Emo is a wide-ranging scene that encompasses countless emotions, but for all of its power, it’s largely associated with sadness. However, the rawest, angriest emo songs trace back to the genre’s roots in ’80s hardcore, where early pioneers like Rites of Spring and Embrace got intensely vulnerable over an equally aggressive foundation, often to the point of screams. That sound spawned different waves that all put their own twist on “emotional hardcore” — a bloodletting of rage, heartbreak, and other anguish. We’ve seen this in everyone from the Used to Paramore to My Chemical Romance. With this in mind, we wanted our readers to tell us the angriest emo songs, ever. You can find the top fan picks ranked below.
Read more: What does emo really mean? The story of the genre in 11 songs
5. Fall Out Boy – “Tell That Mick He Just Made My List of Things to Do Today”
Out of Fall Out Boy’s many albums, Take This To Your Grave is their grittiest and most furious, combining their hardcore roots with soaring pop-punk hooks. Lyrically, Pete Wentz was at his angriest, penning tales of betrayal, jealousy, and the angst of missing home into a collection of bulletproof tracks. Our readers called out “Tell That Mick He Just Made My List of Things to Do Today,” its biting opener that set the tone for everything to come. Taking its title from a line in Rushmore, it’s got scathing lyrics to boot. Among them: “When you catch fire, I wouldn’t piss to put you out/Stop burning bridges and drive off of them.”
4. Taking Back Sunday – “Cute Without The ‘E’ (Cut From The Team)”
A lot of songs from Tell All Your Friends could’ve made this list, Taking Back Sunday’s fiery 2002 debut album that became a defining moment of emo’s mainstream crossover. Drawing from Long Island hardcore, the Get Up Kids, even hip-hop, the band made an impression from the jump, guided by the dual vocals of Adam Lazzara and John Nolan. However, readers pointed to “Cute Without The ‘E’ (Cut From The Team)” — and it’s not hard to see why. From the very first line — “Your lipstick, his collar/Don’t bother, angel/I know exactly what goes on” — the track was destined to become their breakout, buoyed by its blistering momentum and pointed, theatrical lyrics.
3. The Used – “I’m a Fake”
Through the years, the Used have been celebrated for their raw, angry catalog — highlighted by Bert McCracken’s intense emotional delivery. He could shift between melodic singing and tortured screams on a dime, with 2004’s In Love and Death becoming one of their most beloved albums for that very reason. The closing track, “I’m a Fake,” unravels the “true nature of the beast of self-doubt.” As McCracken said in a 2021 interview where he unpacked every song, “It’s just this rant about something that’s so precious, about human ego and our own ability to destroy ourselves before anyone else has the chance to… We all feel like a fake when we’re trying to be ourselves.”
2. Senses Fail – “You’re Cute When You Scream”
Senses Fail’s Let It Enfold You is a landmark album in emo, punk, and post-hardcore circles, encompassing a hugely emotional sound that still hits as hard today as it did in 2004. While its title track serves as its furious centerpiece, its front-half song, “You’re Cute When You Scream,” came out on top here. Frontman Buddy Nielsen has always been adept at expressing intense trauma, addiction, and angst through raw, passionate shrieks, but on “You’re Cute When You Scream,” his rage is simply contagious.
1. Brand New – “Seventy Times 7”
Brand New’s Your Favorite Weapon captures tremendous amounts of rage, bitterness, and heartbreak, but none more so than “Seventy Times 7.” Throwing it back to their beef with Taking Back Sunday in the early 2000s, the track takes aim at their falling out (“When you say best friends means friends forever,” a lyric that TBS would reference on “There’s No ‘I’ in Team”). Though there was never a true resolution, both bands toured together in 2002, where John Nolan would come onstage to play guitar during “Seventy Times 7.”
