Chris Carrabba Says Dashboard Confessional 'Wouldn't Have a Career' Without Music Piracy Surge of the Early 2000s

Mar. 15, 2025

Dashboard Confessional in 2002.Photo:RJ Capak/WireImage

Dashboard Confessional, winner of the VMA MTV2 Award

RJ Capak/WireImage

A spike in music piracy that came as more households around the country logged on to the Internet in the early 2000s changed the game for countless artists

Dashboard Confessional’sChris Carrabbasays that his band is one of them, opening up about the time where services like Napster and Kazaa first became popular in NBC News Studios’My Generation.

“There’s no question Napster affected the record industry and it was a negative effect in a lot of ways, but not for me," the “Hands Down” singer says.

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Student downloading music from Napster.Spencer Platt/Getty

A New York University student downloads music from the Napster site March 6, 2001 in New York City. The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) filed 261 lawsuits September 8, 2003 against file sharers that have downloaded music files from the internet.

Spencer Platt/Getty

“My records came out on a small label. It had limited distribution. If you had found out about my band, there wasn’t any place you could go get my music if you wanted to,” he explains.

“If it hadn’t been for people having had a way to share my music, I wouldn’t have a career of any kind.”

The rise of music piracy happened just as the emo scene, of which Dashboard Confessional is a part, started to experience true growth.

Dashboard Confessional, lead singer Christopher Carrabba, performing on “MTV2 Unplugged” at the MTV studios in New York City. 4/24/02 Photo by Scott Gries/ImageDirect

Scott Gries/ImageDirect/Getty

“The emo scene came up from a need to dig deeper inside yourself,” Carrabba says. “Young people, you’re suddenly grappling with a world that is now changed forever.”

source: people.com