buddies house after school and he had downloaded Tell All Your Friends from Kazaa. I really think that was the turning point. We became obsessed and honestly not much has changed since then.
2002 was the year my friend showed me Kazaa! We had the "Without Me" music video on repeat on his computer that summer. Honestly, it can't be stated enough how mind-blowing an experience it was to be a pre-teen learning that on the internet you could discover music
I don't know if there's any time of my life that I look back on more fondly than those college summers.
Some incredible classics from 2002. A few that always stick with me: Counting Crows - Hard Candy Matchbox Twenty - More Than You Think You Are Something Corporate - Leaving Through the Window Bruce Springsteen - The Rising Butch Walker - Left of Self-Centered Coldplay - A Rush of Blood to the Head The Wallflowers - Red Letter Days Maroon 5 - Songs About Jane Avril Lavigne - Let Go Red Hot Chili Peppers - By the Way Beck - Sea Change Wilco - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot Dixie Chicks - Home Goo Goo Dolls - Gutterflower Our Lady Peace - Gravity
My god...what a year. Such similar experiences here, Jason. Thanks for totally making me miss this time!
I wasn't aware Portland was a "pop" area. I've always presumed "pop" was a midwest only thing. I turned 16 in 2002 and so many of these albums, or just songs from them, were on cds as my friends and I had our first tastes of freedom driving around.
This was the year for me, soooo many great albums...I made a playlist of all albums and shared with my 13 yr old son who’s super into pop punk and he’s just blown away. Love that I can have this as a connection with him and your guide made it easy!!!
Listening to the Spotify playlist I'm realizing how many AIM away messages I had consisting of lyrics from these albums.
Damn considering I was in grade 2 during this year it’s wild how many of these albums I absolutely love. Also RIP 18-19 year olds of 2020.
Man Lucky 7 was so good. I remember finding Come Monday on mp3.com and that record became my own little secret as I scoffed at the Simple Plan and Good Charlotte fans who just watched MTV lol
Also 2002 was Don't Look Down's full length debut Start the Show which is still one of the most consistent pop-punk records. Five came out in '03