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Twenty One Pilots - Blurryface (Album Review)
Episode 356

Twenty One Pilots - Blurryface (Album Review)

In 2015, Twenty One Pilots released Blurryface, an album that defied genre and became one of the biggest records of the modern emo scene. Brian and Lizzie discuss how this ambitious album redefined mainstream rock and smuggled mental health themes onto Top 40 radio.

The Emo Social Club Podcast · Lizzie Baumgartner, Brian Rowe, Emo Social Club

January 26, 202644m 13sExplicit

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Show Notes

And then it's, like, the coolest thing you've ever f***ing heard.

Brian and Lizzie dive into the cultural impact and musical complexity of Twenty One Pilots' 2015 masterpiece, Blurryface. They explore the album's guerrilla marketing leak, its consortium of A-list producers, and its lasting influence on the pop landscape.    

Was Blurryface the biggest record to emerge from the 2010s emo scene? Brian and Lizzie investigate the monumental impact of Twenty One Pilots' 2015 genre-defying album. They discuss the duo's Ohio roots, their place in Fueled by Ramen's emo history, and the album's unique production, which brought together producers from hip hop, pop, and indie rock. The hosts explore the strategic album leak, the creation of the 'Blurryface' character to personify insecurity and mental health struggles, and how the record smuggled alternative art into the mainstream. Featuring in-depth analysis of landmark tracks like the billion-stream hit "Stressed Out," the reggae-infused "Ride," and the fan-favorite "Tear In My Heart," this episode debates whether the album's pop punk adjacency and massive success cement its place as one of the best emo albums of all time.   

 

"This is very much a radio sounding record, although the music and the songwriting is not super radio friendly."

"By wrapping a high concept album about depression and insecurity in glossy pop production, Twenty One Pilots smuggled alternative art into the mainstream."

"I wasn't raised in the hood, but I know a thing or two about pain and darkness. And it's like, I don't think that you need to say that in a rap song."

 

 

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Topics

tear in my hearttwenty one pilotsridefall out boyemo social club2015album reviewbring me the horizontame impalaschizoid popindie popemo rapstressed outblurryfaceheavy dirty soulfueled by ramenemo podcast