the commodified emo subculture in america through the used`s
Transcription
the commodified emo subculture in america through the used`s
perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id THE COMMODIFIED EMO SUBCULTURE IN AMERICA THROUGH THE USED’S MUSIC VIDEOS THESIS Submitted as a Partial Fulfillment of Sarjana Degree Requirement at English Department, Faculty of Letters and Fine Arts, Sebelas Maret University By: RENA APRILIA TANJUNG C 0306045 ENGLISH DEPARTMENT FACULTY OF LETTERS AND FINE ARTS SEBELAS MARET UNIVERSITY SURAKARTA 2011 commit to user i perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id commit to user ii perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id commit to user iii perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id MOTTO: “Through the storm and raging sea, I will never be alone. When my hope seems out of sight, I know You will shine Your light” (True Worshippers Youth) commit to user iv perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id Wholeheartedly dedicated to: My Mom My Dad My Brothers My Sister Me & “Hira” commit to user v perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS While the final product is the text on the pages, the true learning lies in the unseen journey. First and foremost, I would like to thank Lord Jesus Christ, My Redeemer, for the wonderful blessing and love given in my life. Gratefully, I would like to thank Drs. Riyadi Santosa, M.Ed., Ph.D. the Dean of Faculty of Letters and Fine Arts. It is also an honor for me to thank the Head of English Department, Prof. Drs. Djatmika, M.A. for giving me a chance to write the thesis. This thesis would not have been possible unless Dra. Nani Sukarni, M.S., my thesis supervisor, helps me in every session with her patience and knowledge. I attribute the level of my Sarjana degree to her encouragement and effort. Without her helps, this thesis would not have been written or completed. I am grateful to my academic supervisor, Mr. Yuyun Kusdiyanto, S.S, M.A. for the help dealing with all of my academic businesses. I am also indebted to all of English Department lecturers to support me in studying English and the contents within particularly anything related to American Studies which has inspired me to write the thesis up. For my beloved family chiefly my Mom and Dad, thanks for supporting me throughout all my studies in the university and providing a warm home where I can complete my writing up. My lovely little twin brothers, Yong Gi and Jonathan, both of you really enliven me every day. My younger brother Ayub, and my younger sister Devi, thanks for being commit to user vi perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id around me when I am in the progress to finish this thesis. Forgive me it takes so long time for me to graduate that I hope both of you can finish your college study faster than me. I love you all. In my daily work I have been blessed with a friendly and cheerful Nav family, Pak Yoyok, Bu Ari, Dek Ira, Dek Dea Mbak Upik, Mbak Dina, Mas Setyo, Ika, Dewi, Nimas, and those who I can not mention in details, thanks for loving me, helping me, giving me a space to grow up, teaching me how to find a better way in my adolescence phase and lifting me up when I am down. Kiki „Quinn‟, my drummer girl, thanks for sharing a long friendship since we were in the junior high school. The Used is eternally in our heart. For my besties, Letizia and Astri, thanks girls for everything, for unbelievable jokes and silly things we have shared. Letiz, you are very nice to me. I can not forget every good thing you have shared with me. Go girl! I am always behind you. Astri, well, you are still my best „partner in crime‟ in learning „what‟s beyond the normal Asian culture‟. I would like to thank to Yuliana since with her kindness, she has implicitly taught me many things in life. And also for Dheka, my longest classmate from junior high school, thanks for plenty meaningful lessons in the past. Definitely for all of my friends in ED 2006, girls and boys, thank you for the nice support and unforgettable friendship. The 2006 American Studies, thanks for the friendship, knowledge and anything we have been going through together in both sad and happy time commit to user vii perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id in finishing this final project. Risqi, how could I do my thesis without your help? Thanks for the really helpful books, journals, and advices. You are the best counselor. I am very happy for your cum-laude graduation. “Ipin” Arifin, you are the most inspiring and most incredible friend that I know, man! Thanks for trusting me and sharing many stories with me. Keep fighting for everything. Pondra, the only „master of music‟ in ED 2006, thanks for sharing many underrated yet good music with me. Aya and Rini, thanks for encouraging me with your word “Semangat”. Iyum and Wisnu, go guys, you can do it fast and well. For my friend Wulan in a peaceful heaven up there, it has been my pleasure to know you and have a friend like you. We will miss you. I can not accomplish my work without the supports from my friends who stand up for the idealism they choose: those who are previously labeled as Emo Kids, HxC Kids and Straight Edgers. Thanks to Bocud Adit, Neng Ireen, Bang Vivid, Kak Na Marina, both of Mr. Jack Jerk Skellington, Joojo „Joe‟ Wilson, Reno, David Loserkid, Mbak Feri‟s gang and others. Thank you all for giving me lots of colorful memories and inspirations for writing this unusual thesis. I am also obliged to Twitter friends especially Mbak Puspa, thanks for accompanying me in both surreal and real world. Finally, for Bert McCracken, Quinn Allman, Jeph Howard, Branden Steineckert and Dan Whitesides, the members of the most amazing band in this world, The Used, thanks a million for making the best songs, sounding youth‟s pain, inspiring me, connecting me with other eccentric youngsters commit to user viii perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id in various remarkable youth subcultures and opening my eyes for the true identity I should go for. Surakarta, October 12, 2011 Rena Aprilia Tanjung commit to user ix perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id PRONOUNCEMENT Name : Rena Aprilia Tanjung NIM : C0306045 It is hereby pronounced that the thesis entitled The Commodified Emo Subculture in America through The Used’s Music Videos is originally made and written by the researcher. It is neither a plagiarism nor is made by other. The things related to other‟s people work are written in quotation and included in bibliography. If it is proved that this pronouncement is dishonest, the researcher willingly accepts any penalty from English Department of Faculty Letters and Fine Arts, Sebelas Maret University, Surakarta. Surakarta, October 12, 2011 The Researcher commit to user x perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id TABLE OF CONTENTS THESIS APPROVAL …………………………………………………….. i PRONOUNCEMENT …………………………………………………... iii MOTTO …………………………………………………………………. iv DEDICATION …………………………………………………………..... v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS………………………………………………... vi TABLE OF CONTENTS …………………………………………….… vii ABSTRACT …………………………………………………………….. xi CHAPTER I : INTRODUCTION A. Background of Choosing Subject …………………………… B. Problem Statement …………………………………………... 13 C. Objective of Study ……..…………………………………. D. Scope of Study ………………………………………….…… 13 E. Research Significance …………………………………….…...14 F. Method of Research …………………………………….…… 14 G. Theoretical Approach …………………………………………. 17 H. Thesis Organization …………………………………………… 21 CHAPTER A. II : 1 13 LITERATURE REVIEW Emo As A Youth Subculture in America …………..………….. 24 1. The History of Emo …………………………………….. 27 commit to user 2. The Identity of Emo ……………………………………….. 34 xi perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id B. The Used‟s Biography …………………………….………… 47 C. Youth Subculture as a Commodity …………………..……… 50 D. American Social and Cultural Condition in 2000s …..……… 55 E. Semiotic of Music Video ……………………………….…… 57 1. Charles Sanders Pierce‟s Semiotic Theory ……………… 57 2. Semiotic of Music Video ………………………………... CHAPTER A. III : 60 ANALYSIS The commodification of Emo Fashion in The Used‟s Music Videos 69 1. Clothing ………………………………………………….. 72 i. Upper Body ……………………………………… 72 ii. Lower Body ……………………………………... 100 2. Hairstyle ………………………………………………….. 107 i. Medium Long Straight Hair ……………………….. 107 ii. Side Bang (Fringe) ………………………………… 111 iii. Gunshot Wound ……………………………………. 113 3. Accessories …………………………………………………. 116 i. Shoes ……………………………………………….. 116 ii. Wristbands …………………………………………. 118 iii. Lips and Ear Piercing ……………………………… 120 iv. Tattoos ……………………………………………… 122 4. Make Up…………………………………………………….. commit to user 123 xii perpustakaan.uns.ac.id B. digilib.uns.ac.id i. Eyeliner ……………………………………………. 123 ii. Black Nail Polish …………………………………... 126 The commodification of Emo Behavior in The Used‟s Music Videos 127 1. Youth Rebellion ………………………………………...….. CHAPTER 130 i. Blue and Yellow………………………………….. 132 ii. A Box Full of Sharp Object………………………. 135 iii. I Caught Fire……………………………………… 138 iv. Blood on My Hands ……………………………… 140 2. Youth Anxiety ……………………………………………. 142 i. Buried Myself Alive ……………………………... 144 ii. Taste of Ink ………………………………………. 150 iii. Take It Away ……………………………………… 152 iv. All That I‟ve Got …………………………………. 155 v. The Bird and The Worm …………………………. 158 IV : CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION A. Conclusion …………………………………………………..… B. Recommendation ……………………………………………. BIBLIOGRAPHY APPENDICES commit to user xiii 161 165 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id ABSTRACT Rena Aprilia Tanjung. C0306045. The Commodified Emo Subculture in America through The Used’s Music Videos. Undergraduate Thesis. 2011. English Department, Faculty of Letters and Fine Arts. Sebelas Maret University, Surakarta. This research is purposively made to analyze the commodified Emo subculture in America found in ten of The Used‟s music videos. With regard to the contested position of American youth, youth subcultures arise from various genre of music to give the alternative space for young people to grow up. The early function of youth subculture is to provide a place for young people to express the ideas which is out of dominant parent culture. However, the exclusivity of youth subcultures has been commodified by the media that the meaning of early subculture is lost. The commodified youth subculture can be seen in the commodification of fashion, music and behavior as the symbolic system of communication within a certain youth subculture. In analyzing the commodified Emo subculture, ten of The Used music videos are analyzed to give the clear explanation about the kinds of subcultural commodification found in it. The research is held using the descriptive qualitative technique which means that all of collected and analyzed data are in forms of words and pictures rather than numbers. Besides, the analysis is made to test the theory and apply it to the observed phenomena rather than to find the new theory from the observation toward the subject matter. In the scope of American Studies, it is necessary to consider the application of interdisciplinary studies in studying a cultural object as a representation of American way of life. The interdisciplinary requires the relationship between text to be studied and the contexts from which they come. To find the context behind the American cultural object, the analysis cannot be simply observed based on a perspective of certain discipline but from the assortment of perspectives related to the subject matter being discussed. Therefore, this research is apprehended using the combination of popular culture, semiotic and sociocultural approach to reveal the context within the data which are analyzed. In the end of analysis, it is concluded that Emo subculture has been commodified in fashion and behavior clearly found in ten of The Used music videos. The commodified Emo subculture in America is under the influence of media related to the social and cultural background at the certain time when Emo is phenomenally thriving. commit to user xiv THE COMMODIFIED EMO SUBCULTURE IN AMERICA THROUGH THE USED’S MUSIC VIDEOS Rena Aprilia Tanjung1 Dra. Nani Sukarni. M.S.2 ABSTRACT 2011. English Department, Faculty of Letters and Fine Arts. Sebelas Maret University, Surakarta. This research is purposively made to analyze the commodified Emo subculture in America found in ten of The Used’s music videos. With regard to the contested position of American youth, youth subcultures arise from various genre of music to give the alternative space for young people to grow up. The early function of youth subculture is to provide a place for young people to express the ideas which is out of dominant parent culture. However, the exclusivity of youth subcultures has been commodified by the media that the meaning of early subculture is lost. The commodified youth subculture can be seen in the commodification of fashion, music and behavior as the symbolic system of communication within a certain youth subculture. In analyzing the commodified Emo subculture, ten of The Used music videos are analyzed to give the clear explanation about the kinds of subcultural commodification found in it. The research is held using the descriptive qualitative technique which means that all of collected and analyzed data are in forms of words and pictures rather than numbers. Besides, the analysis is made to test the theory and apply it to the observed phenomena rather than to find the new theory from the observation toward the subject matter. 1 2 Mahasiswa Jurusan Sastra Inggris dengan NIM C0306045 Dosen Pembimbing In the scope of American Studies, it is necessary to consider the application of interdisciplinary studies in studying a cultural object as a representation of American way of life. The interdisciplinary requires the relationship between text to be studied and the contexts from which they come. To find the context behind the American cultural object, the analysis cannot be simply observed based on a perspective of certain discipline but from the assortment of perspectives related to the subject matter being discussed. Therefore, this research is apprehended using the combination of popular culture, semiotic and sociocultural approach to reveal the context within the data which are analyzed. In the end of analysis, it is concluded that Emo subculture has been commodified in fashion and behavior clearly found in ten of The Used music videos. The commodified Emo subculture in America is under the influence of media related to the social and cultural background at the certain time when Emo is phenomenally thriving. 1 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION A. Background of Choosing Subject ‗America is the fountain of youth‘ is a metaphorical term coined by Robertson (in Campbell and Kean, 1997) to explain America‘s past perspective on youth. The view of parent generation as the Old World and their children‘s generation as the New World puts American youth in a contested space. Children are filled with abundant expectations from their parents that encourage parents to control youth‘s life which parents think it is good to create a better upcoming generation. However, what Americans think it is good for their children does not accomplish adolescents‘ desire of having their own way in defining the future. As Campbell and Kean (1997) write, this order might run well in colonial age but social system in America was continually formed with destabilizing and established order to challenge the next generation. The system shows that there is always a confrontation between parent and youth culture. Youth as a phase which is filled with spirit and desire of acquiring identity has an obsession toward the culture that encourage adolescents create their own space to oppose the dominant culture. Subsequently, the need of having the space free from parent culture triggers youth-based subcultures to emerge. The basic idea of subculture comes from the accumulation of meaning and commit to user groups to oppose the dominant also means of expression from the subordinate 1 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 2 digilib.uns.ac.id meaning system (Murdock in Calluori, 1985: 44). Concerning on the contested position of American youth, American youth subcultures emerge due to the lack of support from parents in assisting them entering the adolescence phase. Adolescence is a state when human trapped between ‗no longer being children‘ and ‗not yet being completely adult‘ (Weinstein in Eipstein, 2002: 4). In this state, young people can not find the ultimate identity instantly because there is a tension between childhood freedom and adult responsibility that reportedly proves to be a fruitful ground for the growth of alienation (Calabrese in Eipstein, 2002: 4). The asymmetry relationship between parents and children persuades adolescents to experience a transition period using the alternative ways outside of their daily zones which mostly acquired by parents culture like home, social institutions and school. The condition has inspired various youth subcultures to come out since through subcultures, adolescents obtain a space to find their identity. In expressing the anxiety and alienated feeling in adolescence phase, young people are often fitted with music. They are susceptible to be affected by music because in this phase, they need to feel, to experience and to be motivated by something or to allow themselves to be deeply affected by it (Pipher in Anastasi, 2005: 313). Since adolescents have more time to search out and listen to music, those who have similar taste of music possibly make a certain subculture to represent the similar ideology. Most of youth subcultures emerge from music scenes because of this phenomenon: a tight relationship between music and identity acquirement like what Williams explains as follows: First, there is a dialectic relationship between music and identity, wherein music is seen as consequential in the commit creation toofuser subcultures as well as consequence of perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 3 digilib.uns.ac.id them. Second, through music and the musical experience—both making and listening to music—individuals are able to locate themselves in specific subcultural formations. (Williams, 2006: 174) The preference of young people‘s music often defines certain subculture they belong to. Each music preference brings each different idea. Therefore, youth subcultures like Teddy Boy, Mods, Punk, Skinheads, Ravers, Metalheads, Goths, Gangstas, Emo, and others are basically varied based on different music preferences. The idea of each youth subculture is practiced through the symbolic systems of communication which is also exclusively different from one subculture to another. Primarily, youth subculture is a space when young people are able to resist the dominant system of a society controlled by parent. The members of youth subcultures communicate each other using the symbolic system of communication to emphasize that the members are assembled in a similar subculture. As Storey states those symbolic systems are firstly used as means of communication among the members of a specific youth subculture to show that they are engaged in the similar kind of subculture also resist the dominant culture because they can fight for their beliefs and ideology (Storey, 1996: 119). Currently, the resistance has significantly changed because of an overconsumption of subculture symbolic system of communication like fashion, music and behavior within a wider society out of subcultural area. All adolescents nowadays ironically can easily affirm themselves as members of certain youth subculture by applying the similar subculture symbolic system of communication through fashion, lifestyle, music preference and commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 4 digilib.uns.ac.id behavior without considering the basic idea of a youth subculture. The resistance toward the dominant culture has died. The media have a significant role on how the early function of a subculture shifts. Stalling affirms that in one side, media control the information of youth subcultures in a good way that it can be well accepted by society, on the other side, the media abuse the basic functions of youth subcultures through the exploitation of fashion, music preference and behavior discarding youth subculture‘s ideology (Stalling, 1999). Through these two opposite functions, youth subcultures are progressively popular that makes everything related to youth subculture including its symbolic systems of communication become public‘s attention. The media has purposively encouraged people to buy new hip products, cool ideas and exciting lifestyle equipment. They have consistently searched the outer limits of society to find products to pasteurize repackage and sell to the mainstream (ibid). Therefore, symbolic styles of youth subcultures gradually become profitable commodities because these stuffs are potential to be the next hipping products considering its uniqueness coming from the ‗rebellion‘ ideas of young people. The changing function of youth subcultures symbolic systems from exclusive means of communication within a youth subculture into the marketable products consumed by wide people is often included in the commodification process. The commodification process of youth subcultures happens in various media. These media give all of youth subculture‘s elements like fashion, music preferences and behavior a strong exposure. Commodification process omits the original value and ideology of youth subculture. Media build a strategy to commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 5 digilib.uns.ac.id familiarize youth subcultures to the society but for a hidden purpose like advertising the symbolic systems of subcultural communication appears on the video, magazine, posters and others. The unoriginal types of youth subcultures slowly emerge as a result of this process. Brooks affirms that young people easily identify themselves as resistors toward the mainstream parent culture by adopting particular music or lifestyle which in fact, they are in effect sustaining the commercial viability of the commodification of youth subculture (Brooks in Saray, 2007: 25). The commodification process of youth subcultures can be seen from the phenomenon of mushrooming music videos on television and internet. Music video is an effective tool for promoting bands, singers and others musicians‘ image to the public. Through audio and visual representation, the music video does not only function to display the performers but also to create them (Peeters, 2004: 9). The performers within the music videos can be the effective ideological tools because according to the process of identification, there is a period when audiences become attached to the performers ranging from emotional affinity to projection, by which fans try to become their idols through imitating speech, movements and consumer patterns (ibid). If the audiences have become emotionally attracted to the performers, they will follow what performers do including wearing, imitating and consuming everything appears there, not only based on the appearance of the performers but also rely on the musical style and the subcultural group to which the performers refer. By showing the subculture symbolic system of communication such as fashion and behavior, the performers have represented certain subculture they belong to. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 6 digilib.uns.ac.id This phenomenon has miserably encouraged the commodification of youth subculture through the exploitation of its symbolic system of communication in the media. The market constantly sees this uniqueness subculture appears on the music videos as something profitable. Some the obvious commodifications of American youth subculture can be found through the exploitation of Hippies in 1960s and Grunge subculture in the late 1980s until early 1990s when Nirvana, a phenomenal Grunge band, became the media spotlight. As Stalling writes: At some point, someone notices. Society starts to recognize the subculture and explore it a little. Think of record label execs going to rock shows in Seattle in the late '80s to check out what the hullabaloo is about Mudhoney and that grumpy band Nirvana. Think of fashion designers sneaking into political protests in the ‗60s to check out those strange clothes all the longhaired protesters are wearing… Somehow, someone notices something different, something that just might be of interest to the rest of the country. What gets noticed is what‘s easy to see and easy to sell: a new look, a new sound, a few innovative accessories (Stalling, 1999) Nirvana, for example, has been incredibly popular in America after their music videos were being regularly aired on MTV. Through their music videos, young audiences get the ideal illustration of Grunge subculture icons, which had been known as fresh, new and attractive youth style in the late of 1980s and early 1990s. The young audiences adopted grunge style exemplified by the appearance and performance of Kurt Cobain and other Nirvana band members on the video. The formula of inventing something new has been applied by media time by time that through their power, the media knows how to control the next trend which is variable from time to time. Therefore, early American youth subcultures, which were popular in the ‗60s, ‗70s, ‗80s, ‗90s, are not popular anymore as the media have found the other fresh, new and attractive subcultural trend. Emo is a typical of American youth to subculture which has also gone through commit user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 7 digilib.uns.ac.id this kind of commodification process. Emo is an American youth subculture emerged from Hardcore and Punk music scenes in 1980s and became widely popular in 2000s. Unlike Hardcore and Punk music which used youth power to rebel the monotonous and dominant system in the society, Emo music gives a space for young people to experience vulnerability in facing their adolescence phase through a sensitive way. Emo term is derived from ―Emotional Hardcore‖ indicating that the music composition is actually similar to Hardcore music but more emotional and personal in lyric. This is compatible with what Bailey states as follows: Emo short for ―emotional music‖ is an evolving and complex American youth subculture that listens to a specific genre of music, which is characterized by feelings of vulnerability and a willingness to express heart-felt confessions about adolescence. (Bailey, 2005:1) The ―Emotional Hardcore‖ music is originated from various Washington D.C. hardcore bands in the middle of ‗80s such as Rites of Spring, Embrace and Rain. Gradually with the notion ―Emotional Hardcore‖, they started to define themselves as hardcore punk bands by adding melodic elements to their songs. Sadness, love, and sense of guilt were some of the most written topics found in the bands‘ lyrics. Emo continues to develop and becomes steadily popular among American young people in 90s when the band like Sunny Day Real Estate and Jimmy Eat World created more melodic Emo songs by leaving the standard of hardcore music behind. Lately in 2000s, the media give Emo stronger exposure that turns it into a famous youth subculture which has influenced most of the American adolescents‘ lifestyle. In this 2000s period Emo has been dejected and commodified by the media because it is found commit to userthat Emo in 2000s has been out of perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 8 digilib.uns.ac.id the original idea of Emo in 1980s. In 1980s, Emo was involved as an underground youth subculture practicing DIY (Do It Yourself) ethic which avoided the interference of mainstream media, by contrast, Emo today deprives the idea of underground subculture based on hardcore and punk into a kind of marketable subculture of which fashion, music and behavior have been traded. The meaning of emotional in the early term of ―Emotional Hardcore‖ is exploited in 2000s Emo. It occurs because the term ‗emotional‘ is always related to the sense of vulnerability, weakness, despair, nostalgia, broken heart, hope, self hatred, anger and the other similar themes. This is what makes Emo today is contrast to other youth subcultures. Emo is different not only from fashion and music preferences, but also from the perspective of understanding the ambient reality of adolescence (Aslaksen, 2006: 6). This fact, however, is very different from the early 1980s Emo which showed the power of the members in facing adolescence through the DIY (Do It Yourself) ethic which was absolutely far away from the concept of being too weak and vulnerable although most of early bands Emo created more personal hardcore songs. Characteristically, the vocalists of today‘s Emo bands usually exploit high falsetto voice to express emotional topics assembled with fast violent guitar chord contrasting to the 1980s Emo bands which practiced the pure hardcore music with yelling and wailing instead of screaming in falsetto voice. The changing sound of Emo music in 2000s is influenced by the mixture of 1980s Emo music filled with hardcore-based music and 1990s Emo which was more ‗pop‘. The mixture of this different music from two different Emo period results in a fresh sound which young listeners have not commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 9 digilib.uns.ac.id yet listened to. Obviously, the media catch it as the next potential stuff to sell. Besides music, like other youth subcultures, the members of Emo subculture show their identity in various symbolic system of communication through fashion and behavior. As the underground subculture, the members of 1980s Emo subculture often indicate themselves with hardcore-based fashion signified by the simple clothing like T-shirt and three-quarter jeans. This kind of fashion was still continually used until the second wave generation of Emo in 1990s. Later, with the exploitation on Emo‘s emotional term by the media, fashion of the 2000s Emo members changes dramatically. It usually comprises on the stuffs like black skinny or stovepipe jeans, dyed black hair, side-parted long fringes, tight t-shirts which often bear the names of Emo bands, studded belts, black wristbands, black sneakers or skate shoes (http://www.gurl.com/findout.label.html). Overall, 2000s Emo fashion is correlated with the gloomy and sad theme as the result of ‗Emotional‘ term that has been commodified by the media. Behavior or mannerism of Emo subculture in 1980s was actually similar with what can be found on hardcore and punk subculture. In 1980s, the application of DIY, the ethic of being independent, was also found on Emo subculture. The ethic made 1980s Emo was not exploited by mainstream media since they did all things independently. Since 1990s, the second wave of Emo has gained popularity through the thriving of Emo music promoted by Sunny Day Real Estate. DIY ethic as the behavior of the subculture was not applied thoroughly anymore because MTV started to enter the Emo world of which result could be seen later in the third generation of Emo in 2000s. The 2000s Emo commit to user 10 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id behavior is usually close with themes of anxiety in adolescence phase, terrible loneliness, mental illness due to the lack of self ability in overcoming youth life problems, the broken-heartedness of love life, sensitive rebellion in adolescence phase and another similar (http://www.ehow.com/about_6657497_emo_kids_depression.html). topic The application of Emo behavior in American youth‘s life even makes parents worry about their children‘ condition because the gloomy theme of Emo has issued to increase youth suicidal action and self mutilation in America (ibid). Nowadays Emo‘s popularity in America is engulfed mostly by the constant and regular broadcasting of Emo bands‘ music videos on MTV. Through music video, Emo is incredibly familiar among young people through the exceptional fashion and behavior shown by the performers. Most of Emo bands are really representative in echoing what young people feel in their adolescence phase. They have accomplished the cries of the adolescents‘ heart and give young people an opportunity to try them on and participate in this crying out (Anastasi, 2005: 316). The listeners who are involved in Emo music represented by Emo bands are not satisfied enough by only listening to their song in audio form. They want more from the bands which lately cause higher demands upon other products such as visualization of the audio form. Since music is not sufficient for satisfying the needs of fans, the existence of other media such as pictures, poster and finally music video are created to give the fans the visual representation to fulfill their need in idolizing the musicians (Peeters, 2004: 8). However, like what have been stated before, music video is proposed to commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 11 digilib.uns.ac.id advertise the performers‘ images to the audiences through everything appears there which means that besides giving the visual representation of Emo icons, the music video are also developed into a selling machine which has successfully commodified all elements of this subculture to be consumed by the audiences. There are numerous bands of which performances and appearances are represented the identity of Emo subculture. Most of them are widely popular in MTV and internet. My Chemical Romance, Taking Back Sunday, Dashboard Confessional, The Used, are just to name a few popular Emo bands in America which has also encouraged the commodification of Emo. A well-known Emo band which has successfully got high response from Emo fans is The Used. The Used comes from Utah and gains popularity through an aggressive Emo music they play. The Used produces more chaotic sound of Emo as the mixture of post hardcore, pop and punk under the mainstream record label, Reprise Record. The different sound of music, the unique appearance closed to Emo style and rebellious performance of The Used‘s members on the stage make this band popular in America. With Bert McCracken as the vocalist, Quinn Allman as the guitarist, Jeph Howard as the bassist and Branden Steineckert replaced by Dan Whitesides in 2008, as the drummer, they have released four studio albums and EPs (Extended Play) or mini album from 2002 until 2009. The albums are The Used (2002), In Love and Death (2004), Lies for The Liars (2007), and Artwork (2009) while the EPs are Berth (2007) and Shallow Believer (2008) (http://www.starpulse.com/Music/Used/Biography). The existence of The Used in music industry is considered as a significant icon for the growth of Emo commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 12 digilib.uns.ac.id subcultures in America. This band is able to embody the general American adolescents‘ problem sensitively since each band member has experienced similar adolescence problem that is when they grew up in a low middle class environment in Utah. Having got huge number of fans, The Used‘s music videos are produced and aired regularly on MTV and popular internet video sharing sites such as YouTube and MySpace. Some of The Used‘s popular videos are Taste of Ink, I Caught Fire (In Your Eyes), All That I’ve Got, Buried Myself Alive, A Box Full of Sharp Objects, Blue and Yellow, Take It Away, The Bird and The Worm, Blood On My Hands, and Empty With You. Those music videos have been released in several years from 2002 until 2009 and highly appreciated by American adolescents who define themselves as Emo Kids. By the regular airing of their music videos, The Used gains more popularity. This phenomenon is really interesting to analyze since the formula of making The Used‘s music videos is basically similar like the formula used by general music videos which is purposively to sell the image of the performers. It means that the other description of Emo subculture as a result of commodification process is also found in the video. it is possible that everything appeared on The Used‘s music videos is possibly made to offer the audiences the right description of Emo youth subcultures. Certainly, everything appears on their music videos is not purely a real representation of Emo subculture because The Used is included in 2000s Emo mainstream band generation which is popular after the subculture is exaggeratedly exploited by the media. Hence, based on this fact, it can be deeply analyzed the kinds of commodification of Emo subculture in commit to user 13 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id America through the appearance and performance of the performers in The Used music videos. B. Problem Statement Concerning the significant issue about the commodification of Emo subculture in America, this thesis is carried out to answer: What kinds of commodified Emo subculture are found in The Used‘s music videos? C. Objective of Study Based on the research question, the objective of this thesis is: To understand the kinds of commodified Emo subculture found in The Used‘s music videos D. Scope of Study In having research on this thesis, the researcher limits on the elements of Emo subculture that are being commodified. The process of commodification here will be focused on how media exploit the moving images, music and lyric in ten of The Used‘s music videos. Ten of The Used music videos which are analyzed are Taste of Ink, I Caught Fire (In Your Eyes), All That I’ve Got, Buried Myself Alive, A Box Full of Sharp Objects, Blue and Yellow, Take It Away, The Bird and The Worm, Blood On My Hands, and Empty With You. commit to user 14 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id E. Research Significance This research is conducted in the substances of: 1. Providing comprehensive information about the commodified Emo subculture in America through The Used music videos 2. Giving deeper knowledge about Emo an example of youth subcultures in America for other researchers who are interested in the study of youth subcultures. F. Method of Research 1. Type of Research This thesis is included in a descriptive qualitative research. Descriptive research is a type of research that aims to make description systematically, factually and accurately about facts, characteristics and relations among the phenomena which are observed (Nazir, 2006: 17). The reason of using this research type is that all of collected and analyzed data are in forms of words and pictures rather than numbers. Besides, the analysis is made to test the theory and apply it to the observed phenomena rather than to find the new theory from the observation toward the subject matter. 2. Source of Data commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 15 digilib.uns.ac.id The sources of data in the thesis are ten of The Used‘s official music videos which are produced and aired from 2002 until 2009. They are Taste of Ink, I Caught Fire (In Your Eyes), All That I’ve Got, Buried Myself Alive, A Box Full of Sharp Objects, Blue and Yellow, Take It Away, The Bird and The Worm, Blood On My Hands, and Empty With You. All of the videos are downloaded from The Used band official account in the internet video sharing site, www.YouTube.com. 3. Data The research will be conducted on two kinds of data. The first is main data and the second is supporting data. The main data is collected from the source of data which are ten of The Used‘s music videos: Taste of Ink, I Caught Fire (In Your Eyes), All That I’ve Got, Buried Myself Alive, A Box Full of Sharp Objects, Blue and Yellow, Take It Away, The Bird and The Worm, Blood On My Hands, and Empty With You. The main data consist of moving picture, music and lyric which all are analyzed to answer the problem statement. The supporting data is proposed to endorse the main data of the research. The supporting data consist of supportive materials about Emo subculture and The Used, as an Emo band that is going to be analyzed, found in several books, reviews, journals, articles, both hard file and soft file taken from the internet and other sources. 4. Technique of Collecting Data To find out messages conveyed by the data, the music videos will be commit to user 16 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id observed through several steps. First, each of the music video is watched repeatedly to find the object of analysis. After that, the music videos containing preferred object of analysis are cut and grouped to reflect the same issue. It means that not all part of the music videos will be analyzed. The chosen data are considered for containing deep and thorough information upon the case which are analyzed. 5. Technique of Analyzing Data The data are firstly collected and classified in order to answer the problem statement. The technique of analyzing data has to include several approaches to explore the main data then the supporting data is scrutinized to support the main data. Last step is taking conclusion to find the obvious explanation for the problem statement. G. Theoretical Approach This research is conducted within the boundaries of American Studies. American Studies is the study of American cultures which occupies various disciplines to involve. It means that to study a cultural object, it cannot be observed from one perspective of each discipline only but from an assortment of commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 17 digilib.uns.ac.id perspectives related to the subject matter being discussed. The purpose of relating various disciplines in studying American cultural products is to find the context behind it as it has been widely recognized that the central to any interdisciplinary enterprise it the relationship between text to be studied and the contexts from which they come (Campbell and Kean, 1997: 4). Therefore, several approaches like popular culture, semiotic and sociocultural are applied in this research to reveal the context behind the data as the products of American culture that are analyzed. American cultural product can be used as an instrument in understanding America because culture reflects a particular way of life, whether a people, a period or a group (Williams in Storey, 2009: 2). Culture that is widely favored or well liked by many people is simply called as popular culture (ibid: 5). Popular culture refers to belief and practices, and the objects through which they are organized, and are widely shared among the people of different beliefs (Smith in Pun, 2009: 16). It means that popular culture product has been extensively acknowledged by wide people without having a definite limitation to which group it can be consumed. However, for the sake that popular culture can be widely consumes by mass, there is a certain ideology to conceal the reality of subordination from those who are powerless: the subordinate classes do not see themselves as oppressed or exploited (Storey, 2009: 3). This is because according to Gramsci, the dominant groups in the society always seek to win the consent of subordinate groups (ibid: 10). The dominant groups here use the media to lose the subordination sense in the society. The process of losing subordination makes commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 18 digilib.uns.ac.id culture products are popularly consumed by all groups in the society without realizing that there is a ruling class to win the hegemony behind it. Bennet also writes: The field of popular culture is structured by the attempt of the ruling class to win hegemony and by forms of opposition to this endeavor. As such, it consists not simply of an imposed mass culture that is coincident with dominant ideology, nor simply of spontaneously oppositional cultures, but is rather an area of negotiation between the two within which – in different particular types of popular culture – dominant, subordinate and oppositional cultural and ideological values and elements are ‗mixed‘ in different permutations (ibid: 10) The hegemony ruling practice can be clearly seen on how youth subcultures are commodified by the media. Stalling states that the media is a machine of which purpose ideally is to inform but realistically, is to sell. It has consistently searched the outer limits of society to find products to pasteurize repackage and sell to the mainstream (Stalling, 1999). The commodification process of certain youth subcultures is derived from such phenomena. Here, the media has shifted the function of the early youth subculture from its exclusiveness as the place for young people as the subordinate groups in the society with the different ideology in acquiring identity to a product of popular culture which wide people can easily consume it. In understanding subcultural commodification in America, popular culture artifacts related to youth life such as movie, music, video game, music video, fashion and the like are studied analytically. From the intensely study, it is found that youth subculture artifacts created by media are structured to eliminate the oppositional values of youth subculture in America. Music video has evidently commodified youth subculture because as a media, music video is basically created by the winning groups such as capitalist and industrialist to sell commit to user the hipping stuffs and ideas of certain subculture to be widely accepted and perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 19 digilib.uns.ac.id consumed. To see the aspect of commodification found in the music videos and the context behind the fact, the elements within a music video including music, lyric, and image are deeply observed because to study a popular culture product, it is necessary to apply semiotic approach (Pun, 2009: 28). Semiotic is the study of signs or the social production of meaning by sign system of how things come to have significance. For Peirce‘s semiotics theory, a sign is something which stands to somebody for something in some respect or capacity. It addresses somebody, that is, creates in the mind of that person an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign (Peirce in Chandler, 2009: 3). Charles Sanders Peirce refers a sign as the correlation between the representamen, object and interpretant. The representamen, as the signifier in Peirce‘s theory, refers to the form which the sign takes while the interpretant, as the signified, refers to the concept it represents. Peirce‘s theory is different from the previous semiotics theory since to represent the concept, as Peirce states, the interpretant is influenced by sense of signs made by the interpreter or the object. The relationship between the representamen, the object and the interpretant emerges three modes of sign: symbol, icon and index. As Peirce notes that symbol is a mode in which the signifier does not resemble the signified but which is fundamentally arbitrary or purely conventional; icon is a mode in which the signifier is perceived as resembling or imitating the signified; index is a mode in which the signifier is not arbitrary but is directly connected in some way (physically or causally) to the signified (ibid: 30). In the analysis of a moving commit to user 20 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id image like movie, short movie, and television shows, Peirce‘ three modes of signs are applicable. Wollen states that film and television use all three forms: icon (sound and image), symbol (speech and writing), and index (as the effect of what is filmed) (Wollen in Chandler, 2009: 35). Since music video is a form of short moving image, Peirce‘s semiotics theory is relevant to use in signifying the concept behind it. Music video is a form of audiovisual communication between the performers and its audiences in which the meaning is created through the correlation of its moving image, lyric and music. Using Peirce‘s semiotics theory, to analyze the concept within it, the image and music are employed as the icon while the lyric is employed as the symbol. Still, the concept is gained from the meaning behind the music video as the indexical tool. Below Carlsson affirms that the meanings of a music video are gained from how the three aspects of music videos, like moving image, music and lyric, correlate each other. Clearly, production of meaning in music videos is complex, compromised of several flows of audio-visual information. These flows interact and the resultant meaning is perceived as one complete whole, created by both the ears and eyes.......points out how three aspects of the audio-visual flow – music, image, and text – interact producing meaning for ―literate" audio-viewers of music video (Carlsson, 1999:1) It means that in analyzing music video, moving image is not the only object that is going to be observed. The analysis of music and lyric is also required because the musical features of a song bend the moving image, even sometimes they also shape the moving image on the video (ibid: 2) while the lyric in the music video are depicted by the moving image to give the clear description of the song to the audiences. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 21 digilib.uns.ac.id As a cultural product of a society, semiotics approach is not merely enough to explain the visual representation of a music video. Griffin states that identifiable features of a text rarely reveal sufficient insight into how and why it communicates (Griffin, 2002: 31). To reveal the context of a text which is the cultural product of a society, it is needed to know how it communicates within a society. Whereas to understand how a cultural product communicates, it is needed to notice on the social context and an understanding of cultural codes. It is right if semiotics theory can explain the context; still, the content of a cultural product is mostly influenced by the social and cultural condition of a society where the text is presented. Therefore, sociocultural approach is important to assist semiotic approach in explaining the context of a cultural product in a certain society. As Griffin also clearly notes as follow: Yet regardless of such debates over the text-centered limitation of semiotic interests and methods, semiotic inquiry has made one thing clear: that, images, like words, can only be understood through their relationship to cultural patterns of making meaning. The sociocultural paradigm, broad and eclectic with regard to specific methods, makes it equally clear that cultural codes……can only be understood within the discursive practices of a production system……and the social organization (ibid: 32-33) In analyzing the commodified Emo as an American youth subculture within The Used music video, it is not enough to simply notice on signs available in a music video. As a cultural product, those signs are influenced by the social context and cultural codes of a society where the text is taken. The understanding about American social and cultural condition at a specific time is needed to explain how a music video as text communicates and how the context behind the text is revealed. At this point, sociocultural approach is applied to give the clear commit to user explanation about the commodification process of Emo youth subculture in 22 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id America. By using sociocultural approach besides semiotics, commodification of the signs in the music video can communicate the issues of Emo youth subculture in America. H. Thesis Organization CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 is the introduction of the thesis. It provides the summary of the background of the thesis. The Problem Statement Objective of Study, Scope of Study, Research Significance, Method of Research ,Theoretical Approach and also the Thesis Organization. CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW Chapter 2 provides the literature review as the basic theory for the analysis. This chapter 2 consists of Emo As A Youth Subculture in America, The Used‘s Biography, Youth Subculture as A Form of Commodity, American Social and Cultural Condition in 2000s and the last is Semiotics of Music Video. CHAPTER 3: ANALYSIS Chapter 3 proposes the answers for the problem statement mentioned in chapter 1. The first subchapter explains about the commodified Emo subculture in fashion. The first subchapter explains about the commodification of Emo subculture in behavior. commit to user 23 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id CHAPTER 4: CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION Chapter 4 includes the conclusion and recommendation based on the analysis which are written in the previous chapter. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 24 CHAPTER II LITERATURE REVIEW As mentioned in Chapter 1, this research aims at answering the kinds of commodification in Emo subculture in America represented by The Used‟s music videos. To conduct with the solution of the problem statement, it is needed to apply several theories. Thus, this chapter provides some appropriate theories which are divided into five subchapters. The first subchapter is about Emo subculture. It explains about the significance of Emo as a youth subculture in America and elements of Emo subculture such as history and identity. The second subchapter provides the biography of The Used including the brief explanation of their career, band members, discography of songs and music videos. Then the third subchapter discuss about the commodifications of youth subculture through its elements which are frequently found in American media especially music video. The fourth subchapter explains about American social and culture condition in the 2000s that influence the development of Emo youth subculture. The last subchapter concerns on semiotic of music videos, embracing its three elements: image, music and lyric. A. Emo As A Youth Subculture in America Adolescence is a phase of human life when childhood is replaced by adulthood. In this phase, young people face a new challenge in relation to their past commit to user 24 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 25 and future life. It means that in this period, young people are commonly looking for their own identities in the process of being mature dealing with their personal anxieties and the need for social self definition. As it is also stated in Fass words “Youth is one of the sites where these forces cross, mix and clash: „at a splendid crossroad where the past meets the future in a jumble of personal anxieties and an urgent need for social self-definition” (Fass in Campbell and Kean, 1997: 215). The searching of identity is sometimes influenced by the environments where they grow. In America, the environments surrounding young people‟s life mostly family, school and social institution, which are typically controlled by parent culture. However, these environments do not fulfill all what young people look for because youth desires its own space outside the adult or public sphere beyond the surveillance of the authorities and institutions that dominate their lives (Campbell and Kean, 1997: 230). Hence, young people will go outside to construct the spaces which are free from parents and institution intervention, as Grossbreg also writes: Youth could construct its own places in the space of transition between these institutions: in the street, around the jukebox, at the hop (and later the mall)…spaces located between the domestic, public and social spaces of the adult world. What the dominant society assumes to be no place at all (Grossbreg, ibid: 230) The construction of these places between encourages youth subcultures to emerge. Youth subcultures are considered as the marginal sites where young people can obtain domains outside of parent culture. These subcultures are mostly created from various forms of articulations like music, fashion, gangs, and so on. In music genre, rock is an example of youth articulation which allow young people to live out commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 26 its alienation in ways that would increase is own sense of control over its everyday life. Rock also offered the possibility of self expression in a new language coming out of a hybridization of oppressed culture‟s musical form like blues, jazz and country (ibid: 230). Besides, rock music also answers the surveillance and authority of the dominant culture with a „counterculture of conspicuous display‟ that found a way to contest their erasure to reintroduce themselves to the public by “throwing out” a new style that made other people take notice (Lipsitz in Campbell and Kean, 1997: 231). Rock music is still divided into various genres based on the different musical events such as rhythmic cells, types of bass lines, harmonic motives, musical processes and so on (Dunbar-Hall, 1991: 130). Every genre has formed its own subculture because the differences of musical events are believed to represent different ideology (ibid: 130). Heavy metal is different from punk, although both of them are basically redlined in rock music, because they are different either in musical events or lyrics which represent its own ideology. In America, rock music genres have been increasingly changed according to the different generations. In 2000s, common rock genres blooming out in this era are basically derived from metal, hardcore and punk subgenre but using its specific characteristics. One of the subgenres emerged from hardcore and punk is Emo which also finally become an independent youth subculture because of its special characteristics. Emo is a recent popular American youth subculture which emerged in 1980s and astonishingly thriving in 2000s. Like the other music-based youth subcultures, Emo is a place for American youth to form their identity in adolescence phase commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 27 through music, fashion, behavior and values. Still, Emo has various distinctions compared to other music-based youth subcultures both on its history and identity. 1. The History of Emo Emo is not a new genre in American music industry. Like punk music, initially, Emo is emerged from underground music scenes. Through several developments, then Emo is distorted from its origin music value. Nowadays, young people identify Emo as a mainstream music genre different from the early Emo in 1980s. The developments according to Andy Greenwald are divided into three parts: the first wave in 1980s, the second wave in 1990s and the third wave in 2000s. The term Emo was firstly introduced by a hardcore punk bands from Washington D.C., such as Rites of Spring and Minor Threat, in the middle of 1980s. Their music was considered revolutionary compared to the common hardcore punk music flowering at that time because their lyrics were softer and more personal than the other hardcore bands. Yet, those bands still expressed their intimate sentiments in the style of hardcore that can be indicated from guitar riffs, feedback, yelled lyrics and aggressive sounds of music, subsequently their music often termed by hardcore fans as “Emotional Hardcore” or Emo. While there were various hardcore and punk bands demonstrating their opinion toward the unfairness of society, politic and other crisis, the early Emo bands explored the individual feeling sensitively through the blown up words. The vocalists of these bands often cried on the stage when singing to show the exaggeration of their emotional feeling. It can be noticed from one of the commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 28 early Emo band‟s lyric, “End on End” by Rites of Spring as follows: … I've had days of end on end where nothing changed cause nothing began. Restless movement in an empty room, gathering shadows of a darkened blue. And oh- it feels so strange- when it comes again … (End on End by Rites of Spring) Rites of Spring‟s lyric above explains about the personal feeling of a man, in this case one of the band members, when he feels the terrible loneliness as if causing the end of his life. Through the words “restless movement in an empty room, gathering shadows of a darkened blue” the loneliness become the main theme throughout the song. Emo scene lasted only a few years in the Washington D.C. By 1986, most of Emotional Hardcore bands in the first movement including Rites of Spring and Minor Threat had broken up. However, their idea and aesthetic spread quickly across the country via network of homemade zines, vinyl records and hearsays (Greenwald, 2003: 15). Since Emo originated from hardcore and punk, the bands were not signed themselves with any mainstream media. They still practiced DIY (Do It Yourself) music values carried out by punk ideology, which separated themselves from mainstream music industries. On the other word, they are independent because their music and belief are different from most of bands handled by majority record labels at that time. In reaching the audiences, they established their own recording labels, aired the songs on local radios and held several small concerts to anticipate the interference of music industries. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 29 Emo then spread widely across the United States in the early 1990s. This period was considered as the second wave of Emo movement. Many bands in numerous local scenes began to emulate the sounds as a way to marry the intensity of hardcore with the complex emotions associated with growing older (Greenwald, 2003: 15-17). Although the bands were numerous, the aesthetic of Emo remained the same. It was about dramatic feeling wrapped in more melancholic hardcore music. Leader among these bands was Sunny Day Real Estate. Unlike the bands from first wave Emo movement in 1980s, this band had slower hardcore music, high-quality gear, lofty musical ambitions, intricate songwriting, and a sweeping epic sound similar to most of alternative bands at that time. Front-man of this band, Jeremy Enigk sang desperately in a falsetto voice which mostly about losing himself and lost love topic through chaotic lyrics and made-up words. Below is the example of Sunny Day Real Estate lyric entitled “Seven”: … Sew it on face the fool December‟s tragic drive when time is poetry and stolen the world outside the waiting crush my heart … (Seven by Sunny Day Real Estate) Different from the lyrics carried out by the bands of the first movement of Emo in 1980s, Sunny Day Real Estate brings the personal feeling closer into the love or romanticism theme which is noticed from the words „poetry‟ and „crushing my heart‟ from the lyric above. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 30 Through their existence in music scene, the aesthetic of Emo was rebuilt and brought closer to the mainstream music industry. Sunny Day Real Estate‟s debut album Diary released at 1994 was over the top of American music chart and their music video entitled “Seven” was aired regularly on popular music video station MTV. Then, like many other aspects of youth culture, the music, including Sunny Day Real Estate‟ music and its associated themes have become commodities for mass consumption in conducting profits, similarly Greenwald states as follows: In the wake of the 1991 success of Nirvana‟s Nevermind, underground music and subcultures in the United States become big business. New distribution networks emerged, touring routed were codified and regional and independent acts were able to access national stage (Greenwald, 2003: 19) The flourishing products based on underground music scene, including Emo, made young people across the country declare themselves as fans of Emo music which would be commonly recognized as “Emo Kids”. The term “Emo Kids” was gradually popular in this period among American young people. Sunny Day Real Estate was one of the bands that can be seen as a turning point for Emo, in which the genre evolved from a less accessible hardcore sound of early bands toward the more mainstream sound that is known today (Aslaksen, 2006: 10). It means that music style carried out by Sunny Day Real Estate influenced the development of Emo movement in the next wave of 2000s after this band‟s success, numerous similar Emo bands, with slower hardcore sounds, emerged. They were signed to major record labels then became marketable products. Their catchy music commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 31 and accessible themes surround youth life gave a broad appeal to young mainstream audiences. The third wave of Emo music movement comes out in 2000s. It is characterized mainly by the rise of bands with a lead singer who generally sings in a high falsetto voice and backed by electric guitars with pop hooks and punk riffs. The lyric typically focus on relationship and heartbreak, yet there is still punk theme influence the bands‟ lyrics such as rebellion, anger, hatred, despair and hope. For instance, Dashboard Confessional, a band with the only one member with melodic and acoustic music but still focus on Emo themed lyric like relationship and despair. The way of other bands like Taking Back Sunday, Hawthorne Heights, My Chemical Romance and The Used, perform their songs have similar dispositions. The vocals of those bands are intermingled with voices close to yells of anger and emotional stress. The bands in this period usually will start their songs with soft sweet singing and will crescendo into an angst-ridden wail (Aslaksen, 2006: 14). They are also influenced by the heavy metal guitar sound and hardcore yells of pain. The third wave Emo bands characteristic which focus on relationship can be indicated from one of The Used lyric entitled “Buried Myself Alive” as follow: … I guess it‟s okay I puke the day away, I guess it‟s better you trapped yourself in your own way And if you want me back, you‟re gonna have to ask Nicer than that … (Buried Myself Alive by The Used) commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 32 The lyric above represents the relationship or heartbreak theme through the hint phrase like “and if you want me back, you‟re gonna have to ask nicer than that”. Moreover, in the end of the phrase, the vocalist usually screams or adds the high falsetto voice to reinforce the mixed emotional feeling of the song. In the next development, Emo become one of the most noticed rock music genre in the middle of 2000s replacing the existence of pop, hip hop and pop punk music. Besides, Emo has become a new phenomenon of alternative youth subculture. Identified Emo today is a trend that unifies music, behavior, fashion, and way of life. It thrives because there are huge numbers of young people apply the same values to find the identity in their world through similar music taste. The values expressed through Emo music offers alternative space for youth to experience adolescence more sensitively. The existence of “Emo Kids” can be found everywhere in America. The music and values, as the symbolic means of subculture communication are not the only factors playing big roles in the increasing of Emo subculture but also the appearance, performance and personality of each member in certain Emo bands. It happens because media and various big record labels as the mainstream industries purposely have manufactured most of today Emo bands. In this point, Emo has been commodified widely to be a marketable product. All of the symbolic means of communication in Emo subculture such as music, fashion and behavior have been redefined by the industries so that the society identifies Emo from media‟s perspective only. Emo is described as a new cool youth subculture in 2000s that commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 33 attracts millions young people‟ attention to join it. This phenomenon is similar with what a journalist, Ariel Meadow Stalling states about the commodification of subculture in Lotus Magazine as follow: This process of commodification -- turning something we view as a lifestyle into a product -- has happened countless times to countless communities…. We live in a media-dominated society ……..the media is a machine whose purpose ideally is to inform but realistically, is to sell.….The media has consistently searched the outer limits of society to find products to pasteurize repackage and sell to the mainstream. (Stalling, 1999: 1) Through Emo bands, including their music, fashion, way of life and behavior, the music industries make the Emo-ness more popular in society so that young people will recognize them, buy their products and do everything in the same way like what the bands do. For instance, the regular broadcasting of some Emo bands‟ music videos like My Chemical Romance and The Used on MTV has dictated the audiences how to be Emo through both of fashion and mannerism shown by performers in the videos. Similarly, Tetzlaff explains: MTV places fashion at the center of existence. Belonging and actualization within the MTV culture are matters of expressing style (available at fines stores everywhere), not cultivating soul. Subcultural symbol systems are torn from their referents in lived experience and social structure. Decontextualized signifiers are grafted onto a single new signified: the consumption of attitude for the sake of consumption….lifestyle is reduced to a pose…but each of these is just something fancy to wear: the pose isn‟t about anything but itself. (Tetzlaff, 1986: 87) The early ideology of Emo has been reduced by the existence of the third wave Emo bands music videos broadcasted in MTV. MTV as the popular music videos channel slowly penetrate the viewers‟ minds in giving the right definitions of Emo standard performed by the video without considering the actual values. Like other media, commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 34 everything shown by MTV is for the sake of consumption. The videos, which are full with Emo themes, are intended to bring the cool ideas to dress and act like what the performers do. By consuming what the music videos represent, the viewers can express themselves and become parts of something special (Stalling, 1999). In the case of Emo, this youth subculture is thriving in 2000s because of media has exploited it in the right moment after American has been stroke by the unknown enemies that the media need to find a new kind of hipping products to sell which also occupies the situation at the time because ccompared to other youth subcultures like Punk which conveys rebellion toward everything which does not suitable with its principles, Emo does not always recommend the members, widely known as “Emo Kids” to be radical yet to be responsive even susceptible in facing everything happens in youth life although it is seen from the negative point of view through darkness, sadness and other pessimist themes. Emo can be accepted from 1980s until 2000s because there is the same line between the past Emo with recent Emo. Three of them are rooted from the same Emotional Hardcore of which the hardcore formula mixed with the emotional sense of music and lyric can be accepted well by most of American adolescents. 2. The Identity of Emo Each youth subculture builds its own characteristic through various symbolic styles including fashion, music preference and behavior. This characteristic also gives that subculture a certain identity which makes them different from other youth commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 35 subcultures. To distinguish a variety of identities in various youth subcultures, it is needed a kind of boundary. Although the concept of identity boundary is flexible but it can obviously describe the characteristics of people‟s self experiences of the self in the society. This boundary provides the purpose of identification through markers. The markers used to differentiate identity are commonly language, dress, behavior and choice of space (Cohen in Hebdige, 1979). The markers are usually used to communicate each other and to indicate that the members are in the same subculture. Emo as one of youth subcultures particularly also has its own symbolic system of communication as markers which differentiate the members from other youth subcultures. However, the markers of Emo subculture have changed since it was firstly established in 1980s. First wave of Emo in 1980s was indicated with its relation to Hardcore and Punk music scene that the markers were different from today‟s Emo subculture. While the Emo in 1980s and 2000s signified the early cooperation with mainstream media like MTV. i. Music Preference a. 1980s Emo The music preference is mostly based on music from the early Emo bands influenced by hardcore and punk scene such as Rites of Spring, Embrace and Fugazi. The characteristics of their music are: commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 36 Theme : Anxiety, anger Tone : Fast and loud, hardcore typical sound Vocal : The vocalists rarely wail and scream. They do not use falsetto voice when singing. Instruments : Guitar, bass, drums b. 1990s Emo The music preference is mostly based on music from more pop bands without the interference of hardcore and punk music. The characteristics of their music are: Theme : Love and relationship, anxiety Tone : Slow tempo of music Vocal : The vocalists sing like other pop bands vocalists. Instruments : Guitar, bass, drums, keyboard, piano c. 2000s Emo The music preference is mostly based on mainstream bands popularly aired on MTV: Theme : Love and heartbreak (relationship), hatred, despair, anger, death and problems surrounding youth life. Tone : High pitch, fast tempo, several bands have aggressive commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 37 sounds of music; some bands acoustically perform their songs. Vocal : The vocalists usually wail, scream, cry and use falsetto voice when singing. There are sometimes backing vocalists in certain bands who usually help the lead vocalist to scream and sing. Instruments : Guitar, bass, drums and sometimes in addition, using keyboard, piano and synthesizer. ii. Fashion Fashion is very significant in distinguishing Emo from the other youth subcultures since fashion is a kind of language subculture deliver to its perceiver that they are different with the mainstream culture in a society. In the youth subculture, fashion is a main system of communication to emphasize that the members are congregated in the precisely similar subculture. As Chakal states, “Generally, subcultures are youth-based and revolve around various music scenes, which in turn produces distinctive fashion with which to identify members” (Chakal in Directo, 2006: 2) In the early rising of youth subculture, fashion is an implementation of young people to reject the dominant norms of a society. They dress and act so unconventionally that they are regarded as threats because they do not appear to adhere to the dominant ideologies of dressing properly and acting civilized. This idea grows rapidly among young people that there are huge numbers of commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 38 them applying the idea through clothing. Therefore, gradually youth subcultures have been commodified and labeled by the government and media which promote the dominant ideologies that make them seem more acceptable and non-threatening in the society (Hebdige, 1979: 155). The exclusive means of communication applied by the members of a youth subculture has shifted into mass production consumed by people outside of the youth subculture itself. Moreover, the role of media in promoting the exclusiveness of subculture as an alternative way to express young people‟ desire makes the previous label of youth subcultures as the defiant subcultures can be widely accepted by society through the ways the media construct them. Firstly recognized as an underground youth subculture in 1980s around Washington D.C., now Emo is extensively recognized by massive numbers of young people in America. The designation of Emo as a root of hardcore subculture which applies the DIY ethic is slowly replaced by the image of Emo today appears on the mainstream media. The symbolic style of Emo subculture like fashion becomes media‟s main exploitation that consequently Emo is mostly recognizable by the different fashion, not by the idealism of an early subculture. The way of an Emo band members dress themselves and the highlighted communities of Emo Kids spread everywhere in America, become the promising commodity for the industries whether for promoting the band or advertising the music from the band itself. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 39 a. 1980s Emo T-shirt and three-quarter pants were commonly used by the members of early Emo subculture. The clothing was still influenced by hardcore fashion booming at that time. Below is the description of general clothing worn by the members of Fugazi band when performing on the stage. http://assets.dischord.com/images.d/artist/image/6557/KYEO_003.jpg retrieved September 10, 2011 b. 1990s Emo „Indie look‟ was the booming fashion among American youth in 1990s. Emo subculture was interfered by the mainstream media at that time. Therefore, the appearances of the Emo band members were similar like the other musicians at that time. Below is the description of general fashion of Jimmy Eat World the second wave Emo band in 1990s commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 40 http://www.8notes.com/images/artists/jimmy-eat-world.jpg retrieved September, 10 2011 c. 2000s Emo Through the media construction, Emo nowadays is associated with dark side of fashion. Emo fashion is close to the rebellious style of punk but more fashionable. Below are the fashion rules commonly practiced by Emo Kids summed up from book Everybody Hurts by Leslie Simon and Trevor Kelley on 2007 Clothing : Clothing is an element of fashion consisting of everything worn to cover human body. The kinds of clothing are separated according to the different part of the body: upper and lower. Upper body‟s clothing includes sorts of shirt, t-shirt, blouse, etc. while lower body‟s clothing includes types of trouser and short for men and skirt for women. Upper Body commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 41 Clothing for the upper part of body usually consists of shirt, t-shirt, polo shirt, blouse, jacket, sweater, sweatshirts and the like. Since Emo is a youth subculture which basically offering rebellion against the usual norms of parent culture, the upper clothing will be simpler than their parents‟ clothing (Simon and Kelley, 2007: 41). It will be mostly around various kinds of tight t-shirt, jacket and hoodie (a kind of hooded sweatshirts with a zipper). Different from other youth subcultures, Emo clothing is usually related with dark color like black, dark blue and red blood to symbolize the major theme of this subculture: sadness, gloominess and depression. However, the shocking color like bright pink, bright yellow and bright blue is commonly accepted, especially if they are applied in boys clothing, to show the expressive and arty side of this subculture. The shape of T-shirt worn by Emo Kids is commonly tight. It is common in girls‟ fashion but not in boys‟. This tight T-shirt makes the boys‟ appearance different from boys of other youth subcultures. Besides tight colorful or dark T-shirt, Emo upper body clothing can be noticed from the use of hoodie. Hoodie is one of the youth breakthrough fashion in 2000s since it combines sweatshirt with zipper. In Emo, the user of hoodie will typically raise the hooded part to cover their head and raise several meanings like mysterious and loneliness. Lower Body commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 42 In the Emo subculture nowadays, clothing for lower body is mostly in the forms of tight pants, jeans or even black tight jeans. Historically, jeans are worn by the blue collar workers because of its lasting use. However, it is now popular as a casual dress among youth. In society basically it has the same function as T-shirt. It is commonly worn by young people to show the freedom of self expression especially in choosing the lower body outfit. Jeans is considered as a way of showing that kind of expression because it is affordable, simple, popular and variable. In Emo subculture, jeans are commonly applied by the members of Emo bands and the members of subculture itself. Hairstyle : Hairstyles used by the Emo Kids can be noticed easily. There are more than two types of hairstyles applied by the members of Emo subculture. The commonest hairstyle noticed from Emo kids is black or colorful long straight hair with long side bang covering the eyes. The other is messy black hair in medium length, colorful Mohawk and Gunshoot-wound hairstyles. Those hairstyles are generally applied by the Emo boys while the Emo girls are commonly use the colorful long straight hairstyle. Accessories : commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 43 The accessories worn by Emo Kids are particularly similar like what ordinary rock-stars wear. Metal and leather are dominated the accessories such as piercing and wristbands. However, Emo has its own specification like the stuffs below: - Vans, Macbeth or Converse shoes - Wristbands - Tattoos - Black or white studded belts - Piercing stuffs - Thick black horn-rimmed glasses Make Up : In this subculture, not only girls make up their face but also boys. Both of girls and boy usually use black or red eyeliner, paint the nails black and often use black lipstick. The use of this make up dominated by dark color is believed to indicate the senses of sadness and despair conveyed by Emo music and lyric. The exploitation of make up makes Emo ridiculous compared to other subcultures since it decrease the values of men‟s strong, rebel and masculine (Aslaksen, 2006: ii). However, the use of make up for boys is gradually acceptable since certain media explore it as a brand new style for American boys. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id digilib.uns.ac.id 44 Below is the picture of My Chemical Romance, the well known Emo band in 2000s. Their clothing is dominated by red and black color. http://www.musicsnews.com/content_images/my%20chemical%20romance%20megali.gif retrieved September 10, 2011 The pictures below are the general appearances of Emo boy and girl which later become the standard of being an Emo Kid. a b a. The example of Emo boy‟s fashion with black and red eyeliner, long side bang, black and blonde hair and tight black t-shirt (http://www.emobucket.com/displayimage-2815.html) retrieved December 10, 2010 09:34 pm b. The example of Emo girl‟s fashion with black and red eyeliner, semi black long hair, tight white t-shirt and white studded belt (http://www.newhairstyles.tk/resimler/sexy-emo-girl-2-2010-17.jpg) retrieved December 10, 2010 09:45 pm commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id iii. 45 digilib.uns.ac.id Behavior Unlike the 1980s and 1990s Emo which did not exaggerate the „emotional‟ term as the rule on how the members behave, 2000s Emo higly exploit the emotional term in its relation to the anxiety feeling in the adolescence phase. Many adolescents find themselves in the position of having an intense to feel loved and accepted. They desperately seek love and acceptance but often lack the means to attain it. Adolescents need to express their pain and opportunity for this expression (Anastasi, 2005: 303). Since adolescents have more time to search out and listen to music, the will choose this medium to express their pain. Music is the alternative way for adolescents to feel, to experience, to be inspired in order to be motivate by something or to allow themselves to be deeply affected by it. Combined with poignant lyrics; music can manipulate emotions and evoke tears, regret, anger, happiness, a sense of social responsibility, etc. Even music and lyric can cause some to begin to face the issues of pain that have been locked in the recesses of their heart and mind hat often only manifest themselves in outbursts, neurosis or depression, when not understood and faced (ibid: 311) Youth subculture is an alternative way for adolescents to express this kind of youth anxiety since most of youth subcultures are entrenched from several music genres. One of the subculture that would fit the description of lyrics of youth lamentation, which also incorporates the commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 46 digilib.uns.ac.id style of music that invites contemplation and evokes passion and emotion, is Emo (ibid: 311). In music, Emo has similar sound like Punk but makes use of minor chords and major nines, which tend to create a somber, pensive mood rather than an adrenaline rush offered by other rock-based subcultures. Emo lyrics are also recognized as a hybrid of anger mixed with hurt, heartbreak, suffering and lamentation which become the primary expressions of its cries. That is why Emo is commonly stereotyped as a group of young people that face everything happen surrounds adolescents‟ life vulnerably and sensitively. If other rock-based subcultures like Punk, Hardcore or Metal highlight the rebelliousness to get a space in a society through vandalism, Emo will offer the member to win a space in more sensitive way. The Emo rebelliousness is formed differently through adolescents‟ anger which is wrapped by the individual sensitive feeling. In the relation to the society or environment, Emo subculture provide a space for young people not to behave violently against the dominant system yet to focus on what they feel while suffering from adolescence phase of which reality is different from their expectation. Emo subculture breaks the youth languageless silence since it provide the adolescents a space or environment for them to begin assess their feelings and needs through its music, lyric and community. As Kegan, a psychologist explains as follows: a “holding environment” or a “psychosocial environment” in which a to user to grow…. this environment can context is provided forcommit the individual perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 47 digilib.uns.ac.id provide a safe place for the adolescent to begin to sense pain, while it may simultaneously function as a challenge to deal with that sensed pain (Kegan in Anastasi, 2005: 305) Having exaggerated nowadays, the members‟ behaviors are seal with sadness, depression and broken-heartedness matters derived from Emo themes which are dominated by feeling of loneliness, sensitive, shy, quiet, sad, introverted, glum, depression, self-pitying, mysterious and angst ridden. This Emo behavior are often represented by various Emo symbol found broadly in the media such as pictures of Emo Kids cutting their wrists with razor or scissors, pictures of Emo Kids with bleeding hearts, pictures of a boy or girl sitting alone anxiously, hanging sad dolls, etc. Because of this stereotype, Emo is often unenthusiastically issued to increase the number of American youth depression, self injury and suicidal action. B. The Used’s Biography There are numerous Emo bands gaining popularity in the third wave of Emo movements in 2000s. The popularity of bands like My Chemical Romance, The Used, Taking Back Sunday, Hawthorne Heights and Thursday signify how Emo is incredibly popular among American youth nowadays. Mainstream music industries explore not only their music but also performance and behavior. Through various media like television, music videos, magazines, and internet, young people recognize these Emo bands then gradually consume them. The Used is one of the famous Emo bands from Orem, Utah founded in commit to user 48 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 2002 achieving popularity in American music field through an aggressive Emo music. The Used is considered as a different Emo band because they produce more chaotic sound of Emo as a result from the mixture of post hardcore, pop and punk using as a kind of crescendo element in screaming to reach a particular emotional pitch, therefore The Used is also regarded as „screamo‟, a kind of breakthrough in Emo area. The members of The Used are: Bert McCracken as the lead vocalist, Quinn Allman as the guitarist and the first backing vocalist Jeph Howard as the bassist and the second backing vocalist Branden Steineckert replaced by Dan Whitesides in the late of 2006, as the drummer. This band is signed under a mainstream label, Reprise Record after going underground through a local independent music label. The four members of this band, who are all boys and still young, indicate the Emo-ness through fashion and performance on stages, music videos, internet and other media. Besides, the youth life background of each member that closes to poverty, homelessness, substance abuse, and broken home, makes The Used fit to Emo sphere. Their songs are easily adapted by Emo Kids since it reflects the real emotion of the members, especially Bert McCracken as the songwriter, in telling his sad experience wrapped by noisy music. Instead of telling the gloominess side of young people related to anxieties in facing society which mostly is the basic theme of Emo, The Used‟s lyrics also tell about the romance and relationship problems of youth love. Most of the lyrics are covered with noisy sound of hardcore music. commit to user The Used has released four studio albums and EPs (Extended Play) or mini perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 49 digilib.uns.ac.id album from 2002 until 2009. The albums are The Used (2002), In Love and Death (2004), Lies for the Liars (2007), and Artwork (2009). The EPs are Berth (2007) and Shallow Believer (2008) (http://www.starpulse.com/Music/Used/Biography). The first full album entitled The Used has been released on 2002 brings this band to reach their popularity. This album is listed on the Billboard 200 and peak on 63th position. In Love and Death, the next album is released on 2004 repeating the band success by staying on the 5th position of the Billboard 200 and getting Gold certification. The mainstream achievement comes up to The Used after the third album, Lies for the Liars, has been released on 2007. Instead of sitting on the 5th position of Billboard 200, some tracks are used for original soundtrack of a blockbuster Hollywood movie entitled Transformer. The latest album entitled Artwork is opened at 10th position on the Billboard 200 with 35,000 copies sold at the first week on September 2009. Like all of the albums, the EPs are also gained success by positioning 71th in the Top Billboard 200 for Berth and 13th position in the iTunes Top 100 Albums for Shallow Believer. By the success history of The Used and their occasional appearance on media as one of the Emo bands, fans begin to point them as an icon of Emo subculture especially in America. Everything comes from The Used become trendsetter among Emo Kids. For instance the appearance of the vocalist, Bert McCracken, with eccentric fashion, eyeliner, wristband and long messy black hair is easily noticed and imitated by Emo Kids. Their songs become anthems for a part of Emo Kids since they are considered as representation of hidden Emo feeling. This band also takes a tour with a number of Emo bands in the Vans commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 50 digilib.uns.ac.id Wrapped Tour (a concert for lists of popular Emo and pop punk bands in several American cities) from 2002 until 2007 which finally reinforce The Used as an icon of Emo subculture through their music, lyric, appearance, behavior and performance on the stages. Besides, their music videos are also occasionally broadcasted by media such as MTV and easily found on the internet video sharing like YouTube. C. Youth Subculture as A Commodity At first the function of youth subculture in general is to get a place for young people to express themselves in order to fight against the dominant standard of a society controlled by parent culture. The more members join with a youth subculture, the more attentions are given to that youth subculture and its members. Their way to communicate their language through appearance and defiant behavior gradually becomes the center attention of society since the emergence of a spectacular youth subculture is invariably accompanied by a wave of hysteria in the press which typically fluctuates between dread and fascination, outrage and amusement (Hebdige, 1979: 92). The media takes an important role on how certain of youth subculture is accepted and known by the society although media stand on two kind of opposite sides. In one side, youth subcultures are ridiculed as a social problem, but on the other side they are alternatively celebrated as a breakthrough phenomenon in society (ibid: 93). Media spotlighting change the function of the previous youth subculture through the media‟s perspective. As Hebdige also writes based on his examination commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 51 digilib.uns.ac.id on Punk, Mod and Rockers subcultures below: In most cases, it is the subculture‟s stylistic innovation which first attracts the media‟s attention. Subsequently, deviant or „anti-social‟ acts- vandalism, swearing, fighting, „animal behavior‟- are „discovered‟ by the police, the judiciary, the press; and these acts are used to „explain‟ the subculture original subculture‟s original transgression of sartorial codes……..as the subculture begins to strike its own eminently marketable pose, as its vocabulary (both visual and verbal) becomes more and more familiar, so the referential context in which it can be most conveniently assigned is made increasingly apparent. (ibid: 93-94) Media do not only record its resistance but also place youth subculture in the dominant framework of meaning which cause young people who choose to inhabit a spectacular youth culture are simultaneously returned as they are represented on TV and in the newspapers, to the place where common sense would have them fit. Through this recuperation process created by the media, youth subculture is incorporated within the dominant standard of culture which is mostly controlled by parents. Fashion and mannerism as youth subculture‟s ways of communication become two characteristics forms of recuperation (ibid: 94). However, this process is shadowed by the commercialization created by various industries to make them marketable. With the process of commercialization youth subcultures, they are depoliticized, accepted into society and subsequently become a part of mechanism. Fashion as a symbolic system used for communication in a subculture has gradually been shifted by the industry to be a new commodity. Subcultural fashion is created differently considering the function of this symbol to communicate. Fashion gives young people strong appeal for them to follow the newest or most update fashion trend offered by market. It makes the meaning of early youth subcultures frozen since it is removed their private contexts by the small commitfrom to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 52 digilib.uns.ac.id entrepreneurs and become codified, made comprehensible, rendered at once public property and profitable merchandise (ibid: 96). Fashion of youth subcultures style are also being presented as an alternative and an aspiration for the normal person so that he or she can avoid homogenization and looking like „everyone else‟ in their increasing struggle for social power (Directo, 2006: 3) Besides fashion as the immense products of youth subculture, mannerism or behavior of a youth subculture is also another commodity highly exploited by various industries. However, the way in which youth subcultures are represented in the media makes them both more and less exotic than they actually are (Hebdige, 1979: 97). Youth subculture can be trivialized and domesticated in one side, but on the other side it can be transformed into meaningless exotica as a pure object and a spectacle (Barthes in Hebdige, 1979: 97). Hence, youth subculture is often represented as a group of deviant young people causing riot and chaos everywhere; by contrast, it can be defined as the normal young people who just want to express themselves. One of the ways media exploiting the two forms of youth subculture through its styles is represented within the music video. Besides become an effective promotional tool for the musician, music video has significantly changed the music industry since it has changed the habit of music consumer from the listener into the viewer. In America, it can be noticed after the distribution of television in the 1950s that make the dominance of visual over verbal information (Tetzlaff, 1986: 80). Behind this phenomenon, the dynamics of capitalism through the political economy acts shapes culture in a very powerful commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 53 digilib.uns.ac.id way. Capitalism makes decision on which commodities to produce and exchange purely on the basis of profitability. Here, culture is a form of commodity since it is also produced and distributed in the same way as other commodity (ibid: 82). Music videos nowadays do not simply form the ideology of a certain youth subculture but tend to sell the pleasure through everything appears on it (ibid: 84). The traditional form of ideology which is identified as the function of mind nowadays has been shifted into the modern one which also means that the replacement of persuasion and rationality with a direct fusion of item and response. This pursuit of pleasure is directed towards the products of the system (ibid: 86), including what can be found within a music video. Through music videos, which are mostly broadcasted by the phenomenal music videos television channel or MTV, the industries simply recycle the styles and offer the fascination to the viewers. In attracting the viewers‟ attention, this industry exploits the subcultural symbol systems which are torn from their referents in lived experience and social structure (ibid: 87). Each youth subculture‟s symbol systems is reduced to a variety of poses offered for young shopper, punker, metalhead, Emo, hip-hopers and other members of youth subcultures. In a music video, the visualization dominates the video but this visualization, in reality, is dominated by the lyric. The pictures, as what have been stated above illustrate the lyric which for sure is adjusted with the music genre. Punk, Metal, Hardcore and Emo genres are basically rooted from rock music. Those genres actualize the existence of youth subcultures of which each idea is used within the video (ibid: 88). In Emo for example, the concept of the video is commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 54 digilib.uns.ac.id regulated by the theme enclosed in lyric. Most of the music videos elements such as characters, costume, properties and so on are certainly adjusted with the theme carried by Emo music. Since, the function of each video is to sell the image of performers and its music; the media place the band or singers as the tastemaker subculture through its fashion, music, and every appealing feature. Similarly, Directo notes: For the public, the tastemaker subculture represents the instinctual knowledge of everything cool. By injecting products, clothing, and music into the public sphere through the tastemaker who promotes products by listening, wearing, or using them, he or she then becomes a spectacle. In an effort to possess this tastemaker status, consumers jump on the bandwagon so they, too, can be a part of the hipster subculture that is continuously ready to serve up the next important band/electronic device/fashion accessory. (Directo, 2006: 5) As a tastemaker subculture, the performer has a significant role in determining the viewers‟ perception of a certain subculture through the symbolic styles of a subculture. It means that everything performed by the performer is the right standard of how to be involved in certain subculture. The viewers of the music video influenced by the role of the performers as tastemaker subculture will indirectly follow everything performed by their idols including fashion and mannerism they show on the video. D. American Social and Cultural Condition in 2000s To understand why the commodification of Emo subculture is able to run well in 2000s, it is important to highlight what happen to American society which influences youth culture around 2000s. The 2000s is considered as a millennium era when the use of technology is significantly raising in order to make everything commit to user in life easier. As a result, the industry grows fast and the role of parents or adult perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 55 digilib.uns.ac.id people in social and economical life is highly demanded. Hence, most of American young people do not have close relationship with their parents. Parents have less involvement in their children‟s adolescence phase so that they tend to do risky actions such as drug use, despair, suicide attempts and mental illness involvement in finding their identity (http://www.libraryindex.com). Alternatively, most American kids choose the optional space to grow up outside of family. Youth subculture is considered as the right place for them to find the identity. The development of nowadays youth subcultures in America is influenced by the role of the media rather than the self awareness of establishing the youth subculture in demolishing the dominant standard of a society. American youth in this era are generally marked by the familiarity of adolescents with modern technology such as internet. The peer or group oriented widely increases in America not only through conventional way like having fun together in a certain place but also through an alternative way such as internet. The fast growing of online social networking sites and forums such as Livejournal, Makeoutclub, and MySpace, make young people tend to have virtual peer group oriented rather than the real one. Similarly Greenwald also states as follows: The dominant role the internet now plays in teenager‟s lives-mostly spend at least sixteen hours per week online- is both a profound change and the next step in larger chain of events that stretches back throughout the history. Teenagers have always felt persecuted and have always been so-called early adopters, seeking ways to connect with each other that are unique to their peer group. (Greenwald, 2003: 56) Emo subculture nowadays mainly grows up from this phenomenon. Through internet, young people have thetoultimate commit user tool or a private medium that perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 56 digilib.uns.ac.id their parents do not understand where they can easily trade, access and share music, ideas, feeling and support (ibid: 56). This community brings out cultural choices for young people as an escape for reality. It also constructs the early Emo as an underground community into a community of young people with the same taste on fashion, music preference and behavior. Various Emo bands also come out as result of this trend. Case in point, an Emo band called Thursday bloomed out by the beginning of December 2001 in Makeoutclub and Livejournal sites. Their popularity makes their video appears regularly on MTV2 and their singles peak on Billboard charts. In May 2002, most of American Emo Kids proudly wore Thursday t-shirt (ibid: 58). Early 2000s‟ American music is mostly dominated by pop, hip hop, R&Btinged pop, boy bands, girl bands and divas such as Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Backstreet Boys and Nsync. Their music conquers the American market from late 90s until early 2000s right before the 9/11 tragedy had happened. At that time, America was popular with „superpower country‟ label which can not be beaten by anything. The glamorous entertainment industries before and after the millennium era represent how powerful this country is. After the terrible event, America seems to lose its power because the superpower label has been dejected by 9/11 event. America needs a healing process for a short time which certainly makes most of American entertainment industries vacuum. To re-raise the entertainment business, the industries need to find another thing that remarkable and different from the previous stuff. Greenwald states that the media business which are very desperate post 9/11 tragedy, had found the next „big thing‟ for commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 57 digilib.uns.ac.id American young people that we will know it further as Emo. As what has been explained before that Emo concerns on seeing life from the gloomy side which coincidentally fits with American condition post 9/11. The re-emergence of Emo with its „emotional‟ term in media has represented what America in general feel at that time. Gloominess, sadness, depression and other related themes are well accepted in the entertainment industry. Though, there is a fact that the hedonistic, materialistic hip-hop still dominates the music charts and media, Emo could enter the media before it is dramatically famous (ibid: 141). In the wake of this success, many Emo bands are signed to major record labels so that everything related to this subculture becomes marketable products. The depoliticized nature of Emo through various media, coupled with its catchy music and accessible themes, give it a broad appeal to young audiences. E. Semiotic of Music Video 1. Charles Sanders Pierce’s Semiotic Theory Music video communicates messages and ideologies conveyed by the performers through audio and visual representation instead of becoming one of the musician‟s effective promotional tools. Similar like movie, music video also gives the artistic side behind its ideological and commercial force. MTV as the greatest and earliest media bringing various music videos to audiences has proven it, as Peeters also points out: The fact that MTV has become the ultimate forum on which youth culture is both expressed and constructed has transformed the music video not only into the most effective tool for promotion within the music industry, but also into a powerful commit to user ideological force.(Peeters, 2004: 2) perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 58 digilib.uns.ac.id Considering the artistic, commercial and ideological potential of the music video, it becomes necessary to investigate both the semiotics of the clip text and its function within society at a deeper level. For the investigation of an object of study as multidimensional as the music video, using signifiers from different sensorial domains, the field of cultural studies with its interdisciplinary approach can provide tools for interpretation (ibid: 2). Therefore, semiotics as the study of signs is applicable in analyzing music videos. To understand the meaning of the medium, it is important to study and interpret the various signs within it. Generally, the signs can be taken form of words, images, sounds, odors, flavors, acts or objects, et cetera. Charles Sanders Peirce, an American philosopher, states that a sign is something that represents something else (Peirce in Chandler, 2009: 3). The assemblage of signs, which are constructed and interpreted with reference to the conventions associated with a genre and in a particular medium of communication, often forms a text which is employed in semiotics analysis. Peirce creates a triadic model of sign creating which consists of three major elements correlating each other: Representamen (the form which the sign is taken which usually comes from unnecessary material), Interpretant (not an interpreter but rather the sense made of the sign) and Object (to which the sign refers). As he also has pointed out: 'A sign... [in the form of a representamen] is something which stands to somebody for something in some respect or capacity. It addresses somebody, that is, creates in the mind of that person an equivalent sign, or perhaps a more developed sign. That sign which it creates I call the interpretant of the first sign. The sign stands for something, its object. It stands for that object, not in all respects, but in reference to a sort of idea, which have sometimes called the ground of the commitI to user representamen' (ibid: 27). perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 59 digilib.uns.ac.id According to him, the object is considered as an instance of „firstness‟, the representamen as an instance of „secondness‟ and the interpretant as an instance of „thirdness‟ (ibid: 28). It is clearly noted that Peirce‟s representamen also functions as signifier while interpretant functions as signified. However, as the „firstness‟ the object or interpreter can determine the signs mode. Therefore, the interpretant is often influenced by the object as the interpreter. According to Peirce, the presence of the object between representamen and interpretant will create three modes of sign: a. Symbol is a mode in which the signifier does not resemble the signified but which is fundamentally arbitrary or purely conventional so that the relationship must be learnt. b. Icon is a mode in which the signifier is perceived as resembling or imitating the signified (recognizably looking, sounding, feeling, tasting or smelling like it) - being similar in possessing some of its qualities. c. Index is a mode in which the signifier is not arbitrary but is directly connected in some way (physically or causally) to the signified. 2. Semiotics of Music Videos Wollen states that film and television use all three forms: icon (sound and image), symbol (speech and writing), and index (as the effect of what is filmed) (Wollen in Chandler, 2009: 35). Since music video is a form of short moving commit to user 60 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id image, Peirce‟s semiotics theory is relevant to use in signifying the concept behind it. Music video is a form of audiovisual communication between the performers and its audiences in which the meaning is created through the correlation of its moving image, lyric and music. Using Peirce‟s semiotics theory, to analyze the concept within it, the image and music are employed as the icon while the lyric is employed as the symbol. The three essential parts in a music video are the moving image, the music and the lyric. The meaning is not only attained from how one part play a role in the music video but also from how those three aspects of music videos correlate each other. According to Carlsson, the imagery is gained from several flows of audio visual information including moving image, music, lyric and sometimes sound effect in the beginning or end of music video. These flows interact that the resultant meaning is perceived as one complete whole, created by both the ears and eyes. a. Moving Image Moving image on the music video basically has the same elements with film. According to Christian Metz, shot is the smallest element in a film which is comparable to words in language, scenes as sentences and sequence as the paragraph (Metz in Monaco, 2000: 160). It means that shot in a movie which physically defined as a single piece of film without breaking the continuity of film, functions as a sign to represent the meaning behind. Other pictorial commit to user 61 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id elements of moving images also express the concept behind the music video are divided according to the mise-en-scene and cinematography. Mise-en-scene is a theatrical process of staging which encompass the elements below: - Setting : location (place), sound stage (a built locale in which every variable of light and sound can be calculated to simulate whatever environment a filmmaker wishes to create) - Lighting : it functions as a property dealing with the control of light in a scene to establish mood and direct attention to detail. It also helps the viewers to understand setting as well as characters within that setting. Lighting is divided into three parts: Key light : it provides the primary key of a light source, tends to illuminate most strongly the shot‟s subject and also cast the strongest shadows. Key light is still divided into high key and low key light. It can be said as high key if there is a little contrast between bright and dark obtains soft and revealing of details. While low key tend to be in high contrast, harsh and hard. It is usually found in horror and mystery movie. Fill light : it is usually positioned near the camera roughly 120° or thereabouts from the key light which functions is to soften the illumination upon the subject and its surrounding area. commit to user 62 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Back light : it comes from behind the subject and separates the subject from the background, counterbalancing the brightness of the key light. - Costume : it relates to the wardrobe worn by the characters which functions to strengthen the characterization on a film based on its genre. - Hair & Make Up : similar with costume, hair and make up function to strengthen the characterization on a film. - Properties : it helps to amplify the mood and gives the further definition to a setting in a film. - Figure Behavior : it means to describe the movement, expressions of the actors and other figures (animals, animated figures, etc) within a given shot. Besides the elements of mise-en-scene, it is needed to notice on the elements of cinematography which basically encompasses everything to do with the camera: - Camera Framing : generally it deals with the placement of the camera which can be analyzed in terms of the distance between the camera and its subject. It is described by: • Extreme long shot (ELS) : in which one can barely distinguish the human figure • Long shot (LS) : in which humans are distinguishable but remain dwarfed by the background; commit to user • Medium long shot (MLS) : in which the human is framed from 63 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id the knees up • Medium shot (MS) : in which human is framed from the waist up • Medium close-up (MCU) : in which the human is framed from the chest up • Close-up (CU) : in which isolates a portion of a human (the face, most prominently) • Extreme close-up (ECU) : in which a mere portion of the face (an eye, the lips) is framed. - Camera Angle : it deals with the angle of the camera in relation to that which it records. - Camera Movement : the movements of the camera during a single shot including tilting, panning, tracking and so on. However, there is a distinction between moving images of a music video with the moving images of a film. The visual form of a music video is close to the musical form since it is made for an already existing tune. By manipulating color, motive setting, story footage clothing and so forth, the music video director creates a couple of idea which are repeated and varied (Carlsson, 1999: 3). This concept is used to rearrange visual motifs so that it forms a whole work. The visual motifs of music video are merging form of the three traditions of moving images: singing performance, visual story-telling or narrative and the non-narration of modern art. - Singing performance Singing performance which is also close to concert performance usually use the traditional basic formula of taking a popular singing commit to user performer and place him or her in a setting influenced by the musical 64 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id genre with the historic pop tradition of recording live performance on tape or film. The singing performance is commonly used to promote the performer‟s performance to the audiences and to give the viewers repeated images of performer‟s characters. (ibid: 4) - Visual story-telling or narrative Visual story-telling or narrative is carried by the lyric or the visual images, sometimes featuring a guest star and turning music video into mini film with specific generic identification (e.g. horror, gangster film, screwball comedy, western, noir, melodrama, women‟s picture) making the visual easier to remember and providing the spectator with a fabricated day dream with varying degree of space left for personal elaboration (Kinder, 1984: 4-5) - The non-narration of modern art As the opposition of the traditional singing performance, the nonnarration of modern art has been developed by the representatives of the 20-th century art forms and created experimental movies. In a nonnarration of modern art music videos, clip collages, paraphrases, animated abstract art computer graphics and unexpected combination of pictures may appear (Carlsson, 1999: 4) b. Element of Music Basically, music video is composed by adding images to music. Sometimes, the musical elements shape the moving pictures. For instance, commit to user 65 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id movements like footsteps are often synchronized with the beat so that people in the music video seem to walk in synch to the music (Carlsson, 1999: 2). Therefore, the analysis of musical properties is really needed because of the compact relationship between music properties and moving images in a music video. Since Emo is a subgenre of rock music, it is needed to know the elements of rock music to reveal the meanings behind. Like another music genre, rock consists of musical sound properties including pitch, dynamic, tone color and duration (Kamien, 2000: 4-69). - Pitch Pitch is determined by the frequency of vibration. - Dynamic Dynamic of music is separated into the of loudness and softness in the relation to the amplitude of the vibration that produces the sound. - Rhythm Rhythm is the flow of music through time separated into three related aspects, beat, accent and tempo: i. Beat Beat is a regular, recurrent pulsation that divides music into equals unit of time occurring every ¼ second and seldom happens every 1 ½ seconds. ii. Accent or Syncopation commit to user 66 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id A note is sometimes accented when it is held longer or higher in pitch than the notes near it. When an accented note comes unexpectedly, it will be known as syncopation. iii. Tempo Tempo is the speed of the beat, the basic pace of the music. A fast tempo shows the feeling of energy drive and excitement while the slower tempo contributes to a calm mood. - Melody Melody is a series of single tones which begins moves and ends, also has direction shape and continuity. - Harmony Harmony refers to the way chords are constructed and how they follow each other. A chord is the combination of three or more tones sounded at once or group simultaneous tones. The harmony of rock is usually simple since it consists of three or four basic chords. c. Lyric Besides moving images and music, lyric is another element to help the visualization within the music video. Different with film, in music video, the meaning is mostly influenced by the correlation of music and lyric since those two elements are formerly exist. As Carlsson also points out: In various music videos, the new meaning is added to the banal lyrics to metaphorical language…… the greater the leap between the content of the lyrics and the imagery in this metaphorical joining, the more difficult for the commit the to user viewers to understand and interpret context. (Carlsson, 1999:3) 67 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Generally, what appears on a music video has never been far from the visualization created by the moving image in order to make the viewers understand the message of the music video (ibid: 3). For example, if the word “sad” or “alone” is repeated due to the theme of a song then the visualization of moving image will mostly adjust itself to the concept of lyric and music. Lyric presented in the song is a linguistic sign with clear cut onsets. Their denotative semantic structure is completely determined by the autonomous linguistic meaning (Mazzola, 1997: 57). Hence, to understand the meaning of lyric in a music video, sometimes it is needed to notice on the semantic features of the lyric. commit to user 68 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id CHAPTER III ANALYSIS This chapter proposes the answers for the problem statement mentioned in chapter 1. Since the objective of this research is to understand the kinds of commodification of Emo as one of American youth subcultures represented by The Used‟s music videos, this chapter is divided into two major subchapters to specify the analysis. The division of subchapters is based on the most identifiable Emo youth subculture‟s symbolic system of communication which includes fashion and behavior. The first subchapter explains about the commodification of Emo subculture in fashion in The Used‟s music videos. Because fashion comprises on numerous parts, the analysis is classified into several points to explain the main subchapter in detail. The second subchapter gives an explanation about the commodification of Emo behavior within The Used‟s music videos. This second subchapter is divided into two major points to simplify the analysis about the commodification of Emo behavior found in the video. To deeply scrutinize the commodification of fashion and behavior in the videos, the analysis is not only based on the visual representation but also the audio representation of music and lyric. 1. The commodification of Emo Fashion within The Used’s Music Videos commit to user The huge numbers of youth subcultures are merely distinguished by the 68 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 69 digilib.uns.ac.id diversity of music genres because in music, young people find a right place to express their feeling when they are going through the adolescence phase within the society which is mostly defined by the standard of parent culture. Each youth subculture offers the acquirement of identity through various symbolic systems of communication including fashion and behavior. Fashion is the most visible symbol of a youth subculture applied by the members to emphasize that they are congregated in a precisely similar subculture. However, through the exploitation of the media, fashion of today youth subculture has been commodified from its previous function as the exclusive means of communication in a youth subculture into mass product of which everyone can wear. The role of media in defining the meaning of a youth subculture is contradictive. In one side, the media capture the bad side of youth subculture. Young people as the members of youth subculture are considered to dress and act so unconventionally in a society that they are regarded as threats because they do not appear to adhere to the dominant ideologies of dressing properly and acting civilized (Hebdige in Directo, 2006: 2). On the other side, the exclusivity of a group of young people in building their own system through fashion attracts media‟s attention to exploit the meaning of this symbolic system of subcultural communication. Through these two kinds of opposition created by media, there will be more people become familiar with youth subcultures‟ remarkable fashion since this fashion offer the uniqueness that cannot be given by the standard fashion in a society. This phenomenon gradually attracts the industries to produce similar stuffs and encourage consumers to apply the similar idea. This process has commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 70 digilib.uns.ac.id manufactured the early fashion as the exclusive means of communication into a marketable product. The similar process happens within Emo youth subculture. The previous label of Emo as a root of hardcore subculture applying DIY (Do It Yourself) ethic is slowly replaced by the image of Emo today exposed in the media. The Emo fashion has been widely commodified by the market that consequently Emo‟s early idea as an exclusive youth subculture is lost. Emo is not plainly a hardcore music-based youth subculture but also a new trend in youth fashion. Music video has a significant role how the Emo today is defined. Because of many bands have applied the Emo theme, the making of the music videos is not far away from Emo subject. The regular exposure of the Emo bands through the visual media like MTV and internet video sharing sites make the audiences easily identify the bands in their definite images (Peeters, 2004: 9). Consequently, if a band has been labeled Emo by the mainstream media, the adolescents who at first have been fascinated by those Emo bands‟ music will possibly idolize the bands appearance and follow everything they perform within a music video. By exploiting the idolatry thinking toward the bands, the music videos then change the attitude of the viewers into the active consumers. Fashion as the symbolic system is now easily watched within a music video, become the essential part of it and found everywhere in the fashion store (Tetzlaff, 1986: 87). The exploitation of Emo subcultural fashion is obviously found in most The Used‟s music videos. Fashion used by the performers including the band members and models within the videos is intended to sell Emo image of The Used to the commit to user 71 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id viewers. The visualization of The Used‟s lyric and music intermingled with the Emo fashion applied by the performers become the double-edged sword to convince the viewers about the fashion standard of being an Emo kid. This standard is possibly made to let the devoted viewers apply and duplicate what the performers present on the video. From ten of The Used music videos, it can be acquired that the process of commodification through fashion are stumbled on clothing, hairstyle, accessories and make up. Here, it is seen that Emo theme is highly exploited, fused with every elements of fashion and intended to produce the fashion standard of being the members of Emo youth subculture. a. Clothing To simply understand how Emo fashion has been commodified within the music videos, the analysis is separated into upper and lower body clothing. i. Upper Body Clothing for the upper part of body usually consists of shirt, t-shirt, polo shirt, blouse, jacket, sweater, sweatshirts, etc. Emo upper body clothing will approximately include various kinds of t-shirt and hoodie (a kind of hooded sweatshirts with a zipper). The colors of Emo upper body clothing are usually related with dark colors like black, dark blue, brown, grey and red blood to symbolize the major theme of this subculture: sadness, mysterious, gloominess, togetherness and the like. However, the shocking colors like bright pink, bright yellow and bright blue are commonly accepted, especially if they are applied in commit to user 72 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id boys clothing, to show the self-expression side of this phenomenal youth subculture (Simon and Kelley, 2007: 59) 1. Dark Colored T-shirt a. Gloominess Emo is always associated with the gloomy theme of adolescence phase, the colors like black, dark blue, red and other dark colors, dominate the appearance of the performers to support the related themes (ibid: 59). Instead of highlighting the gloominess, the exploitation of dark colors in Emo also raises the sense of mysterious and togetherness. In Emo, the gloomy theme is actualized by several dark colors applied in T-shirts. It can be seen from the appearance of Bert McCracken in I Caught Fire music video. The visualization of I Caught Fire music video represents the love life and relationship of young people within an Emo group whose life seem miserable because they have to live along the street, out of their home and family. The video‟s storyline deliberately exemplifies the general problem of young people, since in this adolescence phase love life is one of the complicated things approaching them. Emo as a youth subculture which sensitively notes on this problem has explored love theme in lyric and music reflected in I Caught Fire music video. Applying the singing performance semi narrative concept, this video is intended to give the general description of adolescents‟ love life embraced in Emo style. commit to user 73 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 In a scene of I Caught Fire, low key lighting generally strengthens the gloomy theme of this video. From 00:00:29 until 00:00: 31, the camera takes two medium shots of Bert McCracken, the lead vocalist of The Used wearing a navy blue T-shirt standing in front of a dark place with two lamps above him as the only source of light (Figure 1). Besides showing the performance of the band‟s lead vocalist, this scene also demonstrates Emo fashion through Bert‟s T-shirt (Figure 2). This scene appears as Bert sings the lyric “could we dim the sun and wonder where we‟ve been” while the drum dominates the music in a medium tempo so that Bert‟s voice is going to be spotlighted in audio as well as Bert‟s appearance in visual. The low key lighting used in this scene is intentionally connected with the word “dim the sun” to reinforce the gloomy theme of Emo. The phrase “Could we dim the sun and wonder where we‟ve been” here poetically refers to the relationship description of adolescents in an ironic way which is easily found in the general Emo lyrics. “Could we dim the sun” phrase sounds too overstating compared to the popular American love songs at that time which are dominated by pop music and R&B (Greenwald, 2003: 69). However, when Emo is generally publicized, the exaggerating poetical love songs have got more attention from the young listeners since the commit to user music have been answered the adolescents‟ need of expressing love in a more 74 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id sensitive way yet still wrapped in a noisy music which signifies the rebellion side of adolescents. Emo music is considered as breakthrough music compared to the common pop love songs at the millennium era due to the use of poetically love theme on rock songs. As the framing turns into medium close up shot, the typography of Bert‟s T-shirt becomes the main object of camera. The word “Saint” in big red size letter is shot simultaneously with red flash as the backlight (Figure 3). Through the use of “Saint” letters, Bert embodies the icon of „saint‟ through his T-shirt. Different with the meaning of saint in general which refers to holy person whose life is practicable this typography precisely creates a perception that Bert as the central object in the scene exemplifies the Emo fashion which is applicable for every viewer who wants to look Emo like him. Bert‟s appearance is purposely intended to match up with the lyric he sings, therefore, besides listening to the songs, the viewers are going to watch the fashion of being an Emo Kid figured out by Bert‟s T-shirt. In other scene, the rest of band members are also shot both on their performance and appearance within I Caught Fire music video. Figure 4 Figure 5 Figure 6 Figure 7 From the scene above, in a short duration of medium close up shot, Quinn the commit to user guitarist and Jeph the bassist become the objects of camera as the sounds of perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 75 digilib.uns.ac.id guitar and bass rhythm coming out. Besides focusing on their face in order to introduce and familiarize the guitarist and bassist to the viewers, the camera mostly focuses to their upper body clothing. In the left corner of the first medium shot (Figure 4), Quinn wears a tight black T-shirt while, Jeph in the right corner, wears the red and black outfit. The second medium shot of the camera (Figure 5), the objects are still placed in the same position but the low key lighting on their face turns from bright into dark blue. Like what happened to Bert in the previous scene, the light effect here creates the dark sense to highlight Emo major theme. Then as the drum‟s beats lead the song, the medium close up shot moves to the early drummer of The Used, Branden‟s appearance, who wears the similar outfit like Quinn does: a black T-shirt with certain typography on it (Figure 6&7). Like Bert and other band members, the dark colors applied in his T-shirt are aimed at signifying the Emo themes represented by The Used‟s song. The spotlight of The Used four members‟ appearances above gives an alternative choice for young viewers to express themselves through fashion in a simple yet sensitive way wrapped by Emo style. The simplicity offered by Emo fashion is different from most popular style of American youth at the early 2000s influenced by the appearance of pop, hip hop and R&B stars which mainly portrays the glamour lifestyle (Greenwald, 2003: 141). Post terrible incident of 9/11, the national suffering has shifted every sector of American life including youth lifestyle (ibid: 69). As American‟s life is getting insecure, the gloomy theme offered by Emo can represent what most young American feel. commit to user 76 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Having faded out by the terrible event, the entertainment industries have found out that Emo theme is the next big business. Emo can be easily accepted by American youth since it can mingle the gloomy feeling post 9/11 with the anxiety feeling of the adolescence phase. It means that American adolescents do not need another space to acquire the identity in the midst of national suffering because all that they need have been occupied by Emo as an alternative youth subculture to choose. This video is made in 2005 where the euphoria post 9/11 still influences most of American life which makes Emo become the most wanted stuff by American young people.. b. Togetherness Besides singing performance, I Caught Fire music video also applies the story telling concept through the performances and appearances of American suburban Emo Kids which are deliberately situated to strengthen the Emo theme. Figure 8 Figure 9 Figure 10 Figure 11 The camera takes the long shots of suburban Emo Kids which consists of boys and girls. Without any additional lighting source since it is outside framed, this scene is obviously shot in order to leave the idea of togetherness in commit to user Emo subculture and its members. The appearance of Emo kids are not shot one perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 77 digilib.uns.ac.id by one but in a group that consequently the viewers will notice on what appears on the scene. The four pictures above shows that Emo Kids approximately wear the same type of T-shirt of which colors are dominated by the of dark colors. Besides identifying the dim theme of Emo subculture, the dark color of their upper clothing symbolizes the togetherness and unity which is known as the root of any kind of youth subculture. Moreover, the first until fourth scene are shot using different setting of place in several American towns which is purposively used to emphasize the appearance of a group of American adolescents with the communal atmosphere. The similar color and style signify the unity and togetherness of Emo youth subculture to impress the viewers that the members could be everywhere together with the community either in happy or sad situation. The communal atmosphere here becomes a selling point within the scenes, because like what has been stated in the previous chapter that most American youth tends to have the virtual youth community rather than the real one regarding to the development of technology. The scenes trace back the meaning of being together in the real youth subculture. As it is known that togetherness sense id mostly found in the traditional youth subculture such as Punk in the early 1980s for example which was basically offering the sense of unity, mutuality and togetherness which were practiced by gathering living together in a street. The first long shot scene is shot from the edge of the street in a medium angle (Figure 8). This scene is captured from the beginning of I Caught Fire video at the same time as the melody of the guitar as the intro of the song is commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 78 digilib.uns.ac.id played. The appearance of those models in the beginning of the video commonly describes real Emo Kids as the members of youth subculture whose life is communal, mutual and underrated like what can be found in the early youth subcultures. By placing the camera in this angle, the Emo Kids‟ full appearances are shot in order to show the viewers what kind of outfit they wear. Simplicity and unity senses can be found in the first scene as well as other scenes. Compared to most of American adolescents‟ style at this time, around 2005, this scene offers an alternative choice of Emo fashion for young people different from the common fashion figured out by most pop icons. The close distance of the models in the first scene strengthens the mutual assistance among the members. This mutual assistance is the one that other popular icons can not exemplify. Popular stars in America are considered to strengthen the individualism sense revealed by their glamour appearances they show. The next scene is set on a crowded street to emphasize the similar sense. As the lyric “just stay with me, lay with me now” sung by Bert dominating the song, the scene appears (Figure 9). Added with the high pitch of Bert‟s voice as the scene emerges, the phrase of the lyric is used to emphasize the sense of togetherness. The appearance of the models within this scene has a tight correlation with the lyric sung by Bert because it can be literally interpreted as asking other people to „stay‟ or „lay‟ with those who sing the song. By wearing such kind of outfits, the performers look extremely different from the surrounding environment. It seems like the kids have an authority over their surrounding area through the fashion they wear. The scene describes the commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 79 digilib.uns.ac.id common phenomenon familiarly found in any youth subculture. The Emo Kids above are described to have their own world and freedom in a simple way through fashion. Generally, the sense of freedom, specialty and being different are what every youth subculture offers to the members. In adolescents phase most of young people try to get the fixed identity and when they find the place such as youth subculture offering the identification through fashion, it will attract young people‟s attention. Stalling also states: Simply put, our needs are not met by the "normal" world, so we create our own temporary autonomous zones, little havens where we are free to express ourselves as we choose. An identity evolves from this removal -- an identity built on pride of creation, expression and a bit of rebellion. We feel like we‟re part of something special, right? We‟re proud of who we‟ve become and what we‟ve created and we want to share it (Stallings, 2009) The alternative choice of fashion makes young people easy to define their identity. At the time before Emo is trending in America, the hipping fashion is popping-branded clothing reflected by popular icons on TV. This fashion is too exclusive for most adolescents who come from middle and lower class. For them, this is not the identity what they look for because they have to be rich first to wear such kind of outfits. By the appearance of simpler Emo fashion represented by this scene, the middle and low class adolescents have the optional way to find their identity through fashion without need to copy the stars‟ appearances. Moreover, the sense of unity and simplicity appeared on this scene is intended to alternate the individualism of the previous hipping youth subculture through their glamorous fashion. The next scene is a medium close up shot of the kids walking and running together on a public stair (Figure 10). The shot focuses on the upper commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 80 digilib.uns.ac.id body outfit they wear. It can be seen that T-shirts led by dark colors are shot as the lyric “I lost my place, could stay a while” sung by Bert, the vocalist. They move from one place to another place on foot while still using the same outfits like the previous scenes. Smiling faces shown by the performers bring the estimation that the simplicity and unity bring happiness although they have „lost their place‟. They can have fun together with friends using their youth spirit in a realistic way devoid of having several high quality stuffs, fashions and made-up appearances to be accepted in a group like what has reflected by the previous popular stars on TV. It is also strengthened by the next scene of the video, where the Emo Kids arrive on the edge of a road (Figure 11). The camera takes long shot of their similar appearance to gain the powerful impression of a youth subculture although it can be seen that their numbers are small. As Bert sings the bridgelyric in a high pitch voice over the assembling music “you can stand and watch me fall and of course I‟ll ask for help…just stay with me now”, the scene appears. It is told in the scene that the kids are waiting for the ride from the cars crossing over the road but nothing stops and lets them in. The phrase „you can stand and watch me fall‟ intermingled with the scene describes the power of the unity as if the kids were strong enough to survive in the community. The rest part of the phrase „just stay with me now‟ means that the kids can be strong if they are in a similar group with their friends no matter what happened to their surrounding life. This scene offers the viewers to get back to the root of youth subculture in a simple street life while in America at that time; commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 81 digilib.uns.ac.id adolescents are spoiled with the blink and expensive stuffs that can be found in the malls or shops. It also encourages the viewers who merely young people to leave their previous American youth lifestyle and move to the new subculture which is simpler to apply and more sensitive in revealing the sense of togetherness. Correlating with the making of the video around 2005, the scenes above are used to show that Emo is a youth subculture which put the value of togetherness within the subculture. The performers of the video have successfully performed a mutual group of young people wrapped in the Emo style. The mutual group description, however, can not be found on the mainstream video before Emo subculture raised since it has been that the hysteria of millennium might encourage American youth to live individually through the dream of personal success offering by pop stars like Britney and Christina. The individuality can not be fully applied in America post 9/11, though. America needs to reunite. The concept of unity and togetherness put on this video strengthens the perception that Emo is a right subculture for young people to join with. Joining with this subculture means that young people should communicate each other using the similar symbolic system of communication. In this case, the viewers have been dictated in wearing dark colored T-shirt, like what the performers in I Caught Fire music videos wear. Another The Used video, Buried Myself Alive also shows the dark color domination upon the upper body clothing. This video applies the singing performance semi narrative concept with the band members as the performers. commit to user 82 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 12 Figure 13 Using low key lighting added with obscure setting of place, the video impress the mysterious theme of songs which tends to darkness and gloominess. This theme is also supported by the hanging lamp as the only lighting source within the video. Starting with the appearance of Quinn the guitarist and Bert the vocalist in medium long shot frame, the viewers will be ultimately led to watch these two band members‟ upper body clothing (Figure 12). The extended melody of guitar riff mixed with the slow tempo of drum makes a long introduction of the music video which gives a chance for the performers to be shot one by one in the video. Low key lighting coming from swinging lamp over the band shoots Quinn appearance first. Like what can be seen on the scene, the guitarist wears a simple upper body outfit, however the dim light makes his appearance raise the dim effect too. He is shot first by the camera as the guitar riff dominates the intro of the song. This shot is also purposively made to make the viewers notice on Quinn‟s role as the guitarist of this band. Next to Quinn is Bert wearing black outfit: black T-shirt and black jeans. His position in this scene is deliberately closed to Quinn since he takes the role to sing after the intro ends. Their appearance in the beginning of the video is intended to bring the mysterious and darkness impression toward the commit to user viewers who watch them. The theme of this video is adjusted with the song perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 83 digilib.uns.ac.id title: “Buried Myself Alive” which literally gives the impression of mystery, death and depression so that the materials within the video are also accustomed with the basic theme. Then, the camera shifts into long shot frame where all the members of The Used are shot. The swinging lamp in the middle of the dark and obscure place focuses on two major dimness colors appearing on the costumes worn by the band members, as Bert sings the lyric “you almost always pick the best times to drop the worst lines” over the assembling band instruments beyond his voice (Figure 13). Semantically, „the best‟ is the antonym for „the worst‟ which in this lyric, those two words are mixed to describe an irony, a bitter sense of something which is still mysterious represented by the word „you‟. Related to the adolescence phase, it has been widely known that the changing process from childhood and adulthood encourage the children to find their identity. The anxiousness becomes the serious problem in this phase since most of the children experience it at the deep and painful level including American adolescents. As Anastasi also states: …American adolescents are suffering from a desperate need for connectedness, for a sense of belonging…they have an intense need to feel loved and accepted…adolescents need to express their pain and suffering in order for healing to take place… (Anastasi, 2005: 303) Why is anxiety theme shown in the video through fashion? Besides representing American youth aspiration in facing the adolescence phase, it also represents what America faces at the time post 9/11. Having beaten by terrorist, America feels the anxiousness which has knocked down everything in her life. commit to as user Emo in this video is not only interpreted the youth subculture which explore 84 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id the anxiety feeling of youth but also all American. The anxiety theme of Emo subculture has been commodified and represented through the fashion of The Used‟s members which then become the right representation of what America has experienced. Applying the similar formula like Buried Myself Alive, another video of which band members‟ fashion are dominated by dark color, is Take It Away. Still using singing performance semi narrative concept, the band members become the objects of camera within the video. Besides showing the gloominess, this video also shows the rebellion theme through the fashion the performers wear. It can be noticed from the opening of the video when the band members play music on a rooftop. The fast tempo of music guiding by high pitch of guitar chord and quick drum along with the screaming vocal of Bert raises an impression that everything shown in this video is related to the rebellion theme revealed by the fashion they wear. Figure 14 Figure 15 Figure 16 From the pictures above, it can be seen that black color is applied in every band members‟ T-shirt as they begin to play with their own instruments passionately (Figures 14). Black colors applied on their upper clothing are the index of power (http://www.infoplease.com/spot/colors1.html). If it is applied commit to user on clothing worn by young people especially those who are members of Emo, perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 85 digilib.uns.ac.id it does not only indicate the gloomy sense but also rebelliousness as it can be seen in the beginning of this video. The long shot camera used in the beginning of the video together with the band members‟ performances indicate that the black color on their clothing is an index of defiance act of adolescents represented by Emo Kids. The long duration of the scene mixed with direct lighting of their performance draw the index of rebellion from the color that dominated their T-shirts. While the other band members are playing their instruments, Bert screams „Get down!‟ loudly in the opening of the song until he bows down because of the overrated high pitch of his voice. Screaming in Emo music is commonly used to express the painful feeling through the song assembled with the high pitch of guitar chord in the slow tempo. However, when screaming technique is applied in this scene simultaneously with the quick tempo of noisy music, the meaning is shifted into the combination of pain and anger expression. The rebellious theme represented through the performers‟ appearance has also been strengthened by Bert‟s prolog before this song, „Take It Away‟, begins „Life's greatest questions have always been: Who am I? Where did I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going?‟ The prolog of this song in reality reflects the anxiety feeling of adolescence phase which has been faced by common American adolescents. In general, adolescents face the similar questions in finding their real identity like: who they really are, where they came from, why they are in a certain condition and where they are going to go. This scene from the video made on 2004 catches the adolescents‟ anxiety commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 86 digilib.uns.ac.id within Emo‟s circle and reveals it through The Used band members‟ performances. The other rock-based subcultures in 2000s encourage the members to fight back the standard of the society, but Emo which raises the gloomy theme has encouraged the members to be radical in the sensitive way. The black color on The Used members‟ T-shirts does not only represent the rebellion of youngsters but also the national grief. It is because American youngsters in this Emo era have been affected by the terrible event of 9/11. Like their parents, it is needed for the youngsters to experience national grief on their growing-up period. Repeatedly, Emo subculture in 2000s has occupied the rebellion and grief in a compact subculture. The performance of The Used members on this video shows that Emo theme have been commodified since it is very different from the basic concept of Emo in 1980s when the members of subculture focused on the only way to rebel the society due to the anxiety feeling of youngsters without involving the society grief within subculture. 2. Bright Colored T-shirt Besides applying dark colored T-shirts, Emo fashion is also known for the use of bright shocking colors especially on the boys‟ T-shirt. In the video Blue and Yellow, the singing performance concept is applied that makes the video seem like a video-biography of the band. The position of Bert as a central object of camera in this scene is intended to get the most attention from the viewers since in the audio form singers have effectively delivered the core meaning of a song through their voices. Therefore, to actualize the meaning of commit to user 87 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id a song through a music video, the vocalist gets the most portions of camera shot. Similarly, Peeters also states that “Singers have always had a superior status to both their orchestra and their public, since on an auditive level, they were the anthropomorphic, most prominent element in the musical ensemble” (Peeters, 2004: 7. At this point, Bert becomes the most shot figure in the video to show his appearance especially when wearing bright colored T-shirt. Figure 17 Figure 18 The first scene shows how the camera takes a medium shot of Bert wearing yellow T-shirt while singing a song in the closed eyes in front of other band members who are still wearing black colored T-shirt (Figure 17). Yellow color in fashion is a symbol of cheerfulness and confidence which is commonly applied in female fashion (http://www.infoplease.com/spot/colors1.html). The exploitation of yellow color through Bert‟s T-shirt in the video is proposed to give the legal mark for boys in wearing bright colored T-shirt. The bright colors are rarely applied in other rock-based youth subculture‟s fashion especially for boys because applying bright colors on the clothing is considered diminishing the masculinity sense of the boys themselves. Moreover, bright color like yellow in Emo‟s fashion is also employed to give the artistic sense of this youth subculture which will not be found in another rock-based youth subculture like commit to user metalhead, hardcore and punk. 88 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id The next scene in the video shows the medium close up of Bert facing the camera quirkily while still using the same T-shirt (Figure 18). Here, Bert wears a kind of girl‟s hair accessory on his hair. As it has been stated before that, it is commonly known that bright color especially yellow is usually applied in women‟s fashion, however, if it is added with the wearing of Bert‟s girl hair accessory, it means that he has emphasized the concept of “Emo pretty boy”. Bert‟s appearance signifies the freedom of Emo boys in expressing their appearance. It means that the scene is intentionally made to show the freedom of expression in fashion especially for boys, since they can freely express themselves without being ashamed of the term „feminine‟. Aaron Anastasi in his journal writes that many American young boys are eager to be understood and they want connection with others as well as the accompanied healing. However, this longing for nurture is often kept silent because it is seen weak and feminine (Anastasi, 2005: 304). Therefore boys experience pain and need to connect with others at an emotional level in order to heal from the syndrome. In Emo, boys can express freely express themselves unlike the other rock-based youth subculture which indirectly proscribes the use of the bright colors in their fashion since it diminishes the sense of strong and masculine. Emo as a youth subculture which perceives adolescence phase more sensitively is an appropriate place for boys to express themselves since Emo welcome the use of „less masculine‟ fashion like the wearing of bright colors T-shirts. commit to user 89 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Another video which shows the use of bright colored T-shirt is A Box Full of Sharp Object. This video also applied the singing performance concept in which the band members‟ performances become the object of the camera. Below is the scene of Bert wearing a girl T-shirt when performs in a stage. Figure 19 Figure 20 From those scenes, it is obviously seen that Bert wears a tight pink T-shirt. Pink is the commonly applied on girls stuff including T-shirt. The pink T-shirt here is used to show the freedom of boy‟s expression in fashion. The medium shot of Bert singing crudely on the stage is contrary with the upper body clothing he wears, though (Figure 19). The fill light of this scene coming from the stage is equivalent with the tight outfit he wears, however, the T-shirt is also combined with the typography “Sex, Drugs and Rock „n Roll” on it which deliver the contrast meaning from a feminine sense. From the first scene, it can be observed that Bert wears T-shirt in different color like Quinn, in the left side, does. Considering the position of the singer as the most shot character in the video, this scene is intended to show the viewers about the uniqueness of Bert as the role model of Emo‟s fashion. The much portions of Bert as the object of camera here means that everything put on him is noticeable including his bright pink T-shirt and its typography. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 90 digilib.uns.ac.id The typography “Sex, Drugs and Rock n‟ Roll” used here refers to the common rockers‟ symbol of lifestyle. Combined with the fast tempo and beat of band‟s instrumental using in this scene, the use of this typography on Bert‟s T-shirt apparently means that Emo kids are also like usual adolescents of other rock-based youth subculture who have a big enthusiasm in expressing themselves to win a space toward the standard norms in a society. In America, the slogan “Sex, Drugs and Rock n‟ Roll” was widely popular among young people whose music taste is rockers around 1980s. The combination of tight girl T-shirt and this popular typography is purposively made to show the viewers that Emo Kids can be like common adolescents who become the members of a youth subculture in rebelling the normal standard although they face everything happens in adolescence vulnerably. The sense of youth subculture‟s enthusiasm reflected by Emo can also be found in the next scene which is a medium long shot of Bert spurting beer from his mouth on the stage while still wearing the same T-shirt (Figure 20). These two scenes show the commodification of boys‟ outfit in the Emo youth subculture. Bright colored T-shirt, which is peculiarly used by boys of any kind youth subcultures, is a breakthrough in young boys‟ fashion since the boys especially for those whose members of a certain youth subculture never match to those kinds of bright color in order to keep the code of masculinity. Bert‟s scene above is an icon of Emo boys‟ self-expression. It is intended to give an explanation to the viewers that Emo admits the self expression of boys through the wearing of bright colored clothing. The legalization of using bright commit to user 91 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id colors on fashion makes Emo is considered as a discarded subculture since most of Emo boys actualize their appearance in the ways the girls usually do. The phenomenon of using bright colored T-shirt happens since the emotional term in „Emotional Hardcore‟ has now been highly dejected by the media. It means that the vulnerability and weakness is the common thing used to describe Emo today. Related to the masculinity, before Emo is a popular, adolescent boy especially those who are members of certain rock-based youth subculture, such as metal, punk and hardcore, are not allowed to be vulnerable. Boys as the members of youth subculture are dictated to be strong and macho. They are forbidden to cry and wear girly stuffs. In fact, Post 9/11 is the period when strong and macho concept is demolished. America is getting weak that nothing obstructs her young generation involved in its weaknesses. Everything is getting weak and vulnerable. Throuht the making of the Blue and Yellow music video in 2003, it is signified that Emo subculture is exposed at the right time, of course for commercial purpose, in which boys can express themselves in less masculine side portrayed by wearing girly stuff like what Bert shows within the video above. It is very contrast to the early Emo on 1980 which put the concept of strong and masculine through the practice of their daily life influenced by the Hardcore and Punk idea. 3. Hoodie commit to user 92 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Hoodie is a kind of upper body clothing which is usually identical with the appearance of Emo Kids. Hoodie promise the sense of anonymity, mystery and anxiety for anyone who wears it. Emo boys often wear hoodie in order to cover their head so that everybody surround them will not pay attention to their presence instead of rising the mysterious and recluse effect. The shape of hoodie is like a hooded sweatshirt with or without zipper. Some of The Used videos like Taste of Ink, The Bird and The Worm and Blue and Yellow show how the hoodie becomes a commodity in Emo subculture. Figure 31 Figure 42 Figure 5 3 Figure 64 Since A Box Full of Sharp Object music video is considered as The Used earliest video, the concept of the video is singing performance in form of music video biography. The angle of the camera is placed straightforwardly in front of each band‟s member in order to make them familiar to the viewers of the videos. All of the band members in this video wear similar type and color of hoodie. The first frame shows how camera takes a long shot picture of Bert to user wearing a black hoodie while commit rising his hands and singing the lyric “it‟s our perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 93 digilib.uns.ac.id time to shine through the down glorified by what is ours” as if he was on the stage (Figure 21). The second until fourth pictures shows the medium close up shot of other band members using an airport as the setting of place. The second picture takes Jeph the bassist as a main object (Figure 22). From the black outfit he wears, it can be obviously noticed that he wears a kind of hoodie of which hood covering his head. In a short duration, then the camera moves to another band member, Branden, the early drummer (Figure, 23). Still using the medium close up shot, Branden‟s upper appearance using hoodie is stunning enough as well as Quinn‟s in the fourth frame (Figure 24). The natural fill lighting demonstrating the same color of hoodie which is also assembled with the music of their band is intended to catch the attention of the viewers over the upper clothing they wear. Added with the fast tempo of every instrument‟s beat, the pictures above are purposively captured to show that all of the band members are familiar with the use of hoodie as their daily clothing. In Emo, where sadness theme majoring this youth subculture, the expressiveness of the members is often represented by the kind and color of clothing they wear, like what can be observed from the presence of hoodie in their fashion since it has been acquired before that hoodie promise the sense of mystery and anxiety which full match with the themes brought by Emo. The similar phenomenon can also be analyzed from other videos like Taste of Ink and The Bird and The Worm. In Taste of Ink music video, which applies the singing performance and narrative concept, Bert persistently becomes the center object within the video. It is told that Bert is a young boy commit to user 94 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id who has a phobia to any kind of light. He runs away from the lightened up buildings, rooms and streets in order to avoid the light. Figure 25 28 Figure 26 Figure 27 Figure The first picture of Bert captured with the medium close up shot shows his fear toward the light (Figure 25). He wears hoodie to cover his head and shun the light coming directly to his face. Instead of showing the narrative side of the video, the position of Bert in the scene firm up the gloomy and vulnerable side of an Emo Kid through the dark background of the video mixed with the hoodie he wears. Bert strengthens the sense of gloominess by singing the lyric „you know I hate light‟ repeated twice over the assembling music from other band members‟ instruments. His appearance on the scene, along with the lyric he sings, represents the gloomy side of this youth subculture that Emo Kids will always be related to the anxiety and vulnerability. The second picture is a long shot scene of Bert situated on a minimarket. commit tohim user Compared to other customers surround who wear standard outfits, he looks 95 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id very different by wearing hoodie. Although it is shot in short duration, it has delivered an idea of being cool and unique in a new way. In America, hoodie is considered as breakthrough clothing for young people in the early of 2000s because the most dominant clothing at that time are influenced by the appearance of various pop stars in the media which are dominated by glamour colors and patterns. Wearing hoodie is popular among Emo Kids since it is identical with the notion of anxiety, mysterious, introvert and solitude. It can obviously be seen form the next scenes. The medium close up shot of Bert standing over a big table with some lamps as the back light makes him looks appealing by wearing hoodie (Figure 27). Together with singing the lyric: “I'm so apathetic in my resentment. Living, loving, knowing not”, Bert as a figure of Emo Kid is purposively shot to convey the lyric he sings with his appearance in wearing hoodie to strengthen the sense of „apathetic‟ which has been the theme of Emo itself. Wearing hoodie in this scene implies the meaning of being cool and different. While the next scene is a long shot of Bert sitting in the corner of a bus without anybody surrounds him (Figure 28). Contrast to the previous view of being cool and unique, this scene gives the impression of an adolescent boy‟s loneliness. Head covered by hoodie while sitting alone pathetically emerge an impression of loneliness and sadness. As it is widely known, those two ideas are included as the major themes in Emo subculture. The wearing of hoodie can also be initiated from the video The Bird and The Worm. Besides exposed by the band members, hoodie is also carried by the models of the music video. commit to user 96 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 29 32 Figure 30 Figure 31 Figure The four pictures above are capture from the beginning of this video. The absence of the band‟s music in this scene is deliberately used to let the audiences see the appearance of the performers within these scenes. First scene is a medium shot of a boy who becomes the model of this music video (Figure 29). Using the same concept, singing performance semi narrative, this video tells the viewers about the back stage situation of The Used‟s concert. The medium shot of the boy placed between other audiences make him become a center object of the camera. It can be noticed that his appearance reflects the general appearance of Emo Kids. Tight hoodie is the most noticeable outfit he wears affirming the general fashion of Emo Kids. Using the high key lighting, the video tries to deliver an idea to the viewers that hoodie is a fashion requirement to be considered as an Emo Kid. This idea is more reinforced by the second scene where a boy is placed exactly in front of the camera (Figure 30). The boy who is dissolved by the camera wears a kind of black hoodie commit to user which can be seen from his upper hooded part. This scene is used to emphasize perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 97 digilib.uns.ac.id the previous scene‟s impression where hoodie is standardized as the right clothing in Emo subculture that has to be worn by the members. While the third and fourth picture are the scenes where Bert, the vocalist becomes the main object of the camera. The third picture is a medium close up scene of somebody resembling Bert wearing hoodie to cover his head (Figure 31). Added with the high key light, this scene brings out the sense of strange and mysterious. Here, the hoodie boy looks different and strange from his surrounding. By wearing hoodie, the boy wants to reveal the image of Emo youth subculture which commonly conveys the idea of anxiety and gloominess. The fourth picture is a medium close up of Bert wearing hoodie while staring at his shadow in the mirror (Figure 32). The camera directly put Bert as the main object in order that the viewers can notice only on his appearance. The placement of Bert in the middle of the camera is intended to give the cool sense of an Emo boy after wearing hoodie. As it is known before that hoodie is a kind of remarkable fashion among American youth especially in the 2000s and here, the video want to take hoodie as part of Emo‟s fashion since hoodie reveals the sense of anxiety and mysterious. Hoodie as fashion are highly popular in 2000s as Emo subculture gets the high exposure from media. The phenomenal use of hoodie does not only give the sense of cool but also mysterious and anxiety. Similar like what has been stated in the previous discussion about clothing and anxiety, this clothing has commodified the anxiety theme through fashion since it has represented both of American youth‟s anxiety feeling and also American anxiety in general post commit to user 98 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 9/11. By merging this formula, hoodie is considered as the new youth clothing to sell. When everything is gloomy, the gloomy-related stuff is the right choice to buy. The American media, of course take the role on how the clothing is sold to the audiences with the term „mysterious yet cool‟ like what can be found on the scenes above. ii. Lower Body In Emo fashion today, the clothing for lower body is mostly tight pants, black tight jeans and sometimes stovepipe jeans. Jeans is now popular as a casual dress among young people because of its long lasting use. It is commonly worn by young people to show the freedom of self expression in fashion especially in choosing the lower body outfit. In Emo, tight jeans are commonly worn by the members of Emo bands and Emo Kids. The occasional appearance of band members on the video wearing the similar type of jeans makes this lower outfit popular among the viewers. This trend can also be found obviously within The Used music videos. Almost all of the videos show jeans as the commodity in Emo fashion particularly sorts of tight jeans which has become the symbolic style of communication in Emo. Filmed on 2002, A Box Full of Sharp Objects music video‟s performers who all are band members use jeans as their lower body clothing. It can be noticed from the appearance of each band member using singing performance concept of music video. commit to user 99 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 33 Figure 34 From the first picture, the long shot of Bert‟s singing performance shows the whole outfit put on his body (Figure 33). In the case of lower outfit, it can be seen that Bert wears a kind of black jeans which signifies the common fashion of Emo Kids. The scene shows the rude singing performance of Bert in a small studio. It can be seen here that Bert, the lead vocalist of The Used strengthens the icon of Emo Kid through the outfit he wears, especially his lower body clothing: black jeans. This shot is assembled with the noisy music of The Used where the guitar, bass and drum sound are intermingled and played in the fast tempo of sound. The noisy sound of music signifies the characteristic of The Used in revealing the meaning of Emo in a more deafeningly way. The next scene is a medium shot of Bert while singing in another stage (Figure 34). The similar outfit put on Bert‟s body shows the similar function of these two shots: to let the viewers see the use of black tight jeans as the fashion rule in Emo. Moreover, this scene shows the performance of Bert while screaming loudly till he cannot stand anymore. It has been known that screaming technique is often used by most of Emo bands nowadays to highlight the painful feeling of the song. Through this scene, the video wants to deliver an image of Bert as an icon of Emo Kids wearing the black outfit while screaming the song on the commit to user stage. 100 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id The next video made on 2003 is Taste of Ink. This video also shows the commodity of jeans through the band members‟ fashion. Using singing performance semi narrative concept, the video delivers the story about the daily life of suburban Emo kids in relation to their family, job and friends. After getting bored with their daily businesses, the kids are gathering and expressing themselves through various ways including through the way they dress themselves. The lower body clothing dominated by jeans is purposively used to show the expressiveness of young people represented by the band members. Though the jeans shown are not in black tight shape, as it is usually found in common Emo kids‟ clothing, it still proves that jeans as the biggest commodity for lower clothing among them to show the simplicity, expressiveness and freedom in choosing lower body outfit. Figure 35 Figure 36 The first medium long shot of band members from the backside emphasize on the outfits they wear. The three of band members are walking toward the garage wearing the same kinds of jeans (Figure 35). Using nighttime as the setting of time combined with the outfit they wear is an icon of American suburban kids‟ freedom of expression. The night is acknowledged as a time for people to get a rest; yet, this scene shows the specialty of some kids who has commit to user their time after other people get rest. The second scene is also a medium long 101 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id shot of the four of band members inside the garage (Figure 36). This picture is acquired from the last part of the video when the band members are finally chatting and laughing to relax themselves after finishing their own business. The leisure atmosphere is seen from various aspects: the garage room they settle in and the way they dress themselves. Through the similar jeans they wear, it can also be explained that the kids have the same ideas of embodying the freedom to express themselves. Another video applying the singing performance concept, Blue and Yellow also highlights the band members‟ appearance in wearing the similar jeans as their lower body clothing. Figure 37 Figure 38 The first picture is the opening scene of the video telling about the band‟s acoustic performance (Figure 37). In this angle, through the camera‟s medium long shot, it can be seen here that four of the band members wear the similar kind of black jeans. Moving to the second picture, it is a stage performance of the band (Figure 38). From this medium long shot, the band members are shot since they still wear the similar kind of black jeans. The label as an Emo band makes everything they wear is always associated with Emo stuffs. In this case, the black jeans they wear are icons of common Emo fashion it the early rising commit to user of this subculture, for about 2003. 102 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Take It Away is The Used‟s first video exploiting the wearing of black tight jeans in 2004. At that time, black tight jeans are very popular as a dressing code of being an Emo Kid in America. Through the frequent appearance of band members within the video, it can be noticed that black tight jeans they wear have become the main commodity to emphasize that the band members are congregated in the Emo subculture. Figure 39 Figure 40 Those two pictures are the long shots of the band members performing their song over a rooftop. With the minimum back light, the focus of the camera is mainly on their appearance. The outfit they wear, which are dominated by black color, is an icon of common outfit worn by rock bands. Rock music is merely identical with the notion of self-confidence and coolness through the clothing worn by the band members. Since Emo is a sub genre of rock, the band members‟ appearances also have the similar function like the other rock band members do. In terms of lower clothing, Emo has its own characteristic like the wearing of black tight jeans. The performers in this video wear that kind of lower body clothing that purposively become main object within the first and second picture. It can be seen in the first scene, the camera takes long shot performance of band members from front part of the camera (Figure 39). commit to user Through the sparkling backlight, Quinn and other band members except Bert 103 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id are noticed in wearing the similar kind of jeans: black tight jeans. As the opening scene of Take It Away music video, this scene comes with the noisy sound of music behind it to signify that The Used is similar like other rock bands members which highlights the fast tempo and beat of each instrument. Moving to the second picture, it is a long shot performance of band members from the back side (Figure 40). Similar like the first picture, this picture takes the band members‟ appearance as the main object. Bert‟s position in the middle of the camera gives a space for other band‟s members to be shot by the camera. The way Quinn, the guitarist, dresses himself especially seen from the lower outfit he wears: black tight jeans, emphasizes the common Emo fashion popular at the time the video is being aired. The next video is I Caught Fire which has been released in the early of 2005. The video applies the singing performance semi narrative concept. Besides using band members as the model in the music video, this music also employs the performance of the suburban Emo Kids to strengthen the band‟s image as one of the Emo band. Figure 41 Figure 42 In spotting the performance of the Emo Kids as the models including their appearance, the video use the narrative concept. The left picture above is the scene in the beginning of thecommit videotowhere user a couple of young people are 104 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id narrated being in love (Figure 41). It can be seen that the boy takes the girl on his lap. They wear similar but different kind of jeans. The boy wears a kind of tight blue jeans while the girl wears torn blue jeans. Those two jeans, however, are very popular among young people especially those who are involved in the subcultural action. The spotlight of those two models‟ appearance is used to give the description that those models of the video are also involved in the subcultural action especially Emo. The scene then moves to the performance of Quinn, the guitarist who wears the same kind of tight blue jeans like the boy‟s from the previous scene (Figure 42). The medium shots of the camera on the Quinn and the boy‟ similar appearance is used to highlight the hipping Emo fashion at the time the video being aired. From those scenes, it can be noticed that the band wants to communicate to the viewers that they are also a part of Emo kids through fashion. However, those two scenes are intentionally proposed to convince the viewers that the fashion they wear is a requirement to be involved as the members of Emo subculture. To conclude, tight jeans are previously popular in America for girls‟ fashion. Related to the discussion of the bright-colored T-shirt, tight jeans are commodified as the standard of being an Emo Kids since the emotional term in „Emotional Hardcore‟ has now been dejected by the media, the vulnerability and weakness is the common terms used to describe Emo today. Post 9/11 is the period when strong and macho boy is demolished. America is getting weak which makes emotional on the „Emotional Hardcore‟ exposed at the right time commit to user 105 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id that the boys can express themselves in feminine way portrayal by wearing tight jeans. b. Hairstyle Hairstyle refers to the styling of the hair usually used by young people to show their expression. Hairstyle is also used by the members of certain youth subculture to communicate each other and to distinguish themselves from other youth subcultures‟ members. If another youth subculture like Punk is very popular with its bright Mohawk hairstyle, Emo will be famous among young people for its black long hair style often added with long side bang covering the members‟ faces. Sometimes, there is also an exploitation of colors in Emo hairstyle like brown, blonde and bright red is acceptable. This kind of hairstyle is also found within The Used‟s music videos applied both by the members of the band and the models in the video. i. Medium Long Straight Hair a. Bert McCracken‟s hairstyle Figure 43 Figure 44 commit to user Figure 45 106 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 46 Figure 47 Figure 48 As the vocalist, Bert has huge chances to be shot by the camera. It can be proved from those pictures above where Bert is shot using medium close up and close up shot. Those pictures are captured from different videos made from 2002 until 2005. It can be seen above that Bert signifies the notion of Emo boy trough the hairstyle he used. His steady hairstyle make Bert has a strong characteristic among the fans and the members of Emo subculture. The six pictures above put Bert as the model while singing along the video. The first picture is captured from The Used first video on 2002 entitled A Box Full of Sharp Objects. On all of the pictures, Bert is shot using close up shot mode. His smiling face mixed with his brown long hair shoot with bright light emerge an impression of cool Emo boy (Figure 43). This scene is captured from the very first video of The Used which is intentionally made to introduce the characteristic of Bert to the audiences. The shots of Bert‟s appearance are repeated again in the second until sixth pictures captured from the different videos (Figure 44 – Figure 48). Those captures of Bert show that he has the same kind of dark hairstyle. The singing performance concept applied in each video is intentionally made to fix the image of Bert as the Emo boy with his long hair. They are purposively made to emphasize Bert‟s position as icon of Emo kids through his hairstyle.commit However, the shoot also notices on his new hair to user 107 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id looks in the latest videos. Figure 49 Figure 50 Figure 51 The first picture is a medium long shot of Bert in the video The Bird and The Worm made on 2007 where Bert appears with his new hairstyle: long blonde hair (Figure 49). Added with the high lighting, this scene tries to emphasize Bert‟s hair as a breakthrough in Emo hairstyle in which Emo criterion does not always related to dark colors anymore. These scenes are also made to give the audiences the alternative choice of choosing another Emo hairstyle since as it is known that in the previous videos, the perception of a cool Emo boy is always related to Bert‟s dark hairstyle. However, if it is seen from other pictures, the Bert‟s image is returned as an Emo kid through the changing color of his hair from blonde to black through the making of two latest videos, Blood on My Hands in 2009 and Empty with You in the late of 2009 (Figure 51 & Figure 52). It is widely known in previous time that Emo is identical with the black long hair hairstyle. From the medium close up shot of the second and the third picture added with the high light for the singing performance concept, it can be noticed there that Bert‟s position is brought back to the previous image of Emo Kids through his black hair. b. The Models‟ hairstyle commit to user 108 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Besides Bert, another typical of Emo hairstyle is also applied by the models within the videos. This sort of Emo hairstyle can be found in some of music videos which applies the narrative concept like The Bird and the Worm made in 2007 because using this concept, the performers are not only the band members but also the models. Figure 52 Figure 53 Those two pictures are captured from the opening scene of The Bird and The Worm music video. The situation here is the backstage of The Used‟s music concert. The camera takes a medium close up shot of the models playing roles as the audiences of The Used concert. Through these shots, it can be noticed that their hairstyle become the main objects of the camera conveyed in high quality light. The first picture is a girl model whose hair is typically Emo hairstyle: black, straight, and medium sized (Figure 52). The next picture also describes a boy model with the same typical of Emo hairstyle like the girl model has (Figure 53). Those scenes are intended to give the description of the common Emo hairstyle applied by the usual Emo kids besides to strengthen the image of The Used as an Emo band through the models‟ hairstyle. ii. Side Bang (Fringe) The most noticeable characteristic of Emo kids is the use of long side commit to user bang on their hairstyle. As cited on 109 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id http://www.ehow.com/way_5445617_types-emo-hairstyles.html, Boys with Emo haircuts usually also have side-swept bangs. Their hair is grown out so that their bangs cover most of a particular side of their face, and their hair is generally parted to one side or the other. Within the music videos, this kind of hairstyle is also applied by the members of The Used especially Quinn and Jeph. The frequent use of long side bang of the members is not only for strengthening both characters but also the band image as an Emo band whose members have the characteristic of Emo Kids which is gained from the use of hairstyle. Figure 54 Figure 55 Figure 56 Those three pictures place Quinn, the guitarist as the object of camera which most of them expose the typical hairstyle owned by him. The first picture is a scene from Blue and Yellow video where Quinn is shit in a close up mode so that his hairstyle becomes the main center of attention instead of his face (Figure 54). It can be noticed here that he has a typical of side-banged hairstyle. The second picture is a scene captured from All That I‟ve Got video (Figure 55). In this scene, Quinn is placed in the far right of the camera. Similar with the previous picture, Quinn‟s hairstyle with side bang covering his face are shot in medium close up shot to give a maximum shot portion to his commit to user hairstyle. The third picture also gives the same impression like the first and 110 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id second picture do. It is a scene captured from The Bird and The Worm video which applies the narrative concept telling about the band‟s activity before the concert begins. The medium long shot of Quinn in the middle of fans supported with the high light focuses on his appearance with side-bang hairstyle which makes him easily recognizable among the other models of the video. Like Quinn, the bassist, Jeph‟s appearance is also shot to give the specific characteristic as an Emo Kid through his hairstyle. Figure 57 Figure 58 The first picture above is a scene from Blue and Yellow music video made on 2003. The medium close up shot from that scene places Jeph‟s upper appearance to be the main object of the camera (Figure 57). From this shot mode, it can be easily noticed that his typical hairstyle: a black long sided bang hair. The next picture is a scene captured from The Bird and The Worm music video made on 2007. The medium close up shot places Jeph as the main object among other models surround him. Here, Jeph still applies the same kind of Emo hairstyle with a long black side bang covering half of his face (Figure 58). From those two pictures above, it is noted that black long sided bang applied on Jeph hairstyle become the commodity within the two videos. commit to user Similar formula like Quinn appearance in other videos, Jeph‟s shot are 111 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id emphasizing the side bang hairstyle as a requirement of being an Emo Kids. In other word, this side-banged hairstyle has become a commodity that should constantly applied by those who want to be involved in Emo subculture. iii. Gunshot Wound According to the “Everybody Hurts” by Simon and Kelley published on 2007, gunshot wound hairstyle is a kind of hairstyle with a longer version of the bowl cut hairstyle with spiky hairs in the back which is also applied by the members of Emo subculture. It can be found within some of The Used‟s videos especially from the video I Caught Fire where some models of the video are shot while applying this kind of hairstyle. Figure 59 Figure 60 Figure 61 Those pictures are some scenes from I Caught Fire music video made on 2005. The scenes use the models of suburban Emo Kids who have the identical appearance. In narrative, it is told that the models spend their time together in the street (Figure 59). Seen from the hairstyle applied by the girls and the boys from the first until third video, the brown T-shirt girl‟s hair is typical with the gunshot hairstyle since her hair is spiky in the back side commit to user (Figure 60). The typical of gunshot hairstyle is also applied by the boy model 112 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id (Figure 61) The use of black gunshot hairs repeated in several scenes in this video makes this hairstyle become the new hairstyle commodity in Emo. The gunshot wound hairstyle is also found in the video The Bird and The Worm made on 2007. There‟s a model here applying the same kind of hairstyle like what can be found in the previous video, I Caught Fire. Figure 62 A medium close up shot of a boy standing among the crowd of Emo kids above is the opening scene of The Bird and The Worm music video (Figure 62). The picture shows how the boy model becomes the object of the camera with his gunshot wound hairstyle. This scene is intended to give a description of particular Emo boys with a specific hairstyle appropriate for this subculture. If it is noticed from the role of the models as the „usual‟ Emo Kids not as the band members, therefore, equivalent to the previous video, this scene delivers an idea that gunshot wound hairstyle is appropriate to use by those who want to be considered as Emo kid. The various shots of Emo kids with their gunshot hairstyle is possibly intended to give the viewers alternative choice of having another kind of Emo hairstyle besides medium straight hair and long sidebanged hairstyle. All of Emo hairstyles above represent the freedom of adolescents to commit to user express their youth freedom. This is what American youth needs in their perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 113 digilib.uns.ac.id adolescence time. However, medium long hair, gunshot wound and sidebanged hairstyle are kinds of hairstyle which show the feminine side of a boy. All of hairstyles in The Used music videos are intended to legalize the concept of less-masculine yet rebellious boy which preferably to apply longer and more variable kinds of hairstyle rather than short hair as the standard hairstyle accepted in the society. It has been stated previously that the concept of weak and vulnerable boys are popular post 9/11 because America is experiencing the grief and weakness point after realizing the lost battle against the terrorist. c. Accessories Besides clothing and hairstyle, today, accessories have been the major requirement for those who want to be involved as Emo subculture members (Simon & Kelley, 2007: 46). The most visible accessories used by Emo Kids are generally tattoos, piercing, wristbands, belts, and shoes. These kinds of Emo accessories become a huge commodity highlighted by the youth fashion industry especially in America. Both online and offline shops are digging the hipping Emo accessories as the main commodity. In The Used‟s music videos, the exposure of Emo accessories as the main commodity can also be extensively found i. Shoes Shoes as the footwear accessories carried by the members of Emo subculture have its own characteristic. Emo shoes are mostly correlated with the type of slip-on model of shoe usually produced by Vans; an American skate commit to user 114 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id shoes-maker company which is recognized for its production of slip-on model of shoes which are mostly used by American Emo kids (Simon & Kelley, 2004: 46, 49) Instead of slip-on, canvas model of shoes produced by Vans are also applied by the members of Emo subculture. i ii i. Vans shoes Slip-on model. http://gmc-vans.com/wpcontent/uploads/2011/02/vans-shoes.jpg ii. Vans shoes Canvas model. http://gmc-vans.com/wp-content/ VANS/L/AUTHENTIC_TRUWHT1.jpg Both of those models of shoes can be found within The Used‟s music videos entitled I Caught Fire made on 2005 and Empty With You made on 2009. Figure 63 Figure 64 Those pictures above are captured from different The Used‟s music videos. The first one is captured from I Caught Fire music video while the second one is captured from the latest video, Empty With You. Both of the scenes employ the use of Vans shoes as the main object. first picture is a medium shot of Vans commitThe to user 115 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id shoes using the type of slip-on and canvas footwear used by a couple of young boy and girl as the models of the video. Applying singing performance semi narrative concept, it can be observed in I Caught Fire video that the boy on the left side wears a kind of slip on model while the girl wears the canvas ones (Figure 63). The short duration of shot gives an impression that both models of shoes are footwear used by most of Emo kids. The second picture is a medium shot of a band‟s member footwear in Empty With You music video (Figure 64). The model of shoes found in this scene is identical with the shoes worn by the girl from the first picture which mean that the member of this band also use canvas model of shoe too. Both of the scenes are intended to emphasize the viewers that Vans shoes as the common footwear used by the member of Emo subculture. ii. Wristbands Wristband is an accessory mostly used in the wrist area. Wristband is frequently used by nowadays Emo kids as an additional accessory (Simon & Kelley, 2007: 46). This accessory has also become a huge commodity in American youth fashion which can also be found within The Used‟s music videos. Both by the band members and the models within the videos wear wristbands to signify the identity of being the Emo Kids. commit to user 116 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 65 Figure 66 Figure 67 Figure 68 The first picture is a scene captured from A Box Full of Sharp Object music video. Applying the concept of singing performance, Quinn is shot using medium close up mode of shot that the viewers can observe his appearance. From his gesture when raising hand, it can be noticed that he wears a wristband on his wrist. Moving to the second picture, the scene is also captured from the same video. Bert as the vocalist is shot by the camera using close up mode of shot. Through his gesture when waving arms, the focus of camera will directly move to the wristband he wears (Figure 66). This wristband‟s colors, pink and black, ultimately deliver the typical impression of Emo since both of these colors are applied in most of Emo‟s fashion (Simon & Kelley, 2007: 65). Besides showing the use of wristband, this scene also highlights the combination of pink and black color as a new commodity in Emo boy‟s fashion. The third and fourth pictures are captured from I Caught Fire video whose models represent the presences of general Emo kids. The boy in the first commit to user 117 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id picture is shot using medium shot mode focusing on the wristband he wears (Figure 67). It can be observed from his position and pointing gesture that the main focus of the camera will note on his black wristbands. Afterward using medium shot, the camera moves to the other suburban Emo kids in the fourth picture (Figure 68). The subject of the camera is certainly the appearance of the red T-shirt girl. As it can be seen obviously, the girl also wears a red wristband on her right wrist. From those two pictures of Emo Kids, it can be noticed that the music video want to highlight that the use of wristband is a required accessory of being an Emo Kids. iii. Lips and Ears Piercing Emo kids, especially boys, often pierce their lips and ears with various forms of piercing. In Emo today, piercing is a must-wear accessories to show the coolness and artistic side of this youth subculture (Simon & Kelley, 2007: 56). The members of The Used especially Jeph and the ex-drummer Branden show how piercing becomes commodity in their appearance. Figure 69 Figure 70 Figure 71 The three pictures above are some scene captures of Jeph the bassist who is mostly recognized with the use of piercing on his lips and ears. The medium commit to user close up and close up shots of Jeph are proposed to show his appearance of 118 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id using piercings on his lips and ears. The first picture is a scene captured from Blue and Yellow music video, when Jeph is practicing bass who is shot using medium close up shot (Figure 69). From this angle, the camera focuses on the ear piercing he wears. The next picture is also captured from the same video, Blue and Yellow, using the close up shot that Jeph‟s lip piercing is easily noted (Figure 70). The last picture of Jeph is captured from The Bird and The Worm music video scene which also applies the medium shot of the singing Jeph (Figure 71). From this shot, the viewers can watch and note on Jeph‟s ears piercing which match with his Emo‟s boy appearance. Similar like Jeph, Branden, the early drummer of The Used, also employs lips and ears piercing within music video. Figure 72 Figure 73 The first picture is a close up shot of Branden in the video, A Box Full of Sharp Objects. From this shot, Branden‟s lips and ears piercing becomes the object of the camera (Figure 72). On another picture, Branden is also intentionally shot using medium close up shot mode to highlight his ears and lips piercing (Figure 73). Similar with Jeph‟s scenes, these scenes are intentionally made to make the lips and ears piercing as the commodity in Emo fashion. Although it is stated that Emo is related to the weakness and vulnerability of youth, the use commit to user of lips and ear piercing shows that Emo can be like Punk which support the anti 119 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id social by taking body piercing. The use of piercing in the video, however, is not merely used to fight against the social system but turned to such kind of usual accessories with no meaning. The video as if show that body piercing is what American adolescents need after the sinking of glamour appearance of pop stars post 9/11. iv. Tattoos For adolescents, tattoo is now commonly made for the artistic purpose. It is often applied by most of rock musician to the impression of being cool besides showing the ideas through the patterns and pictures tattooed on skin. In today various youth subcultures, the use of tattoo does not merely represent the rebellion act against dominant culture but simply limited for the artistic purpose. It also happens in Emo subculture nowadays. The use of tattoo is highly explored within The Used‟s music videos exposed by the band members such as Bert and Jeph. Figure 74 Figure 75 commit to user Figure 76 Figure 77 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 120 digilib.uns.ac.id The first picture is a medium close up shot of Bert in Blood on My Hands music video (Figure 74). The dimness theme of background dominating by black color with low light reinforces the position of Bert as a vocalist of an Emo band. While holding the microphone, Bert shows his tattoos that deliberately become a main object of the camera. The second picture is a scene taken from Empty With You music video (Figure 75). The position of Bert in the middle of camera makes him become the main object of the camera including his appearance. Both of his arms are lighted enough that the viewers can notice on his arms tattoo. The third picture is a scene captured from Blue and Yellow music video (Figure 76). Jeph is shot using medium shot mode that his appearance is clearly seen together with tattoos on his neck and arms. The fourth picture is a scene from Empty With You music video which applies the similar shot used in the third picture (Figure 77). The position of Jeph in the middle of the camera makes him become the center object especially the presence of tattoo on his neck. From both of Bert and Jeph‟s scenes which apply the same formula, the use of tattoo turns into a commodity within Emo fashion. Tattoos here have the similar function like piercing. It is previously used to show the anti social, but, here the function of tattoos has shifted into such kind of stuff which American youth needs wrapped in Emo style. d. Make Up Emo is considered as a youth subculture that can free the members, commit to user especially boys, from the „Boy Code‟ required by other youth subcultures 121 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id (Anastasi, 2005: 304). The sensitive and gloomy impression offered by Emo subculture give a chance for boys to express themselves in more feminine appearances. Moreover, emotional performances of the Emo bands of which members are dominated by boys make this youth subculture are close to the stereotype of the feminine boys whose appearances are also close to the „feminine‟ concept (Aslaksen, 2006: 36). The feminine concept can be seen from the wearing of tight T-shirt, tight jeans and side-banged hairstyle. Besides concerning on that girlish clothing, Emo boys often wear dark eyeliner and nail polish to emphasize the „gloomy‟ and feminine sense of this subculture. These two essential make up are often used by Emo boys to emphasize the meaning of being an Emo Kid. The application of this required make up can also be found within some of The Used music videos. i. Eyeliner Eyeliner is the essential make up of being an Emo Kid (Simon & Kelley, 2007: 36). Today, the members of this youth subculture often wear eyeliner to emphasize the gloominess idea within it. A person will be considered as Emo, if he or she wears black eyeliner. The used of eyeliner can also be found within The Used‟s music videos. Bert, as the vocalist, emphasizes the wearing of eyeliner, both red and black, through his performances on some videos. Figure 79 Figure 80 commit to user Figure 81 122 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Those are two captures of Bert‟s singing performance on several videos. The close up shots of Bert highlights on the wearing of eyeliner on his eyes. The first picture is a scene captured from Take It Away music videos made on 2004. The trending Emo in America around 2004, make everything related to this youth subculture become the commodity including the eyeliner. Through this close up shot, Bert‟s eyes wearing eyeliner become the object so that the viewer‟s attention will be directly led to his eyes area (Figure 79). As it is seen on the shot, Bert‟s eyes area is filled with the red eyeliner, which has been known as one of the make up requirement of being an Emo Kid. While the camera shots Bert‟s face, this vocalist screams loudly till he can not open his eyes widely. The combination of Bert‟s close up shot of his eyes area and his screaming voice has signified the standard Emo boy. This shot is intended to show the viewers about how the Emo boy should wear to be considered as Emo. The use of eyeliner can be found also on gothic subculture which highlighted the dark and death theme (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/18/fashion/18GOTH.html) In Emo, the function of eyeliner might be the same since Emo is also raising the gloomy and dark theme. It can be correlated with the terrible event of 9/11 in America which causes death and grief. As the gloomy youth subculture, the media through this The Used music video has commodified eyeliner as part of Emo accessories. commit to user 123 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id The second picture is a scene captured form I Caught Fire video made on 2005. The dimness blue lighting makes Bert‟s face blurred and unclear, still, the red line under his eyes is obviously seen (Figure 80). After emphasizing on Bert‟ eyes area, the shot moves to the scene where Bert puts a red flower from his lips (Figure 81). These two shots are intended to make the viewer see the gloominess side of Emo through the dimness lighting behind and spot on the feminine side of an Emo boy through the red flower on Bert‟s lips. ii. Black Nail Polish Besides eyeliner, nail polish is another make up used by most of Emo members. Similar like eyeliner, black is the dominant nail polish color applied by the members to highlight the darkness theme derived also from Goth subculture. In some of The Used music videos, the band members like Bert and the early drummer, Branden wear black polish on their finger nails. Figure 82 Figure 83 The medium close up shot of Bert make him possible to show his hand on Blood on My Hands music video made on 2009 (Figure 82). As it seen above that Bert raises his hands to the camera that the viewers an watch his tattoos and black fingernails polish. Added with the dimness light behind him, his appearance including his black fingernails commit to user raises the darkness impression 124 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id which is mostly exposed by this youth subculture. The next picture is Branden‟s scene, the early drummer of The Used from A Box Full of Sharp Object video (Figure 83). The close up shot mostly focuses on his face and his fingers. Noticed on his fingers, Branden polishes his fingers with black nail polish similar like Bert does. Those two shots, however, are made to show the viewers that black nail polish is a required make up in Emo fashion. 2. The commodification of Emo Behavior in The Used’s Music Videos Besides fashion, behavior related to the Emo theme is another commodity found within The Used‟s music videos. By exploring the performers‟ behavior, music videos have strengthened the basic theme brought by the music. Here, The Used music videos highlight the general Emo theme such as rebellion and anxiety carried out by the performers. Soelle states that in the adolescence phase, music has a big role in creating a space for young people to express their anxiety feeling: In music, the performers‟ manipulation of language, rhythm and syntax creates images and gives meaning beyond the mere content of the lyrics. With a proficient understanding of music and how it affects people, along with lyrics that connect with adolescents, the artist can create an environment, where adolescents may feel free to face the painful issues in their lives as described by the artist or triggered by the similarity of the lyrical circumstance (Soelle in Anastasi, 2005: 311) If music performer affects young listeners in providing a place for expressing youth common feeling of anxiety and rebellion, it is possibly for both sides to build an intimate connection that evoking the idolatry thinking from the listeners toward the performers (Peeters, 2004: 8). The idolatry attitude encourages the commit to user listeners to follow everything created by the performers through the music. This perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 125 digilib.uns.ac.id idolatry attitude, however, has emerged a chance for the industries to take a further step, for example, by making the music video. Peeters affirms that if music is visualized through music video, the performers will give the audiovisual element and enchant attraction that illuminates all viewers (ibid: 2). If the artists successfully communicate with the viewers through music video, then they may be able to establish a deeper connection with the young audiences. The connection profoundly runs that make young people slowly consider the connection as a way to imitate everything shown by performers including the behavior. Tudor wrote: …the fact that movie characters could be effective ideological tools can be explained by the phenomenon of identification, a process by which viewers become attached to a star, ranging from emotional affinity limited to the context of the movie theater to projection, by which fans try to become their idols through imitating speech, movements …(Tudor in Peeters, 2004: 9) Behavior, as Hebdige states, is a symbolic style of youth subculture‟s members to acquire a space in a society. In other words, behavior is interpreted as the realization of youth expressions toward the mainstream culture standardized by parents. Through media exposure, most of youth subcultures‟ behavior is labeled as the defiant behavior causing moral panic (Hebdige, 1979: 94, 96). In a reverse, media have an authority to redefine youth subculture behavior into the more accepted one. It gives the unusual behavior of youth subculture as a defiant group a legal label. As the hit creator, media sell the image of youth subculture through the legalization of its behavior. For example, if a person wants to be considered as the member of Punk subculture, the media gives a policy for him or her to act like members of Punk whose behavior are labeled by the media itself. The presence of music video can be an effective tool to sell the image of the commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 126 digilib.uns.ac.id performers related to the subcultural group they represent. The behavior shown by the performers within the music video will not be far away from the main theme of youth subculture they signify. The behavior within the music video is the primary way to arbitrate the values of certain youth subculture. The viewers are purposively intended to act like what the performers show on videos to be considered as the members of youth subculture. In this case, the exclusive value of youth subculture has been commodified in which the viewers can do the same thing without considering the original value of a youth subculture. It also means that everything related to the subculture can be judged only from what music videos show. Therefore, since Emo today highlights the gloomy side of adolescence phase including the feeling of lost, hurt, heartbreak, suffering and lamentation (Anastasi, 205: 313), the commodification process can be seen from how the performers of music video actualize the value of Emo through their performing acts. In analyzing The Used videos, it is acquired that major Emo theme has been exaggeratedly exploited by the performers. The general theme like rebellion and anxiety are combined well to give the strong meaning of being Emo. The exposure of these two major themes emphasizes the standard for adolescents to be involved within the subculture which can encompass the two reverse feelings of general adolescents in Emo subculture sphere. a. Youth Rebellion Rebellion is the basic idea which has triggered various youth subcultures to commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 127 digilib.uns.ac.id emerge. The unsynchronized relationship between young and old generation is the basic cause why various youth subcultures come out in the society. Historically in 1980s, the phenomenal youth subculture, Punk, emerged because of the dissatisfaction of young people toward the system of parents culture standardized by the high class people. Young people who mostly come from blue collar people need to acquire a space for expressing their ideas, what they feel in the adolescence phase to the society. The imbalance position between parents who rule the mainstream culture and their children has triggered the rebellion to happen. When the children have found the space to grow up, they will practice all of the ideologies within it. Historically, Punk is a youth subculture which actualizes the rebellious ideas in various actions as El Bashir writes: One can say that the punk subculture emerged in opposition to mass culture... The subculture has many ideologies that have always been a form of shock and rebellion, thus it was often viewed negatively. The political ideology most commonly found in punk is anarchism, which is expressed in some songs. Along with this, punks have anti-capitalistic, anti-commercial, and non-conformist views. (El Bashir, 2004: 61) Like Punk, before it is highly exploited by the mainstream media, other youth subcultures with each own rebellious ideas are always on the opposite side of mainstream culture. The society in common often considers negatively toward the rebellious actions they take since they all are in a reverse with the normal norms and rules. Punk has committed itself as a place for young people to express their idea free from the involvement of the commercialism and conformism through the establishment of the DIY (Do It Yourself) ethic which later becomes the most noticeable idea from this subculture. Azerrad affirms that DIY ethic is a realization of Punk‟s rebellious idea encouraging commit to user the members to settle on the perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 128 digilib.uns.ac.id independent area (Azerrad, 2001: 6). It means that Punk has actualized the rebellion through the use of this ethic in covering everything they practice in the members‟ daily life. As Punk is developed into other youth subcultures like Emo and Hardcore, the actualization of DIY ethic was kept running in those subdivisions. Emo previously was recognized as the root of Hardcore-Punk youth subculture which fought back the standard and mainstream culture through Do It Yourself ethic but in a more sensitive and personal way. However, Emo nowadays has lost its rebellious side since the media has widely misused it as a new form of marketable product. DIY as the realization of rebellious idea previously held by Punk has been taunted by media so that its rebellious side does not appear anymore. Similarly, Schwartz and Merten explain this phenomenon as the new form of agreement of mainstream culture controlled by parents and the children in various youth subcultures. They affirm that the traditional cycle of the intense conflict followed by reconciliation when the younger generation takes its place in society seems less common today than in the past (Schwarz and Merten, 1967: 458). It means that nowadays youth subculture do not take a serious rebellious actions since there is dominant factor like media that has been very potential to replace the image of a youth subculture. In Emo nowadays, the original rebellious actions have been replaced with the perception of media in redefining its „rebel‟ side. There is an accord between the wide society and today youth subculture in understanding the meaning of rebellion. Through the music video for example, the rebel side of previous Emo commit to user 129 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id has been replaced with the rebel side of new Emo dominated by the performance of the performers within the music videos. In other words, it can be said that the rebellion has been commodified into the smoother one which is impossibly free from anti capitalism sense so that everyone can accept this idea. Through The Used music videos below, it can be seen that there are commodification of rebellious behavior within the Emo youth subculture. i. Blue and Yellow In Blue and Yellow video, the rebellious side is found within the performances of the band members and the models which consist of the audiences whom intentionally appeared. The singing performance concept of band performing on the stage has strengthened the ambience of rebellious side of Emo. Below are the scenes showing the rebellious side of The Used when performing on the stage. Figure 84 Figure 85 To highlight the rebellious side of the band‟s music video, the camera captures the situation both in the venue and from the audiences‟ arena. On the stage, the band accentuates the rebellious side of Emo through the performance of Bert who takes a headbang action (Figure 84). Added with the performance of other band members behind himcommit who to also user play the music instruments perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 130 digilib.uns.ac.id enthusiastically, this scene gives the impression of common rock stars that mostly relates to the rebellion thing while having stage performance. The using of low key lighting behind the band clearly emphasizes the sense of rock band concert. While this scene is lasting, Bert screams the phrase “Well you‟ll never find it, if you‟re looking for it”. His screaming voice over the assembling music instruments is proposed to strengthen Emo rebellious side. This screaming technique can be found also in the previous 1980s Emo to express the painful feeling of the song. However, screaming was not the most noticeable rebellious sign of the old Emo bands because they still really practiced the DIY ethic by avoiding the mainstream media interventions, establishing independent record labels and considering the music as the place of youth expression not as the saleable thing. The spotlight of Bert‟s screaming action in this scene gives the general description of Emo today which only highlights the rebellious side from the stage performance especially when screaming technique appears. The next figure is a scene of diving action of the audiences while The Used‟s band members are performing on the stage (Figure 85). The angle of camera shows how almost all of the audiences appreciate this „diving‟ by put their hands up to lift a boy audience. This action shows that there is a strong relationship between the band as the performers on the stage and the audiences. Also, this action can be found in almost rock concerts. The rebellious action of this audiences‟ scene is used to show the general description of the members of Emo youth subculture in general when they are coming to the concert. Similar like the previous scene, diving action is not the only thing that is used to show commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 131 digilib.uns.ac.id the rebellious action of previous Emo in 1980s when it was not intervened by mainstream media. Those two scenes show that the rebellious sides can only be gained from the stage performances of a band and audiences‟ responds without any further action like what usually found in the previous Emo in 1980s practicing DIY ethic. Why can this rebellion be accepted nowadays? The media, as usual, control the hipping phenomenon in the society. American adolescents who grow up post 9/11 tragedy are different from American adolescents who grew up in 1980s. Seen from its social life, the 1980s adolescents lived in a strong and powerful America which can create everything independently. Although at that time industries ruled the every aspects of youth life shown by the growing up of mainstream music on MTV, the adolescents still had the power to sustain the ideology of a youth subculture. However, the media did not involve their action because other youth stuffs such as MTV-music type were accepted well due to the euphoria of America‟s good condition. Post 9/11 changes Americans perception toward everything. Like what have been explained in the earlier chapter, the glamour stuffs are not suitable with the condition of America in general. Since the media places as the next big thing for Americans adolescents post 9/11, everything related to Emo including the rebellious actions are considered as the standard of being involved in Emo. Rebellion is not merely an awareness of the members of youth subcultures to fight against the mainstream culture like what happened in the early Emo, but simply change into the stage performance and audience response like what can be seen from commit to user 132 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id this Blue and Yellow music video. ii. A Box Full of Sharp Objects Emo nowadays still practiced the rebellious actions but not like the previous rebellion of Emo found in the 1980s history. Emo is not something underground anymore even its rebellious actions are out as the new commodity to attract the attention of adolescent who look for the identity. The rebellion as a commodity in Emo youth subculture appears on The Used‟s music video entitled A Box Full of Sharp Objects. Using singing performance concept, it can be fully gained that the band members emphasize the rebellious side through the stage performance rather than giving the basic rebellious ideas of a youth subculture. Figure 86 Figure 87 Figure 88 The first scene shows the performance of Bert and Quinn on the stage. The angle of the camera focuses on how Quinn plays guitar passionately and Bert spurts beer form his mouth (Figure 86). Their performance have emphasized the rebel side of rockstars which can easily found on other rock music concerts. Spurting beer while singing is an obvious act of rebellion where a singer can express his feeling. This action, for sure, will not be found in other music concert like pop or RnB. Thiscommit what makes to userEmo is different from mainstream perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 133 digilib.uns.ac.id music in 2000s because it explores the sensitive and rebellious feeling at once in every Emo band‟s stage perfromance. The next figure is a scene of Bert in a stage performance to show the rebellious side of Emo nowadays. Seen from the way he sings, his actions still encompass the sense of rockstar‟s rebellion in general (Figure 87). The long shot picture gives an impression of The Used as a band who perform in front of the audiences. The stage lighting shows that it is a scene of rock concert not pop concert. There, Bert jumps while singing the phrase of the lyric enthusiatically “Today I feel and felt better, just knowing this matters I just feel stronger and sharper”. In the end of the phrase, Bert screams the „sharper‟ part, the action which can usually be found in any nowadays Emo band. The fast beat of drum and guitar rhytm with full techniques giving the strong impression in the song as a rock song not a ballad one. The combination of the lyric, music and Bert‟s stage performance emphasize the rebellion of adolescents in the perspective of Emo today. The phrase “Today I feel and felt better, just knowing this matters I just feel stronger and sharper” makes an impact on the strong and unbeatable young people which commonly close to the rebellious acts. The rebellion is also initiated in the next figure which is a scene of Jeph Howard playing bass keenly in the video while the bass dominating the music. The short duration of his stage performance, however, is used to strengthen the rebellious side of The Used as an Emo band (Figure 88). Considering the condition of America post 9/11, it is impossible for young people to go back to the previous situation when everything was strong commit to user 134 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id and poweful so that they can happily enjoy life like what is described by pop, hip hop and RnB music and totally fight against the system like what is practiced by underground Punk in 1980s and 1990s. Emo youth subculture is considered as a right place for American adolescents to express their feeling due to the anxiety of adolescence phase and national grief after the tragedy of 9/11. However, the ambience atmosphere after the tragedy encourages young people to focus on themselves and to deeply explore their feeling since the media also support it by exploiting Emo youth subculture. Unlike the previous Emo who mainly focused on the rebellious efforts to sustain this hardcore punk rooted youth subculture from the mainstream media, Emo today only depicts the rebellious sense in the stage performance of the band. Incongruously, these rebellious acts have been appeared in the video as the requirement to be involved in nowadays Emo. iii. I Caught Fire (In Your Eyes) Like what have been repeatedly stated before, rebellion according to Emo nowadays does not merely apply the DIY or Do It Yourself ethic anymore because everything is handled by the media so that the DIY ethic which generally rejects the interaction with the mainstream media has been replaced with the new squashier ideas. Through another The Used music video entitled I Caught Fire, it can be gained that the rebellion of previous Emo with its DIY ethic has been replaced with another ethic focusing on the peer relationship. commit to user 135 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 89 92 Figure 90 Figure 91 Figure The scenes above are captured from I Caught Fire music video which applies the singing performance semi narrative concept. The narrative side performs the models of Emo Kids consisting of suburban boy and girl adolescents. Their fashions, like what have been discussed in the previous subchapter, have strengthened the sense of being Emo so that everything they perform there is close to Emo meaning. The first figure is a scene where a group of Emo Kids are sitting in front of the closed shop (Figure 89). The angle shows how they have so strong relationship as a youth subculture that they sit together in the edge of the road with their peers, a common idea which is usually found in any kind of youth subculture. The next figure is a scene when Emo Kids are walking along together to the unknown place. Using similar angel like the previous scene, it can be seen that the kids walk to the same direction (Figure 90). One direction means that they have a really close relationship which covers the unity idea in Emo besides the rebellion since they live on the street. to user Their appearances and actionscommit at least have explained Emo as a rebellious perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 136 digilib.uns.ac.id youth subculture. Just wearing the similar fashion and hanging around together will simply mean that the Emo Kids are rebels. It is very different with the previous Emo youth subculture which actualize the rebellion by producing the music and concert independently not simply spotlighting on fashion and peer relationship. The next two scenes captured from the video are also used to strengthen the other rebellious sides of Emo as a youth subculture. The next figure is a scene where the kids are stepping on the famous Hollywood Walk of Fame (Figure 91). The camera takes close up shot of a Hollywood Walk of Fame star under the feet of those kids. Hollywood Walk of Fame is popular as the appreciation symbol for the Hollywood stars who have dedicated their life for film. This scene unintentionally describes the Emo members as the rebel kids. The scene raises an impression that the kids are different from the normal people whose names are represented by the names written on the Hollywood Walk of Fame star. The next scene is a close up shot of a paper board with the typography “Let‟s be honest. It‟s for beer” (Figure 92). Beer signifies the popular alcohol drink which mostly becomes a favorite drink for adolescents in general. The scene intentionally confirms that beer is the basic need of those Emo Kids. Sometimes, drinking beer contain of alcohol will prove that somebody is strong and rebel. The rebellious side here is only proven by the consumption of alcohol drink rather than doing something more useful like what was found in 1980s Emo. The regular appearance of Emo Kids in the media has proven that commit to user 137 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id rebellious side of this youth subculture has been commodified. The early Emo, like Punk, actualized its rebellious idea through the application of DIY ethic within the subculture. However, after dejecting by the media, Emo today focuses the rebellious actions on the daily life simply like peer relationship and alcohol consumption. Why is this new form of rebellion easily accepted by the media? As it is known that post 9/11 American need a healing phase to build back its power. The out coming of Emo in youth life is punctually right since media has publicized it as a sensitive youth subculture which can cover youth life to compromise with the mainstream culture by only focusing in daily activity not the brutal one akin to old Punk and hardcore youth subculture in 1980s. Peer relationship is what this young American generation needs because before 9/11 happened, most of them focused on their individual business. iv. Blood on My Hands Another video showing the commodified rebellion in Emo youth subculture is Blood on My Hands. Here, the video applies singing performance semi narrative concepts fully performed by the band members. Bert, the main character in the video, shows the rebellion through his acting. Mainly this music video narrates about Bert as a psycho who has killed more than one victim. commit to user 138 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 93 Figure 94 The scenes above are captured from Blood on My Hands music video. The first figure is an opening scene of the video where Bert sits alone in a dark room (Figure 93). The long shot camera is used to catch all of his appearance together with the background behind him. Here, Bert clutches a cigarette between his fingers while thinking something seriously. The low key lighting in this scene stresses on the gloomy atmosphere which can be occasionally found in any music video related to Emo. A cigarette which he clutches along with his informal fashion signifies the rebellious idea in a new form. In the past, rebellion can be got from the real action of adolescents in the society by applying DIY ethic, now the rebellious sense of Emo is found from the similar appearance and smoking habit like Bert does. The last figure is a close up shot of Bert‟s hands full of blood while holding a knife while stabbing on a man‟s body (Figure 94). This bloody scene is the main scene in the video since it is suitable with the title of the song. Bert stabs the victim when the assembled instruments of the music simply played in a faster tempo and he sings the phrase “There's blood on my hands like the blood in you. Some things can't be treated so don't make me, don't make me be myself around you”. The capturing of this scene reveals assassination as the new form of rebellious idea in Emo way. Combined with the lyric, this scene raises the threatening act which is actualized with the assassination act. Assassination or murdering was not considered as rebellious act in the previous commit to user Emo. However, Bert‟s acting here shows that Emo member can be rebels too perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 139 digilib.uns.ac.id by simply kill anyone. Assassination is put as the new rebellious idea in this music video. In 1980s, Emo youth subculture did not take the harmful action like the tough of killing anybody else in showing the rebellious ideas although Emo avoided the mainstream culture interfere. The previous Emo only focused on how created the exclusive space for expressing the ideas through the production of different music. However, after being exploited exaggeratedly, Emo now always relates to something gloomy, sad and even brutal like suicide and assassination similar like Bert‟s action in the video. This new rebellion related to suicide and assassination can be accepted in Americans youth‟s life since the various media take Emo gloomy feeling excessively as the new trend after the tragedy of 9/11. Even, according to the report, Emo youth subculture has caused the rising number of suicidal action among adolescents in American. It proves that Emo now is close to the demising thought as the extended form of rebellious ideas. b. Youth Anxiety Adolescence is a phase when young people try to look for their identity in facing the next adulthood phase. In particular, adolescents experience the adolescence phase at a deep and painful level (Nouwen in Anastasi, 2005: 303). This phase of finding the identity is often followed by the anxiety feelings where most adolescents feel insecure, lost, and desperate. Besides, they have to struggle to get a right place for expressing their anxiety feeling. Emo as a youth subculture commit to user 140 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id based on hardcore-punk music can respond this condition well by perceiving the youth anxiety sensitively, not violently, through its behavior as the symbolic system of communication. Youth anxiety generally is a major theme of Emo music which includes the feeling of desperate, lonely, hurt, rejected, lost, and insecure. Although the theme is mainly used within this subculture, the previous Emo in 1980s did not take these values too deeply. It could be proven by the application of DIY ethic showing that the previous Emo had a position as the susceptible yet independent youth subculture. However, by the exploitation of the media, now the theme is the only thing that is highly exploited within this youth subculture regardless to the independent ethic which makes Emo is the most vulnerable youth subculture since it focuses only on the anxiety feeling of adolescence phase. In analyzing the videos, here, the view of youth anxiety is based on the common performance of the performers within the video related to the Emo theme not on the psychological aspect of the anxious feeling. Therefore, the psychological approach is not appropriate to use in the analysis since subjects that are being analyzed are correlated only with Emo‟s behavior as the commodity within the video. The following The Used music videos show how anxiety is commodified under the label of Emo subculture. i. Buried Myself Alive In Buried Myself Alive music video aired on 2003, the anxiety sense is acquired from the narrative mixed with singing performance video concept telling about the four band members with each individual problem which commit to user 141 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id visually and symbolically described by scenes as follows: Figure 95 Figure 96 The scene above lasts from 00:00:37 until 00:01:05 which tells about Bert who is being trapped inside a coffin. While the scene is lasting, Bert sings the lyric “well this time I‟m not going to watch myself die… I think I made it a game to play your game and let myself cry... I buried myself alive on the inside so I could shut you out and let you go away for a long time...” The highlighting of Bert‟s slow voice over the assembling band instruments gives a possibility for the viewers to hear what he sings while watching his performance on the music video. From the beginning of the scene it can be seen that Bert holds a lighter while being trapped in a coffin (Figure 95). This scene is intended to show the effort of Bert who tries to escape from the coffin. The medium close up shot let the viewers observe what Bert does inside the coffin. The low key lighting from the lighter is used to emphasize the gloomy sense inside the coffin (Figure 96). Added with the phrase from the lyric “well this time I‟m not going to watch myself die … I buried myself alive on the inside...” the scene tries to visualize the desperate feeling experienced by Bert because logically if somebody is buried alive in a coffin, he or she is going to die soon due to the lack of oxygen.. The visualization of lyriccommit in thistoscene user is purposively made to illustrate 142 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id the same idea that being buried alive is torturing although being buried here does not literally mean „really buried in the soil‟ but a sense of very deep depression. Of course, in visual Bert‟s acting commonly reveal the sense of being depressed which feels like facing the death. The phrase „I‟m not going to watch myself die‟ represents the suicidal idea which in general suicide is known as the deadly effect of being depressed. As it is known in America today that the number of depression and suicidal action among young people is rising due to the problems surround youth life (http://ezinearticles.com/?Facts-AboutTeen-Depression-You-Need-To-Know&id=789323). Emo is considered to respond this problem seriously through music and lyric that provides a space for adolescents for exploring their anxiety. Desperate feeling related to suicidal idea has been commodified within the videos to fit the image of performers as Emo band, like what can be seen in Bert‟s scenes. The idea of being buried alive inside the coffin till the vocalist is dying shown by these scenes show how the depression has been a commodity to strengthen The Used‟s image as an Emo band. Figure 97 Figure 98 The picture above illustrates about the hanging Quinn which lasts from 00:01:55 until 00:02:03 using a messy room with nobody in it as the setting of place of the scene. Quinn, the commit guitarist, to tries user to release himself from the ropes 143 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id or belts which hang him up (Figure 97). The low key lighting coming out from the window here indicates the gloomy situation of the room while the hanging Quinn who tries to release himself symbolizes the alienation and hopelessness since nobody is coming to help him. Captured using normal angle, the focus is only on Quinn‟s effort of letting his body loose from the tight rope (Figure 98). The lyric “I guess its okay I puked the day away, I guess it‟s better you trapped yourself in your own way and if you want me back, you‟re gonna have to ask nicer than that” sung by Bert strengthen the desperation described by Quinn‟s performance. By using the visualization of the video, the word „I‟ does not merely refer to Bert, the vocalist, but also to every viewer who sing it and explore the music vide deeply while the word ‟you‟ may refer to other person which could be a girlfriend, friend, family or another figure who has hurt the „I‟‟s feeling or made mistake on the „I‟‟s life. This lyric, together with the visualization of the video starred by Quinn, emphasizes sort senses of adolescence‟s anxiety feeling similar like what have been illustrated by Bert‟s scenes. The two other members of The Used also perform the symbolic way of desperation in several scenes. Branden, the early drummer of The Used, is described of being a lost boy trapped in a room full of mirrors so that he can not find the way out instead of being confused of seeing his various reflections everywhere. He can not find the right reflection until finally he decides to break out the mirrors (Figure 99). commit to user 144 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 99 The slow tempo of music instruments let Bert‟s voice come up when the Branden‟s scene appears. The lyric “I took advantage of myself and felt fine but it was worth the night...” plainly brings the impression of being regret on something. „I took advantage, felt fine‟ and „it was worth the night‟ are such kind of irony since the word „advantage‟ and „felt fine‟ contains optimistic sense while „worth the night‟ tends to raise negative sense because it raises an impression to „something that has been late‟ or failure. The viewers are invited to feel this regression feeling through the visualization of Branden who is desperately trying to find a way out from a room full of mirrors. The illustration of Branden delivers the meaning of confusedness in adolescence phase to look for the right identity. It has become a common problem that in this phase, many American adolescents are trying to find their identity through the deep and painful experience. Jeph, the bassist in other scenes is narrated of being a drowning boy who tries to get out from the flooding water in a scene from 00:02:15 until 00:02:30. Figure 100 commitFigure to user 101 Figure 102 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 145 digilib.uns.ac.id While Jeph scene is appeared, Bert clearly sings the bridge-lyric “with my foot on your neck…I finally have you, right where I want you”. The lyric brings an impression of desperate feeling which has been translated visually by Jeph‟s effort to escape from the flooding water alone without any help (Figure 100 Figure 102). This scene symbolically describes the painful feeling of an adolescent who tries to get out from problems surrounding his youth life since he or she feels like to face the anxiety problems alone. This scene describes the desperate theme raised by Emo. The long medium long shot of Jeph lets the viewers watch and understand his hard effort to get out from the water for several times. Similarly, it will raise the impression like what can also be found from other members‟ scenes: the hard efforts in overcoming the problems happen in youth life alone, a theme that is acceptable in nowadays Emo. And why is desperate theme in Emo accepted by most American adolescents? Emo here does not merely reveal the common anxiety feeling in adolescence phase but also the gloomy feeling of most American post 9/11 event. Like what has been stated in the previous chapter, 9/11 aftermath brings a massive effect to Americans in every sector of life. In youth life, the previous glamour lifestyle to respond the pre and post millennium hysteria has shifted reversely into the gloomier one as form of commiseration toward the national suffering. This process is certainly stirred by the role of media in making the gloomy stuffs as the new trend in youth life. The early Emo in 1980s and 1990s were not really famous in America because the media have not exaggeratedly explored the gloominess of this subculture. The theme carried out by 1980s and commit to user 146 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 1990s Emo did not represent the major American life at those eras since America was recognized as the most powerful country, the police of the world which was strengthened after the victory of Cold War with Uni Soviet in the early of 1990s. Desperation was not commonly found in youth life. This theme was still exclusively owned by the underground American hardcore youth subculture in 1980s rooted in Washington D.C such as Rites of Spring. However, the media have found that Emo is a right stuff to replace the glamour theme with something sensitive which encompasses the national grief post 9/11 and the anxiety feeling of adolescence phase. Emo which is exclusive at first become popular because of the exaggerated exploitation. Therefore, desperation brought Emo is now a major theme which simply accepted by Americans especially youth. ii. Taste of Ink Another The Used‟s video describing about youth anxiety is Taste of Ink. Here, Bert dramatically shows his anxiety feeling through the scene where he is sitting alone in a base room of his house. Figure 103 Figure 104 Captured using long shot frame, it can be seen that Bert sits alone on the sofa while anxiously thinks about something (Figure 103). The room where Bert sits alone is such a messy one. Thecommit wall is to full of scratches while the goods are not user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 147 digilib.uns.ac.id put in order well. The low key lighting strengthens the anxiety sense while Bert in the beginning of this scene clearly sings the lyric “Is it worth it can you even hear me, standing with your spotlight on me”. The visualization of lyric illustrates Bert‟s anxiety feeling as a young boy, representing the common adolescents. „Can you even hear me, standing with your spotlight on me‟ here means that Bert, of which rule as the common young boy, feels the terrible loneliness because he doubt that somebody can hear him although they are close to Bert‟s life. The medium close up shot of Bert chewing the pen which he used for scratching the wall behind it strengthens the alien and lonely theme (Figure 104). This scene painfully illustrates Bert‟s desperate feeling which make him chews the pen as a result of his anxiousness. Generally, this scene describes the common anxiety of adolescents‟ life where most of them are doubt about the people‟s existence on their life. Most of adolescents feel that adolescence phase is irritating because they are demanded to grow up with the standard of normal society. In America, before 9/11 tragedy, young people did not have the right place for expressing their anxiety feeling. Adolescence phase was considered as joyful phase where they can find the new experience which has not been found yet in childhood time. Culturally, the media supported the joy side of adolescence phase by exposing normal stuff such as pop music, blinking stuffs and the like. There was almost no space for adolescents to express their anxiety feeling because media at that time focused on the powerful era of America so that everything was considered normal and tough. However, 9/11 tragedy proves that America commit to user 148 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id is not merely the strongest and most powerful country anymore but a weak and vulnerable one. America needs the healing stuff which can cover the condition of American after the tragedy. Emo is easily marketable in the media because it captures the right moment when most of American begins to explore the gloominess, misery and vulnerability. Also, Emo becomes a right place to express the anxiety feeling experienced by young people in general. Bert‟s scene above shows how Emo today has covered the individual problem of adolescents such as terrible loneliness. Adolescence phase means anxiety. Anxiety is really close with loneliness while loneliness is the aspect of misery of which Americans in general experienced after 9/11 tragedy. Loneliness is something accepted in Emo youth subculture which other youth subculture based on rock music can not admit. It makes Emo something that is exploitable by the American media. In fact, the early Emo youth subculture members originally applied DIY ethic which means that they were more powerful and independent than what is appeared on the media now. The loneliness was not important on the early Emo subculture, but now loneliness is really acquired within Emo subculture. iii. Take It Away The next video showing about the exploitation of anxiety feeling is Take It Away. Applying singing performance semi narrative concept, the video mostly describes about young people‟s anxiety including the hopeless, confused and alienated feeling. commit to user 149 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 105 Figure 106 Figure 107 Figure 108 Those four pictures above are captured differently from Take It Away music video. Here, Bert acts as young boy who is nervously facing his surrounding environment. Using the night as setting of time, those scenes impress alienated and confused feeling through Bert‟s performances. The first scene appear in the beginning of the song, where the guitar riffs and bass lines are entering the song together with the fast beat of the drum. There, Bert is anxiously awake on his bed because he can not sleep due to the insomnia he suffers (Figure 105). Insomnia or sleep disorder often happens if people excessively think about the problems they have. The low key light on a medium close up shot enable the viewers to watch Bert‟s unhappy expression caused by his personal problems. Bert represents most of American adolescents in having the similar problem that they have to overcome it alone. Move to the next scene, Bert finally decides to go out of his room since he cannot sleep (Figure 106). The long shot using night crowded road as the background reinforce Bert‟s character as a lonely young boy in a crowded place. This scene describes the adolescent‟s terrible loneliness which becomes the main theme within Emo today. Added with the lyric, “I'm a worm with no more chances” while this scene lasts, the impression of desperation and useless is highly highlighted here. „I‟mcommit a worm‟ to phrase user strengthens Bert‟s visualization perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 150 digilib.uns.ac.id of a lonely and useless young boy because in reality, worm refers to the weak invertebrate animal which does not have enough power to survive. „With no more chances‟ emphasizes the hopeless sense of facing what has happened in youth life. The scene then moves to a bright place inside a hospital where Bert stands in front of older people and furiously screams “I'm so apathetic in my resentment, Living, loving, knowing not” while the other band instruments are highly distorted to support the lyric‟s intention (Figure 107). The use of „apathetic in resentment‟ phrase describes the feeling of uselessness. „Living, loving, knowing not‟ phrase delivers an idea of boredom in life. This feeling is commonly experienced by most American young people as Anastasi states that many adolescents have an intense need to feel love and accepted. They desperately seek love and acceptance but often lack the means to attain it (Anastasi, 2005: 303). Bert as the young boy here represents the common feeling of adolescents in being rejected by the society since nobody really cares of his presence. The last picture is a scene when Bert is cornered alone in a bus while lip-singing “take my hand” for eight times (Figure 108). The low key lighting impresses the gloominess and vulnerability feeling of a young boy. The phrase „take my hand‟ here is deliberately made to show the adolescents‟ longing for attention, help and love. Here, The Used‟s music video has reflected the common adolescence problem related to the feeling of confused, unnoticed and useless. The application of those general youth problems within the video is intended to commit to user 151 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id show that Emo is a right subculture where young people can freely express their common problems. Produced after 9/11 event, as it has previously stated that Emo has successfully captured the grief moment common Americans with the anxiety feeling of young people in their adolescence phase. Compared to the previous rock band before the tragedy happened, the adolescence problem themes are not commonly exploited in rock music. It happens too to several youth subcultures like hip hop for instance, which applies the hedonism, the joyful youth and other optimist themes of being youth. Emo in the first wave, around 1980s, still applied the optimistic sense of being young by practicing DIY ethic. However, it has changed since 9/11 tragedy happened. Stroke by the terrible event in a sudden, America is now being alienated and hopeless. There is no reason anymore for America to be as optimist as before the tragedy. To commemorate the event, Emo which basically digs the pessimist theme of youth life appears to give a place of expressing the national sorrow which gradually combined with the anxiety feeling of adolescence phase. iv. All That I’ve Got Applying singing performance semi narrative concept, All That I‟ve Got music video attempts to explore the anxiety feeling through a little boy‟s acting as the main model within the video. It is told that the little boy enters the old bookstore until finally he is trapped inside a book that he opens unintentionally. Inside the book he finds a strange place where he can meet the band members of The Used whom are narrated as the other characters within the book. The commit to user 152 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id little boy asks all of The Used band members one by one in order to find the way out from that strange place. Figure 109 Figure 110 Figure 111 Figure 112 This music video dramatically narrates a tragic-ending story where finally the little boy is perpetually trapped inside the book. The high key lighting mixed with the medium close up shot give an innocent notion on the little boy‟s face (Figure 109, Figure 110). The dialogues “how does the story end?” and “I‟m looking for the end” are plainly written on those two scenes to highlight the innocent idea of a little boy who tries to look for the way out the book. Ironically, in the end, the boy can not go out from the book-world instead of getting trapped as a cartoon character forever there (Figure 111, Figure 112). The repeating phrase of song lyric sung by Bert “I‟ll be just fine pretending I‟m not, I‟m far from lonely and it‟s all that I‟ve got” illustrates the tragic ending story of that little boy. „I‟ll be just fine pretending I‟m not‟ phrase means that the „I‟, referring to that little boy illustration that he will be in fine state although actually everything in his life is miserable. Here, the little boy is commit to user terribly trapped forever inside the book, a fact that he has to accept. The rest perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 153 digilib.uns.ac.id phrase „I‟m far from lonely and it‟s all that I‟ve got‟ means that the „I‟ does not get anything better except being far away from the terrible loneliness. Generally, this scene depicts the satirical condition of young people in overcoming the adolescence phase because sometimes there is no right place available for them to express their anxiety feeling. Repeatedly, this music video is proposed to show the viewers about the correlated problems suffered by American in general and adolescents specifically. The miserable condition shown by the little boy is similar with what America endured at that time. After the 9/11 attack, like what have been stated in the previous discussion that everything connected with miserable and desperate feeling have covered various sectors of Americans life. No more luxurious stuff can represent American condition post 9/11 suitably since the great national suffering has changed the perception of America toward everything. It seems that there is no other way out for America to come back to its previous position before the tragedy had happened as a superpower country in the world. This fact might raise the miserable feeling of general Americans. While the miserable feeling is being experienced by almost all Americans, the industries especially those who concern on youth culture have found that Emo youth subculture is the next saleable big thing. The exploration of miserable feeling in Emo is made exaggeratedly which can be watched in almost all of The Used music videos. Young people are invited to experience the anxiety feeling deeper and more sensitive than facing the reality of life optimistically. This kind of feeling exploration can be accepted well by the American youth commit to user 154 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id since Emo can represent what most Americans suffer as the impact of 9/11 strike besides general miserable feeling experienced by adolescents in puberty phase. The little boy within the video who is confused in looking for the way out unintentionally describes the miserable feeling experienced by those two sides: Americans in general and adolescents. Historically, the previous members of Emo, around 1980s did not really focus on the miserable feeling in this youth subculture. DIY (Do It Yourself) ethic applied by the members of early Emo in 1980s proved that miserable thingy was not the main focus in the subculture. It was true if the gloomy or miserable topic was also used in the 1980s Emo youth subculture, but not as the main theme which had been deeply exploited. From this process, it is clear that the miserable thing, a feeling of hopelessness and confused, is a form of commodification found in nowadays Emo youth subculture. v. The Bird and The Worm The Bird and The Worm applies the singing performance mixed with narrative video concept where in here, Bert figures out youth anxiety feeling in various scenes. commit to user 155 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id Figure 113 Figure 114 Figure 115 Figure 116 The first scene appears in the beginning of music video. Here, Bert anxiously sits in a messy room while other band members are not with him (Figure 113). He covers his head with upper part of hoodie to visually reinforce the anxiety feeling. In the previous subchapter before, it has been discussed that hoodie in Emo raises the sense of anxiety, mysterious and gloominess. The purpose of scene take in this figure is to show the anxiety and mysterious side of Emo experienced by the band members represented by Bert. In the next scene, he opens his hoodie while watching his surrounding area worriedly as if somebody was hunting him (Figure 114). The medium long shot are used in those two scenes to focus on Bert‟s fear expression. While those scenes are lasting, he sings „he wears his heart safety pinned to his backpack, his backpack is all that he knows…shot down by strangers whose glances can cripple the heart and devour the soul‟. From the lyric, Bert as the singer poetically describes the fear toward something invisible while he has no power to face it. It can be obviously seen from the phrase “he wears his heart safety pinned to his backpack, his backpack is all that he knows” in describing his weakness so that as if he only has the „backpack‟ to protect himself from any destruction. His fear toward the „invisible creature‟ is depicted by the rest of the lyric „shot down by strangers whose glances can cripple the heart and commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 156 digilib.uns.ac.id devour the soul‟. The word „strangers whose glances can cripple the heart and devour the soul‟ poetically means that there is something that is really feared by Bert. This fear is a common topic owned by most of young people in facing the adolescence phase. Next figure is a scene when Bert peeps what happens outside his room through the door hole. He can see that there is an unidentified haunting him (Figure 115). The coming out of this creature is intended to show the realization of fear feeling. Next scene is scene where Bert suddenly drowns in a mysterious deep water inside the chair he sits (Figure 116). Both of these scenes are running together with the instrumental sounds without any lyric heard. The function of this instrumental is intended to strengthen the dramatization of Bert while struggling with his fear problems. All of the visualizations of The Used‟s music videos reflect fear in general suffered by young people. Repeatedly, the comings out of those scenes are intended to strengthen fear impression of being older in the Emo style. Before Emo emerges in the early of 2000s, there is no music exploring dread thing in such way, even Emo in the early of 1980s. However, everything related to the fear seems like a common and popular Emo formula since 9/11 tragedy has happened. American young people can deeply explore their fear in Emo. Similar like the previous phenomenon, the rising of nowadays Emo is used to emphasize the ambient atmosphere post 9/11 with a component of anxiety feeling suffered by common American adolescents. Fear is the most visible thing that America experienced after the tragedy since her symbol of commit to user 157 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id superpower has been destroyed unexpectedly by the unknown enemy. The scenes of the video have clearly described the dreadfulness of America. Similarly, fear is intimately experienced by adolescents since they have to enter a new stage in their life which will be different from the childhood phase. The way the video explore the feeling in Emo style, has change the fear as a legal requirement in this youth subculture. In fact, Emo previously is an underground youth subculture which faced „fear‟ of getting older in contrast with such vulnerable way by practicing DIY ethic. Overall, The Used‟s music videos show the commodification of Emo by exploiting youth anxiety as the only main theme with the related topic like depression, loneliness, alienations, vulnerability, confuse and the like as a standard image of Emo Kids represented by The Used. commit to user 158 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id CHAPTER IV CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION A. Conclusion Youth subculture is a group of young people in gathering and expressing their adolescence sense in a resistance to the dominant parents’ role. One of the most noticeable youth subcultures is the existence of Punk in 1980s which legalizes the rebellious side of young people against the standard norms of British life controlled by parents. In America, there are various youth subcultures applying the same ideas in acquiring a space in the society controlled by the dominant role. Within a youth subculture, the members are obliged to communicate each other using the agreed means of communication such as fashion, behavior and music. The different means of communication between one to another group shows that each youth subculture has its own characteristics in accordance with the norms made by the members. Along with much exposure in media, the previous meaning of youth subculture has lost. The peculiarity of youth subcultures is what the media look for to make the next big thing consumed by the society. Therefore, youth subcultures today are not like the previous groups who merely focused on how the members get a place to express their feeling due to the identity crisis facing by adolescents. Youth subcultures’ exclusive means of communication such as fashion and behavior have been commodified to easily sell in the market. The commit to userall of youth subcultures existing commodification process is found in almost 158 perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 159 digilib.uns.ac.id today. As it has been stated in the background of thesis, the commodification process is also found in today Emo youth subculture. There is a wide range of differences found in nowadays Emo compared to the previous one especially in the scope on how the members communicate each other. To see on what kinds of youth subcultures commodification are, the analysis is anchored in ten of The Used’s music videos as the main data. Emo in 1980s was rooted from Hardcore and Punk scene by practicing Do It Yourself (DIY) ethic and claimed to be free from any mainstream media interference. Emo term is derived from Emotive Hardcore because the first generation of Emo youth subculture came from Washington D.C. music scenes creating the more personal and sensitive songs yet still wrapped in the noisy tunes. The recent Emo term, however, dramatically turns into a term for youth subculture of which members focusing only on the personal problems related to the adolescence phase and neglecting the basic idea of Punk, DIY. Media have exaggeratedly exploited Emo that adolescents know this youth subculture mistakenly. Being the members of Emo subculture means that they have to dress and act in Emo way. Means of communication such as fashion and behavior have been commodified by media which lastly encourages young people to do the things alike in order to be considered as Emo members. The commodification of youth subcultures is simply found in the production of Emo bands’ videos. Here, ten of The Used music videos have been analyzed to observe that the elements within the videos show the commodification of Emo subculture in terms of fashion and behavior. Having developed the main research commit to user 160 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id question mentioned in the early chapter, the analysis is held to see the commodification of fashion and behavior within the music videos. Fashion in the early Emo in 1980s was not really exaggerated like what can be watched within The Used’s music videos. Although gloominess became the basic theme of this subculture, but the fashion was still not inflated because of the influence of Hardcore and Punk scene at that time. However, nowadays Emo’s fashion has been adjusted with the theme of the group which spotlight on the gloomy and sad theme. To see the aspects of Emo fashion in details, it is needed to make points of analysis about the commodification of Emo fashion within the music videos such as clothing, hairstyle, accessories and make up. The gloomy theme brought by the Emo subculture has been applied on the upper and lower clothing such as the wearing of dark colored t-shirt, bright colored t-shirt and tight pants. Also, hairstyle as the aspect of fashion has become the commodity in the video since the performers have shown various kinds of Emo hairstyle to the viewers. In the scope of accessories, the commodity within the videos is found on the wearing of additional stuffs related to Emo theme such as certain type of shoes, wristbands, piercing and tattoos. Last, the wearing of make up for boys of which previously considered as improperly used is also kind of commodity in Emo fashion shown by the performers within the videos. From all of the analysis on fashion, it is gained that The Used music videos seem to make the viewers understand the standard of Emo through the details of fashion shown by the performers of the music video either the band members or the models. commit to user perpustakaan.uns.ac.id 161 digilib.uns.ac.id Furthermore, the behavior of the performers within the videos is also the commodity found within the music videos. In 1980s, Emo practiced DIY ethic which became the basic idea of Hardcore and Punk scene although their music and lyric focusing on more individual problems. Emo behavior nowadays has been commodified by focusing in a personal and sensitive problem only. Dealing with the adolescence problem, Emo has been stated as a youth subculture which is very sensitive about the common experience in youth phase such as rebellion and anxiety. The youth rebellion of Emo is gained well within The Used music videos. If the in the 1980s Emo, rebellion was delivered from hardcore subculture members practicing DIY ethic, Emo rebellion today gains from the behavior of the Emo members on the music scene particularly on the stage. The stage performances of The Used members appeared on the video describe well the rebellion side of Emo today. Another commodification in behavior is also found in how the performers within the videos give the description of anxiety feeling. The previous Emo did not take the anxiety feeling seriously because the subculture was rooted from hardcore and punk music scene which was recognized as a strong and rebel youth subculture. However, in conclusion, through the performance of the performers within the videos, it is concluded that common feeling of adolescence phase has been commodified because Emo today is commonly popular for the relation with the general anxiety feeling such as alienated, terrible loneliness, rejected and the like. The commodification of Emo subculture in America will be impossibly happen without the influence of the society’s social and cultural background. It is commit to user 162 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id needed to notice that Emo subculture is dramatically popular in post 9/11 era. If it is connected to the general situation in America at that time, the gloominess covers all aspects in that country including the entertainment business. Before the national tragedy of 9/11 happened, the millennium hysteria still dominated the entertainment industries. Music genre such as hip hop, R&B and pop could be accepted well by the society as the form of hysteria post early millennium period. However, after the tragedy happened, such hysteria collapses due to the national suffering. American media focuses to search the next big thing that can cover the situation in America at that time. In entertainment business for youth, Emo becomes the right target to sell. Combining the national suffering post 9/11 and sensitive feeling in adolescence phase, Emo is considered saleable and acceptable in American youth life. This basic background has encouraged the subculture to be exaggeratedly exploited and commodified. B. Recommendation Analyzing various phenomena of youth subcultures is really interesting. There are various extra factors behind the phenomena of youth subcultures’ rising and down period in a society. To study what kinds of factors behind it is challenging. Due to the lack of youth subculture’s analysis, it is really recommended for the other American Studies researchers, who have a great interest in studying youth subcultures, to find out the phenomena happens to certain youth subcultures since it has been acquired that nowadays youth subcultures are rising and down dramatically due to the additional factors behind commit to user 163 digilib.uns.ac.id perpustakaan.uns.ac.id it. Moreover, since the symbolic systems of communication of a youth subculture are being commodified by the industries, it is needed to look the idea of youth subculture deeper than what can be seen through media perspective. Not all of the youth subculture’s symbolic systems of communication described by the media nowadays have really represented the real youth subculture. Thus, the further analysis of various youth subcultures is expected. commit to user