Mutual Catharsis and Real Tears
The lore of these early shows is legendary because the barrier between the band and the audience dissolved completely.
The Volatile Stage:
Picciotto would violently thrash around, smashing equipment, knocking over cymbal stands, and physically collapsing from exhaustion.
The Audience Reaction:
Hardcore punks—people used to toughing it out in violent mosh pits—would openly weep in the audience. It wasn't uncommon for people to hold each other, overwhelmed by the sheer vulnerability on display. (While it sounds like a modern exaggeration, intense emotional catharsis has been a staple of the scene since its inception.)
The Term is Born:
The local scene didn't know what to make of it. People started mockingly (and then seriously) calling it "emotional hardcore," which flipped into emocore, and finally just emo. The band hated the label. In a famous 1985 interview, Picciotto noted that he found the term totally bizarre, arguing that all punk rock should inherently be emotional. Yet, the name stuck because they had tapped into a brand of raw, unvarnished confession that the underground had never seen before.
The Legacy of the Broken Mirror
Rites of Spring only played around 15 shows and released one self-titled album before burning out, but that brief flashpoint changed everything. It established the core "lore" that carried through every subsequent wave of the genre: that true strength in a subculture doesn't come from being bulletproof; it comes from showing exactly where you are bleeding.