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12 bands who wouldn’t be here without My Chemical Romance

We examine My Chemical Romance’s direct impact on your favourite rock bands – from Creeper to twenty one pilots…

12 bands who wouldn’t be here without My Chemical Romance
Words:
Paul Travers

They were most commonly assigned the nebulous tag of ‘emo’, but musically My Chemical Romance were magpies in ravens’ feathers, dipping into punk, metal, pop, rock and more to create a marvellous sonic stew that somehow sounded only of themselves. Even at their most bombastic or fantastical they kept a sense of raw emotion and they spoke to and for the outsider even when they became one of the biggest bands in the world.

Even now, MCR’s profound influence on the current music scene is obvious. Many of the fans who loved them grew up and started bands of their own and they continue to have an impact on new generations.

Here we look at some of the bands who probably wouldn’t have been possible without the trail blazed by Gerard and Mikey Way, Frank Iero and Ray Toro

Creeper

Perhaps no other band is more evocative of My Chemical Romance than the UK’s own Creeper. Sure, they have their own approach, but there are definite similarities in the dark gothic tint, the hook-laden punk and rock moves and, more importantly, their penchant for a sweeping, grand design. With overarching themes, mysteries and a blurring of fact and fiction, they’ve taken the baton from MCR and run with it.

twenty one pilots

In that infamous open letter following the break-up, Gerard proclaimed that My Chemical Romance can never die because “it is not a band – it is an idea”. twenty one pilots don’t sound like MCR, but they write their own musical and aesthetic rules in a similar way. They’ve permeated the mainstream while maintaining that link with the core fans and, if it matters, their frontman is a fan. “I like that band anyway, I like the sound of that band,” he told PopBuzz while discussing pilots’ distinctive cover of MCR’s Cancer. "I think what they do is really interesting. So I was psyched to hear that cover."

Post Malone

MCR’s influence extends way beyond the modern emo or even wider rock scenes. Austin Richard Post would have been 11 when The Black Parade came out, and if you don’t think it had an impact on his subsequent career as Post Malone, you haven’t been paying attention. Again, it’s the spirit rather than the style, but as a video of him losing his shit while playing Welcome To The Black Parade during his DJ set at Emo Nite proves, My Chem certainly had an impact on him.

Lil Peep

Lil Peep’s fusion of hip-hop and emo suggests a more obvious debt to MCR. The late rapper drew from a host of influences, but he was vocal about his love of emo and pop-punk, and his confessional style dealt honestly with real issues that resonated with his fans. Good Charlotte performed at his memorial, and it was also reported that the famous ‘So long and goodnight’ line from MCR’s Helena moved family and friends to tears as it reverberated through the room.

New Years Day

With a strong visual aesthetic and a knack for using vivid, often horror-themed imagery as a metaphor for real-life issues, there’s a definite line to be drawn between MCR and New Years Day. Ash Costello also experienced a fangirl moment when she got to work with Gerard and Ray Toro. She told Alternative Press, “When Gerard started calling me by my name, it was a really cool moment. I was like, ‘Oh shit! He knows my name!’ So I’d be recording and I’d hear him be like, ‘Yeah, Ash will be able to hit this note fine,’ or, ‘Ash will be able to wail on this part,’ and I’m just sitting there like, ‘Oh my God! He’s talking about my voice!’”

Famous Last Words

If the concept albums filled with obsession and inner demons weren’t enough, the fact that Famous Last Words lifted their name from the MCR song of the same name should spell it out. This is most definitely one band who wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for My Chemical Romance.

Sleeping With Sirens

The Jersey-ites had a big impact on the members of Sleeping With Sirens – and not just frontman Kellin Quinn, who has been pictured in an MCR T-shirt. Jack Fowler has described The Black Parade as the album that made him want to follow his dreams, as well as inspiring him “to learn how to play lead guitar, study my playing and become the guitarist I am today”, while Nick Martin added that he can still play the album from beginning to end.

YUNGBLUD

YUNGBLUD is another artist with a wide array of influences, but one of the biggest was always My Chemical Romance. He’s previously spoken about growing up on bands like MCR “who were actually genuinely talking about and saying things”. He also made a mash-up with the lyrics of his own single Hope For The Underrated Youth sung to the tune of Welcome To The Black Parade for Radio 1, admitting,If this goes wrong it’s sacrilegious.”

Hey Violet

Rena Lovelis once admitted to Kerrang! that her first gig was Hannah Montana. The second was My Chem in their Fabulous Killjoys phase, however, and it was this that had an indelible impact on Hey Violet, who were also in attendance. “My Chemical Romance were a huge influence on us, on our songwriting and what we wanted to do – especially at the start,” she said.

State Champs

State Champs might have worshipped at the altars of the usual pop-punk icons such as Green Day, Sum 41 and blink-182, but My Chemical Romance were another early influence. Guitarist Tyler Szalkowski admits to wearing a blazer over an MCR shirt to his ninth grade homecoming and says they had an enduring impact on him. “They were a rock band that’s very comfortable being different, and that’s very inspiring to see them have so much success from just being themselves,” he told Rock Sound after his band covered The Sharpest Lives.

Save Face

As an emo-tinged punk-ish rock band from New Jersey, Save Face have the background nailed. They also nailed their colours to the mast with a cover of Teenagers. “The Black Parade is one of my all-time favourite albums,” said vocalist Tyler Povanda. “I did a little demo and just went with it! Out of all the songs on that record, this one definitely made the most sense and felt right.”

Havelocke

They might not be a household name, but Sheffield band Havelocke have been earning acclaim for a sound that updates the 2000s emo and post-hardcore that soundtracked their formative years. “We grew up on My Chemical Romance and The Used and AFI and that comes out in our music,” guitarist Hope Thackray told us. They’re self-confessed “emo kids who grew up” and there are plenty more where they came from.

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