DS Throwback: Twenty-Five Years of Dashboard Confessional’s “The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most”

In the spring of 2000, Fiddler Records released the first Dashboard Confessional album, Swiss Army Romance. Chris Carrabba saw the record as a side project to Further Seems Forever, the band he had been singing for since 1998. Most of the record features Carrabba and a guitar singing songs he felt were too personal to record with Further Seems Forever. Swiss Army Romance would steer Emo in a singer-songwriter direction, stripped down of instruments but not feelings. It established a vulnerability that would be mocked not just with Dashboard, but throughout the whole genre. Carrabba chose the name Dashboard Confessional based on a lyric from the record’s second track, “The Sharp New Hint of Tears.”


Further Seems Forever was chugging along as Dashboard Confessional was gaining steam. After releasing a song on a compilation and a split with fellow Florida band Recess Theory, the band recorded their first record, The Moon Is Down, on Tooth & Nail. Carrabba recorded the vocals for the record after he had returned from a Dashboard Confessional tour and decided that he would leave the band to pursue his own solo endeavor. The record features Carrabba’s vocals on ten tracks, including the single “Snowbirds and Townies.”


By this time, Carrabba, in full Dashboard Confessional mode, was playing solo shows in venues and working on new songs. Choosing to play smaller and more intimate venues, Carrabba cultivated a show where everyone could participate and was encouraged to sing along with him. Eventually, he started working on the follow-up to Swiss Army Romance. Despite mostly keeping the same stripped-down format as the first record, The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most released in 2001 on Vagrant Records feels more like an extension but doesn’t feel repetitive. 

While both records have small sounds and big feelings, The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most’s opening song “This Brilliant Dance” is a song about the invincible feeling of falling in love for the first time. It’s a nice contrast before the heartbreak to come, and it helped the record become a defining document of early-2000s emo that would shape the sound and emotional vocabulary of the scene.


While Swiss Army Romance was mostly a solo effort, this record features a full band on four of the songs, including The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most’s lone single, a re-recording of “Screaming Infidelities.” While Swiss Army Romance did not have anything that would be considered a single, this was one of the more popular songs off Dashboard Confessional’s first record.

This song and “The Best Deceptions” both explore the fallout of being cheated on. Carrabba’s lyrics of betrayal and painful memories are contrasted by pushing the hope, wonder, and uncertainty of “This Brilliant Dance” and tipping it into literally the worst-case scenario. While Carrabba’s guitar and vocals don’t change much on “Screaming Infidelities,” the addition of the band really gives the song the emphasis it needs in certain spots.


For an album that a lot of people associated with crying and whining, tracks like “Saints and Sailors” and “The Good Fight” show how sharply Carrabba captured the emotional messiness of a relationship unraveling. This record is a great document of a relationship gone sour, and while it’s something most people will eventually experience, Carrabba’s lyrics make the imagery easy to picture or inhabit. This is a question you can probably ask in regards to most emo music of this era: Did we long for love, the rejection, or the assumption we’d just be in a terrible relationship? If this had ever crossed your mind, you probably related to “Again I Go, Unnoticed.”


An album with so many feelings and emotions needs a definitive closing statement. “This Bitter Pill” is a fantastic closer. All of the songs of resentment, harsh truth, and disappointments have built up to this moment. If the title track “The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most” was about a fear of showing these emotions, “This Bitter Pill” is the “fuck you” moment.

The narrative of this record and the juxtaposition of its sides are pretty cut and dry. By the end of “The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most,” the narrator is charged and ready to confront these things. By the end of “This Bitter Pill,” these words are emblazoned into the ether by Carrabba singing with everything he’s got and left hoarse, ending the record in a place of catharsis and new beginnings.


Eventually, mainstream success would catch up to him and change the trajectory of the band and the type of songs written. I turned to Dashboard Confessional after putting my heart out there a couple of times and getting it stepped on. The songs on both Swiss Army Romance and The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most were soothing to the nth degree, if only because real heartbreak would eventually come to me later.

While Carrabba’s descent into songs with electric guitars wasn’t as dramatic as when Bob Dylan went electric, it definitely changed the trajectory of the band. After the success of The Places You Have Come To Fear the Most, Carrabba released a pair of EPs, The Summer Kiss and So Impossible. The band then released A Mark, A Mission, A Brand, A Scar. It was the first album built around fully electric songs, a departure from the intimate, too-personal-for-a-full-band approach that defined his early acoustic work.

There was a lot of shame around buying a Dashboard Confessional record, especially after The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most took off. It’s funny in hindsight because the vulnerability people mocked is what made these records resonate. I remember when I bought A Mark, A Mission, A Brand, A Scar at Tower Records, there this judgy store clerk who tried to chastise me for my purchase. She went on a diatribe about how Chris Carrabba was nothing but a Backstreet Boy with tattoos. I think I asked, “Don’t the Backstreet Boys have tattoos also?” I’m still not sure who that question actually helped. Two decades later, the shame is gone, but the honesty remains. That’s why these records hit as hard as they do.


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