@Two Sheds: God bless you sir, honest and truly, but could re re up the despiracidos album, I cant get Mediafire to work it out. As for the Say Anything Album you posted, They were my bar none favorite band in HS and I saw them live a few times, but had not even heard that they released another album. I was so thrilled I fell off of the wall of bricks I had just shat, and in response, am uploading my other two favorite albums from High School.

This is ...Was a Real Boy, the seven track alternate CD that was packaged with the re-release of Say Anything's 1st Album, and it is all really just as, if not a little better, than everything else on ...Is a Real Boy.
http://www.mediafire.com/?xvxzd1vmtvi

Taking Back Sunday's 2nd and 3rd albums (which I sadly don't have at all *wishes for albums to appear*) are trying really hard to fill some of the biggest possible shoes when it comes to stepping up their game, but they started out with Tell All Your Friends, which is arguably one of the penultimate Turn of the Century Emo records. This Disc is an Explosion of good fucking music, and me and my brother sat down at our last X-Mas and tried to figure out, between the two of us, how many times we had listened to this album, and we estimated well in the 30,000s =) If you like Emo at all, these guy really and truly deserve a listen, and if you've never been able to stomach Emo before, hit this record up, because it is still amazing, powerful, and downright dance-to-able =)
Every Friday night, me and my friends would go to our towns Teen Center, a non profit hang out space that promoted a safe drug free environment, pool table, Basketball court, Big screen TV and N64, and a sweet stereo, and as soon as it opened at 7 PM, we stormed in, threw this album on and all, like, 15 of my friends just played air guitar until all the songs were over. Gooooood times.
http://www.mediafire.com/?8wjzrqdajzb

Anyone who knows me in real life is pretty aware of my vehement lust for My Chemical Romance, but the reason for that is not because I never got to see Queen and need a poor substitute, nor is it because Glam-Pop-Emo-Punk is my, like, totally favorite style of music, cause it isn't.
This album was recorded in response to 9/11. The lead singer and the back up guitarist, Gerard and Mikey Way, both grew up Jersey, and most of their friends and family worked, lived and hung out in NYC, and they, like many of Americans, especially in that area, got hit really hard but what happened. When they got together as a group, they all had a lot frustration and anxiety that needed to come out, and this is how they did it. There are also a lot of references to failure and feeling useless, due to the fact that before starting MCR, Gerard Way was on his way to a promising career as an animator for a cartoon on Cartoon Network, but the show was axed at the last possible minute, after he'd diverted all his possible resources into this career path, so at 24-25, he was totally jobless, no prospects, and pretty much turned into a complete painkiller/booze addict, and he did not recover and get off the wagon untli halfway through recording their 2nd album, when the other band members told him they were quitting if he didn't get his shit together.
It's because there 1st album is really raw, underproduced, and at times a lil' scary, that I dig it so much. It captures the three feelings I remembered having the most in High School, and identified with the most:
1) Just feeling comepletely in the dark about the world outside my little ho-hum town, and realizing how powerless I am do anything for a good long while.
2) Just utterly failing to comprehend why girls were so goddamn crazy it is unbelievable
3) Crippling depression, brought on by extreme personal misgivings and identity issues.
Now, about 90% of the teenagers I grew up with have those exact problems, in one form or another, but MCR's first album does is darker and more or less carelessly than most of the other bands I remembered liking at the time. There are songs about Suicide, Vampires, Drowning after Prom Night, but theres also songs about fighting for what's yours, coming back from the dead to right wrongs (a theme they flesh out into an entire theme album,
3 cheers for sweet revenge), and simply just not taking shit from absolutely anybody about doing what you believe in. I find that this album is worlds different than there 3rd album, The Black Parade, and there is certainly a lot of difference from their sophomore album, but this disc simply has, in my honest opinion, more raw personality and emotional depth than their new discs.
In short, while MCR may not be the 1st name in Musical integrity, their 1st album rocks my socks, shoes, neckties, and eardrums on a happily regular basis.
http://www.mediafire.com/?ydqit0gpy00