Hello, everyone! Welcome to the hub for my Deep Dive project Establishing Screamo Canon: From Chaos to Catharsis! 2025 was the Year of Screamo and, while I didn’t quite get to my goal of covering Screamo from the 90s through 2015, getting through the 90s wound up being a Herculean feat in and of itself. I’m quite proud of this accomplishment! The series will continue indefinitely as I have time for it, but getting it up onto the website was very important. Please refer to the Overview post for more information about the series and the various sub-series within.
Below you can sort by subseries or via a tag cloud, weighing the most commonly-used tags such as artists, release years, record labels, locations, genres and even descriptors! Please keep an eye on this as the series continues!
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Envy - From Here to Eternity | Screamo Hall of Fame Class of 1998 Nominee
Release Information:
8/11/1998
HG Fact Records
Tokyo, Japan
Runtime: 33:54
Tracks: 11
Band Members:
Tetsuya Fukagawa (Vocals)
Masahiro Tobita (Guitar)
Nobukata Kawai (Guitar)
Manabu Nakagawa (Bass)
Dairoku Seki (Drums)
Genres, Influences and Characteristics:
Screamo, Melodic, Energetic, Dynamic, Raw
Musical Analysis:
On this LP, Envy crafted gorgeous, pure, cathartic Screamo, just as you would expect. In particular, their dense, heavy guitars would overwhelm if not threaded with clean, standalone guitar arpeggios, tasteful melodic lead lines, dynamic song structures and endless kineticism. This all combines with Fukagawa's intense vocal performance to produce astonishing results.
Historical Analysis:
Simply put, this album is integral to the formation of Japanese Screamo. Although Envy's primary influence on the genre seems to be the integration of Post-Rock, that innovation in and of itself was spurred from Envy's injection of melody into heavy Screamo.
Prior to this album, Envy had undergone numerous lineup and stylistic changes since their 1992 formation, but they would have about two decades with this lineup, wherein all of their legendary material would be released. Special to Japan, this record serves as a harbinger of what's to come more than a standalone entry into the Hall.
Lyrical Analysis:
*Note that because this is an old release in the grand scheme of Emo and Screamo history, I cannot locate lyrics for any of these songs. If more lyrics can be dug out, I will reevaluate the lyrical analysis. Please note any lyrical analysis on my end will lack cultural nuance and accuracy in the translation.*