The complete ranking
The Top 500 Rock Bands of All Time
Five hundred bands, ordered by a blend of cultural influence, critical reception, and commercial reach. Click any name to read the deep dive. Articles are added in batches; entries without an article yet show a quick-facts page.
- 500 bands
- 7 eras
- 45 subgenres
- 22 countries
- 1,959 earliest formed
- #001 The Beatles
Widely regarded as the most influential rock band in history.
- #002 Led Zeppelin
Pioneers of hard rock and heavy metal whose sound defined a decade.
- #003 The Rolling Stones
The longest-running rock band, central to the British Invasion and beyond.
- #004 Pink Floyd
Architects of progressive rock concept albums and immersive live experiences.
- #005 Queen
Theatrical rock virtuosos behind some of the most-performed anthems ever.
- #006 The Who
Mod-era originators of the rock opera and explosive live performance.
- #007 Nirvana
The band that broke grunge into the mainstream and reshaped 1990s rock.
- #008 AC/DC
Riff-driven hard rock perfectionists with one of the best-selling catalogs in music.
- #009 U2
Stadium-filling Irish rockers who fused post-punk drive with anthemic ambition.
- #010 Black Sabbath
The Birmingham band credited with inventing heavy metal.
- #011 Metallica
The biggest thrash metal band, defining heaviness for generations of metal fans.
- #012 The Doors
Jim Morrison-fronted psychedelic rock unit blending poetry and dark blues.
- #013 Radiohead
Restless art-rock innovators reshaping what guitar music could be.
- #014 The Velvet Underground
Underground New York pioneers whose influence on indie rock is incalculable.
- #015 The Beach Boys
Surf-pop pioneers turned studio innovators with peerless vocal harmony.
- #016 R.E.M.
Athens, Georgia jangle-pop trailblazers who built American college rock.
- #017 The Clash
Punk's most musically expansive band, fusing reggae, dub, and rockabilly.
- #018 Sex Pistols
Detonators of UK punk whose brief career rewired popular music.
- #019 The Ramones
Queens four-piece who invented the blueprint for fast, simple punk.
- #020 Guns N' Roses
Sunset Strip rockers whose debut became one of the best-selling debuts ever.
- #021 Aerosmith
Boston's bad-boy hard rockers with a multi-decade comeback.
- #022 Eagles
California country-rock harmonizers behind some of the best-selling albums ever.
- #023 Fleetwood Mac
British blues band that became a transatlantic pop-rock juggernaut.
- #024 Deep Purple
Foundational hard rock outfit whose riffs anchor metal's lineage.
- #025 Iron Maiden
Twin-guitar New Wave of British Heavy Metal champions and global metal ambassadors.
- #026 Rush
Canadian power trio synonymous with virtuoso progressive hard rock.
- #027 Yes
Symphonic prog architects whose long suites defined the genre's ambition.
- #028 Genesis
Theatrical British prog band who later became 1980s pop hitmakers.
- #029 Pearl Jam
Seattle's enduring grunge standard-bearers with a deep catalog.
- #030 Soundgarden
Sub Pop heavyweights bridging grunge and 1970s metal.
- #031 Alice in Chains
Seattle quartet with bleak harmonies and crushing riffs.
- #032 Red Hot Chili Peppers
L.A. funk-rockers turned long-running alternative rock institution.
- #033 Foo Fighters
Dave Grohl-led rock workhorse, the most successful post-Nirvana band.
- #034 Green Day
Bay Area trio who reignited mainstream punk and wrote a punk-rock opera.
- #035 Oasis
Manchester swagger and Beatlesque hooks at the center of Britpop.
- #036 Blur
Britpop chameleons whose restless reinventions outlasted the era.
- #037 The Cure
Goth-tinged post-punk turned arena-filling alternative rock.
- #038 The Smiths
Manchester icons whose four albums defined British indie.
- #039 Joy Division
Bleak Mancunian post-punk whose two albums shaped a generation.
- #040 Talking Heads
CBGB art-school nerds who pushed rock into funk and global rhythm.
- #041 Pixies
Loud-quiet-loud Boston quartet who taught alternative rock how to be weird.
- #042 Sonic Youth
New York noise-rock pillars who connected the underground to the mainstream.
- #043 Rage Against the Machine
Politically charged rap-rock whose riffs fused funk-metal and protest.
- #044 Tool
Cerebral progressive metal whose albums treat heaviness as ritual.
- #045 Linkin Park
Genre-blending L.A. rockers whose debut redefined post-grunge radio.
- #046 The White Stripes
Detroit duo whose stripped-down blues garage revived rock's primal urge.
- #047 The Strokes
New York garage-rock revivalists who set the 2000s indie template.
- #048 Arctic Monkeys
Sheffield indie-rockers whose internet-fueled rise rewrote breakthrough playbooks.
- #049 Coldplay
British alt-rockers turned global stadium-pop colossus.
- #050 Muse
Bombastic British trio fusing prog ambition and arena spectacle.
- #051 The Smashing Pumpkins
Chicago dream-grunge band of double-album scale and shoegaze color.
- #052 Weezer
Power-pop nerds with two iconic 90s records and a long, divisive run.
- #053 The Killers
Las Vegas synth-rockers behind one of the defining 2000s debuts.
- #054 Kings of Leon
Tennessee brothers who arc-ed from southern garage to stadium rock.
- #055 System of a Down
Armenian-American L.A. quartet weaving folk, metal, and political rage.
- #056 Slipknot
Iowa nine-piece whose theatrical brutality redefined extreme metal performance.
- #057 Korn
Bakersfield band that codified the down-tuned, hip-hop-flecked nu metal sound.
- #058 Deftones
Sacramento metallers blending shoegaze textures with crushing weight.
- #059 Pantera
Texas groove-metal monsters who reshaped post-thrash heaviness.
- #060 Slayer
Speed-and-fury L.A. thrash icons among the genre's most influential.
- #061 Megadeth
Technical thrash titans led by Dave Mustaine after his Metallica exit.
- #062 Anthrax
New York thrash mainstay rounding out the Big Four with crossover swagger.
- #063 Judas Priest
Birmingham metal lifers who codified the leather-and-steel metal aesthetic.
- #064 Motörhead
Lemmy's furious power trio fusing punk speed with metal volume.
- #065 Van Halen
Eddie Van Halen's tapping techniques rewired what hard rock guitar could do.
- #066 Kiss
Face-painted New Yorkers whose theatrical shows scaled rock to spectacle.
- #067 ZZ Top
Texas blues-rock trio whose long beards and tight grooves became iconic.
- #068 Lynyrd Skynyrd
Florida southern-rock standard-bearers whose anthems define the genre.
- #069 The Allman Brothers Band
Southern rock progenitors whose dual-guitar jams reshaped American rock.
- #070 Creedence Clearwater Revival
Bay Area swamp-rock kings who turned out hit after hit in just a few years.
- #071 The Band
Americana pioneers whose rural rock recast the country's musical past.
- #072 The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Hendrix's London trio reinvented the electric guitar in three studio LPs.
- #073 Cream
Clapton-Bruce-Baker supergroup who defined the rock power trio.
- #074 Bad Company
British supergroup behind a string of bluesy hard-rock hits.
- #075 Free
British blues-rock outfit whose 'All Right Now' became a hard-rock standard.
- #076 The Kinks
Ray Davies' London band whose riff-rock prefigured punk and metal.
- #077 The Yardbirds
British R&B incubator that launched Clapton, Beck, and Page.
- #078 The Animals
Newcastle British Invasion band famous for their take on 'House of the Rising Sun'.
- #079 The Hollies
Manchester harmony-pop veterans of the British Invasion.
- #080 The Byrds
L.A. jingle-jangle pioneers who fused Dylan's lyricism with electric guitars.
- #081 Buffalo Springfield
Short-lived L.A. supergroup that seeded country-rock's rise.
- #082 Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
Harmony-rich supergroup whose softer rock defined a folkier strand of the era.
- #083 Steely Dan
Studio perfectionists fusing jazz harmony with cynical rock songcraft.
- #084 Chicago
Horn-driven rockers turned soft-rock juggernaut over decades.
- #085 Boston
Layered guitar arena rock whose debut became one of rock's biggest sellers.
- #086 Journey
Bay Area arena-rock stars whose anthems remain karaoke staples.
- #087 Foreigner
Anglo-American FM-rock hitmakers blending hard rock and AOR.
- #088 Toto
L.A. session-musician supergroup behind 'Africa' and other studio classics.
- #089 Heart
Wilson sisters-led hard rock band among the most successful female-fronted ever.
- #090 Cheap Trick
Rockford power-poppers behind a legendary live album from Budokan.
- #091 Thin Lizzy
Phil Lynott's Dublin band combining twin-guitar harmonies and storytelling.
- #092 Rainbow
Ritchie Blackmore's post-Purple project bridging hard rock and neoclassical metal.
- #093 Whitesnake
David Coverdale's bluesy hard-rock outfit turned MTV-era hitmaker.
- #094 Def Leppard
Sheffield band whose layered hard-pop took NWOBHM to the masses.
- #095 Bon Jovi
New Jersey arena rockers behind the most enduring 80s glam-metal hits.
- #096 Mötley Crüe
Sunset Strip excess incarnate, the genre's biggest tabloid stars.
- #097 King Crimson
Robert Fripp's restless prog institution and a touchstone of the genre.
- #098 Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Keyboard-led prog supergroup of arena-scale ambition.
- #099 Jethro Tull
Flute-fronted British prog band fusing folk, hard rock, and theatre.
- #100 Dire Straits
Mark Knopfler's understated bar-rock outfit became a global mass-market act.
- #101 The Police
Reggae-tinged New Wave trio whose tight songwriting topped charts globally.
- #102 INXS
Sydney rock band whose funk-rock crossover defined Australian rock's 80s peak.
- #103 Duran Duran
Birmingham synth-rockers at the heart of MTV's first golden age.
- #104 Tears for Fears
Synth-pop duo behind some of the most enduring 80s hits.
- #105 Depeche Mode
Basildon synth-pioneers who darkened pop into goth-tinged stadium fare.
- #106 New Order
Manchester post-Joy-Division project who fused dance music and rock.
- #107 Echo & the Bunnymen
Liverpool post-punk band of cinematic atmosphere and Doors-y drama.
- #108 Siouxsie and the Banshees
Trailblazing post-punks whose icy art-rock paved goth's path.
- #109 Bauhaus
Northampton band whose 'Bela Lugosi's Dead' essentially launched goth rock.
- #110 The Sisters of Mercy
Leeds gothic-rock institution synonymous with smoke-and-leather darkness.
- #111 The Jesus and Mary Chain
Reid brothers' fuzz-pop project, an indie touchstone whose noise inspired shoegaze.
- #112 My Bloody Valentine
The genre-defining shoegaze band whose 'Loveless' remains untouchable.
- #113 Slowdive
British shoegazers of glacial beauty whose reunion rebuilt the genre's audience.
- #114 Ride
Oxford four-piece blending Byrdsian jangle with shoegaze haze.
- #115 Cocteau Twins
Scottish dream-pop pioneers whose ethereal vocals shaped 4AD aesthetics.
- #116 Mogwai
Glasgow instrumentalists central to post-rock's quiet-loud canon.
- #117 Sigur Rós
Icelandic ambient-rock band whose bowed guitars feel weather-borne.
- #118 Godspeed You! Black Emperor
Montreal collective whose orchestral crescendos define apocalyptic post-rock.
- #119 Explosions in the Sky
Texas instrumentalists whose cinematic builds soundtracked a generation.
- #120 This Will Destroy You
Texas post-rock band of patient texture and slow-burn dynamics.
- #121 Russian Circles
Chicago instrumental trio fusing post-rock dynamics with metal weight.
- #122 Pelican
Chicago instrumental band straddling post-metal and post-rock.
- #123 Isis
Boston post-metal pillar of patient builds and cathedral crescendos.
- #124 Neurosis
Oakland heavy-rock visionaries who married hardcore weight to ritualistic ambient.
- #125 Cult of Luna
Swedish post-metal stalwarts of glacial heaviness and atmosphere.
- #126 Mastodon
Atlanta progressive-metal band whose concept albums redefined modern heavy.
- #127 High on Fire
Oakland trio merging Motörhead drive and Sabbath sludge.
- #128 Sleep
California riff lords whose 'Dopesmoker' is a stoner-metal cornerstone.
- #129 Kyuss
Palm Desert pioneers whose desert sessions birthed stoner rock.
- #130 Queens of the Stone Age
Josh Homme's hooky desert-rock project and rock radio mainstay.
- #131 Eagles of Death Metal
Loose, swaggering rock-and-roll duo with a sense of humor.
- #132 The Black Keys
Akron blues-rock duo whose retro grit became a 2010s mainstream sound.
- #133 The Dead Weather
Garage-rock supergroup with Jack White and Alison Mosshart.
- #134 The Raconteurs
Detroit-Nashville rock band led by Jack White and Brendan Benson.
- #135 Wolfmother
Sydney trio mining Sabbath and Zeppelin riffs for a new generation.
- #136 Black Mountain
Vancouver heavy psych quintet of acid-drenched riffs.
- #137 Dinosaur Jr.
Massachusetts indie noise legends whose loud-soft template shaped 90s alt-rock.
- #138 The Replacements
Minneapolis ramshackle rockers beloved for songwriting and chaos in equal measure.
- #139 Hüsker Dü
Twin Cities trio who proved hardcore could carry melody and ambition.
- #140 Mission of Burma
Boston post-punks whose noisy intelligence prefigured indie rock.
- #141 Black Flag
L.A. hardcore touring monsters whose DIY ethic shaped American punk.
- #142 Dead Kennedys
Bay Area satirists turning punk into political theatre.
- #143 Bad Brains
D.C. Black hardcore innovators who fused reggae and lightning-fast punk.
- #144 Minor Threat
D.C. straight-edge hardcore short-timers whose influence vastly outsizes their run.
- #145 Fugazi
D.C. post-hardcore exemplars of integrity, dynamics, and DIY ethics.
- #146 At the Drive-In
El Paso post-hardcore band whose 'Relationship of Command' is a touchstone.
- #147 The Mars Volta
Post-At-the-Drive-In Latin prog explosion of fierce ambition.
- #148 Bad Religion
L.A. melodic-punk academy who proved punk could be erudite.
- #149 NOFX
Bay Area skate-punk lifers and indie-label standard-bearers.
- #150 Rancid
Bay Area street-punk torchbearers carrying the Clash's spirit forward.
- #151 The Offspring
Orange County punks whose 'Smash' is the best-selling indie record ever.
- #152 Blink-182
San Diego trio synonymous with 2000s mainstream pop punk.
- #153 Sum 41
Ajax, Ontario pop-punks who later embraced harder metal sounds.
- #154 Good Charlotte
Madden brothers' Maryland pop-punk band of MTV-era ubiquity.
- #155 Simple Plan
Montreal pop-punkers among Canada's biggest 2000s rock exports.
- #156 New Found Glory
Florida pop-punks of consistent hooks and breakdowns.
- #157 Jimmy Eat World
Mesa, Arizona band whose 'Bleed American' became emo's mainstream entry.
- #158 Dashboard Confessional
Chris Carrabba's confessional acoustic-emo project, a 2000s phenomenon.
- #159 My Chemical Romance
New Jersey theatrical emo whose 'Black Parade' defined the era.
- #160 Fall Out Boy
Chicago pop-punks whose hooks pushed emo onto mainstream radio.
- #161 Panic! at the Disco
Vegas band whose vaudevillian emo-pop dominated late-2000s charts.
- #162 Paramore
Tennessee pop-rockers whose evolution carried emo's hooks into the 2010s.
- #163 AFI
California band who shifted from hardcore punk to dark post-hardcore arenas.
- #164 Thursday
New Jersey post-hardcore band whose 'Full Collapse' is an emo cornerstone.
- #165 Taking Back Sunday
Long Island emo-rockers behind a string of mid-2000s genre-defining LPs.
- #166 Brand New
Long Island band whose ambitious arc brought literary emo to indie spaces.
- #167 The Used
Utah post-hardcore band of howling melodrama and Warped-tour catharsis.
- #168 Saosin
Orange County post-hardcore band whose technical chops set a 2000s template.
- #169 Senses Fail
New Jersey post-hardcore lifers and Warped-tour stalwarts.
- #170 Underoath
Florida Christian-scene-turned-mainstream post-hardcore titans.
- #171 Bring Me the Horizon
Sheffield band who arc-ed from deathcore to arena rock crossover.
- #172 A Day to Remember
Florida band who blended metalcore breakdowns and pop-punk choruses.
- #173 Killswitch Engage
Massachusetts metalcore foundational act of the 2000s wave.
- #174 Lamb of God
Richmond groove-metal heavyweights who carry post-Pantera weight forward.
- #175 Gojira
Bayonne progressive-death-metallers acclaimed for environmental concept albums.
- #176 Meshuggah
Umeå polyrhythm masters whose sound spawned djent.
- #177 Opeth
Stockholm prog-metal mainstays of long-form composition and dynamics.
- #178 In Flames
Gothenburg melodic-death-metal pillars who shaped 2000s metalcore overseas.
- #179 Dark Tranquillity
Gothenburg melodic-death originators alongside In Flames.
- #180 At the Gates
Gothenburg melodic-death-metal architects whose 'Slaughter of the Soul' is canon.
- #181 Children of Bodom
Espoo melodic-death/power band of virtuoso shred and chilled hooks.
- #182 Nightwish
Kitee symphonic-metal pioneers and a global flagship for the subgenre.
- #183 HIM
Helsinki goth-rock band whose 'love metal' brand crossed Atlantic borders.
- #184 Stratovarius
Finnish melodic power-metal stalwarts of operatic neoclassical scale.
- #185 Helloween
Hamburg fathers of European power metal whose 'Keeper' albums are foundational.
- #186 Blind Guardian
Krefeld bards turning Tolkien epics into shredding speed metal.
- #187 Rage
Long-running German power-metal trio of relentless output.
- #188 Accept
Solingen metal veterans behind 'Balls to the Wall' and a steady career arc.
- #189 Scorpions
Hannover hard-rock band whose 'Wind of Change' soundtracked the post-Cold-War era.
- #190 Rammstein
Berlin Neue Deutsche Härte titans of pyro spectacle and martial riffs.
- #191 Ministry
Chicago industrial-metal pioneers whose grinding output reshaped extreme rock.
- #192 Nine Inch Nails
Trent Reznor's industrial-rock juggernaut whose 'Downward Spiral' is genre-defining.
- #193 Marilyn Manson
Florida shock-rock provocateur whose late-90s peak roiled mainstream culture.
- #194 White Zombie
Rob Zombie's NYC pre-solo project, a 90s industrial-metal mainstay.
- #195 KMFDM
Hamburg-Chicago industrial provocateurs of relentless output.
- #196 Front 242
Belgian electronic-body-music pioneers central to industrial rock's lineage.
- #197 Skinny Puppy
Vancouver industrial pioneers of grim collage and biomechanical theatre.
- #198 Godflesh
Justin Broadrick's Birmingham project that helped birth industrial metal.
- #199 Killing Joke
London post-punks who pre-dated industrial rock and influenced metal alike.
- #200 The Pretenders
Chrissie Hynde's Anglo-American band of jangly New Wave craft.
- #201 The Cars
Boston band whose Ric-Ocasek-led catchiness dominated late-70s rock radio.
- #202 Devo
Akron art-punks whose herky-jerky New Wave was both satire and innovation.
- #203 Blondie
CBGB-bred New Yorkers who fused punk, disco, and hip hop into pop hits.
- #204 Television
New York post-punks whose 'Marquee Moon' rewired guitar interplay.
- #205 The Stooges
Iggy Pop's Detroit band, proto-punk torchbearers of confrontational rock.
- #206 MC5
Detroit revolutionaries whose live energy lit the fuse for punk.
- #207 New York Dolls
Trashy NYC glam pioneers whose sleaze inspired both punk and metal.
- #208 The Modern Lovers
Jonathan Richman's proto-punk songbook of wide-eyed everyday Americana.
- #209 Patti Smith Group
NYC poet-rocker collective whose 'Horses' is punk's literary cornerstone.
- #210 Pere Ubu
Cleveland avant-rockers whose sci-fi unease built post-punk's American wing.
- #211 Wire
London art-punks whose minimalist songwriting influenced indie for decades.
- #212 The Fall
Mark E. Smith's prolific Manchester institution of acerbic post-punk.
- #213 Buzzcocks
Manchester punks who bottled tuneful angst into perfect three-minute songs.
- #214 The Jam
Paul Weller's mod-punk band who topped UK charts in three short years.
- #215 The Damned
London punks who released the first British punk single, then evolved into goth.
- #216 Stiff Little Fingers
Belfast punks whose 'Inflammable Material' chronicled the Troubles.
- #217 The Stranglers
London band whose keyboard-led punk became polished New Wave.
- #218 Magazine
Howard Devoto's post-Buzzcocks project of cerebral post-punk.
- #219 Gang of Four
Leeds post-punks who fused political theory with funk-inflected rhythm.
- #220 Public Image Ltd
John Lydon's post-Pistols project, a foundational post-punk band.
- #221 The Specials
Coventry 2 Tone leaders who fused ska with punk-era message music.
- #222 Madness
London 'nutty boys' whose ska-pop charm defined a slice of 80s UK pop.
- #223 Dexys Midnight Runners
Birmingham soul-rockers whose 'Come On Eileen' became a generational anthem.
- #224 The Pogues
Shane MacGowan's Anglo-Irish band fusing trad music with punk attitude.
- #225 The Waterboys
Mike Scott's pan-Celtic 'big music' band of folk-rock grandeur.
- #226 Big Country
Scottish New Wave band whose bagpipe-toned guitars stamped a unique sound.
- #227 Simple Minds
Glasgow art-rockers turned 80s arena hitmakers.
- #228 Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
Wirral synth-pop pioneers whose hits traveled from new wave to MTV staples.
- #229 Ultravox
British synth-rockers whose 'Vienna' epitomized New Romantic ambition.
- #230 Roxy Music
Bryan Ferry's stylish art-rockers who pre-figured post-punk and synth pop.
- #231 T. Rex
Marc Bolan's glam-rock band who turned boogie riffs into chart gold.
- #232 Slade
Wolverhampton glam-rock chant-makers who fueled British 70s pop.
- #233 Sweet
British glam-pop hitmakers turned tougher rock as the 70s wore on.
- #234 Mott the Hoople
Hereford glam-rock band whose 'All the Young Dudes' became a generational anthem.
- #235 Wishbone Ash
British twin-guitar rock band whose 'Argus' helped invent the dual-lead style.
- #236 Uriah Heep
London hard-rock veterans of fantasy lyrics and classical-inflected riffs.
- #237 UFO
British band whose Schenker-era LPs became NWOBHM blueprints.
- #238 Saxon
Yorkshire NWOBHM mainstays of working-class metal anthems.
- #239 Diamond Head
Stourbridge NWOBHM band whose 'Am I Evil?' became a thrash standard.
- #240 Venom
Newcastle band whose name and album titles seeded black metal.
- #241 Bathory
Quorthon's solo-vehicle Swedish project that pioneered Scandinavian black metal.
- #242 Mayhem
Notorious Norwegian black-metal originators whose 'De Mysteriis' is canonical.
- #243 Burzum
Solo black-metal project whose lo-fi atmospherics shaped the genre's sound.
- #244 Darkthrone
Norwegian duo whose 'A Blaze in the Northern Sky' is a black-metal touchstone.
- #245 Emperor
Norwegian black-metal innovators of orchestral grandeur.
- #246 Immortal
Norwegian black-metal stalwarts of frostbitten riffs and corpsepaint imagery.
- #247 Enslaved
Norwegian band that arc-ed from raw black metal into progressive territory.
- #248 Dimmu Borgir
Norwegian symphonic black-metal band who pushed the genre to mainstream metal.
- #249 Cradle of Filth
Suffolk extreme-metal theatre with literary horror at its core.
- #250 Death
Chuck Schuldiner's Florida band who effectively invented death metal.
- #251 Cannibal Corpse
Buffalo death-metal mainstay and one of the genre's biggest bands.
- #252 Morbid Angel
Florida death-metal pillar whose technical bite shaped the form.
- #253 Obituary
Tampa swamp-and-grit death-metal lifers.
- #254 Deicide
Tampa blasphemous death-metal band of single-topic notoriety.
- #255 Carcass
Liverpool grindcore-to-melodeath pioneers whose 'Heartwork' is a touchstone.
- #256 Napalm Death
Birmingham grindcore originators whose blast beats redefined extremity.
- #257 Bolt Thrower
Coventry death-metal stalwarts of war-themed crawling riffs.
- #258 Entombed
Stockholm 'Sunlight Studios' death-metal pioneers of the chainsaw guitar tone.
- #259 Dismember
Stockholm death-metal cornerstones alongside Entombed.
- #260 Sepultura
Belo Horizonte band whose 'Roots' fused thrash with Brazilian rhythm.
- #261 Soulfly
Max Cavalera's post-Sepultura tribal-metal project.
- #262 Angra
São Paulo power-metal band of operatic and Brazilian flavor.
- #263 Os Mutantes
São Paulo Tropicália pioneers whose psychedelic strangeness is a global influence.
- #264 Soda Stereo
Buenos Aires trio who became Latin America's biggest rock band.
- #265 Café Tacuba
Mexico City eclectics whose music spans rock en español, electronica, and more.
- #266 Maná
Guadalajara band who became one of the most popular Latin rock acts.
- #267 Caifanes
Mexico City rock-en-español pioneers of dark, danceable rock.
- #268 Babasónicos
Buenos Aires alt-rockers whose sleek strangeness defines modern Argentine rock.
- #269 Sumo
Luca Prodan's Buenos Aires post-punks who reshaped Argentine rock.
- #270 Los Prisioneros
Santiago band whose synth-rock protests defined Chilean rock under Pinochet.
- #271 Aterciopelados
Bogotá rock-en-español band of folk-tinged genre play.
- #272 Héroes del Silencio
Zaragoza band who became one of Spain's biggest rock exports.
- #273 Mago de Oz
Madrid folk-metal band fusing Iberian melody with electric crunch.
- #274 Los Planetas
Granada indie-rock standard-bearers in Spain.
- #275 Stereolab
Anglo-French band fusing Marxist lyricism with motorik grooves and lounge.
- #276 Phoenix
Versailles indie-rockers whose 'Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix' broke France big.
- #277 Indochine
Paris New Wave veterans, France's biggest enduring rock band.
- #278 Noir Désir
Bordeaux alt-rockers, one of France's most acclaimed rock bands.
- #279 Téléphone
Paris band that became France's biggest 80s rock act.
- #280 Magma
Christian Vander's avant-prog band whose invented language and zeuhl style remain singular.
- #281 Gong
Anglo-French Canterbury-scene band of cosmic prog whimsy.
- #282 Soft Machine
Canterbury-scene pioneers blending rock with jazz fusion.
- #283 Caravan
Canterbury-scene mainstays of warm prog whimsy.
- #284 Hatfield and the North
Canterbury supergroup whose two albums are British prog touchstones.
- #285 Van der Graaf Generator
Peter Hammill-led prog band of dense saxophones and wrenching theatre.
- #286 Camel
British prog band whose 'Snow Goose' is a melodic mid-70s gem.
- #287 Gentle Giant
British prog virtuosos of medieval polyphony and complex arrangements.
- #288 Renaissance
British prog-folk band of orchestral arrangement and Annie Haslam vocals.
- #289 Marillion
Aylesbury prog torchbearers and pioneers of fan-funded album campaigns.
- #290 Porcupine Tree
Steven Wilson's Hertfordshire band, modern prog's most-cited reference.
- #291 Dream Theater
Long Island progressive-metal flagship of arena-scale shred.
- #292 Symphony X
New Jersey neoclassical prog-metal stalwarts.
- #293 Queensrÿche
Bellevue, Washington band whose 'Operation: Mindcrime' defined prog metal.
- #294 Fates Warning
Connecticut prog-metal pioneers whose patient compositions shaped the genre.
- #295 Coheed and Cambria
Long Island band whose comic-book concept arc spans many records.
- #296 Between the Buried and Me
Raleigh genre-mashers fusing metalcore with sprawling prog.
- #297 Animals as Leaders
Tosin Abasi's instrumental djent-prog trio of dazzling fretwork.
- #298 Periphery
Maryland djent flagship blending metal weight with sky-high vocals.
- #299 Tesseract
Milton Keynes djent band of meditative atmosphere.
- #300 Karnivool
Perth progressive band whose 'Sound Awake' is modern Australian prog canon.
- #301 The Vines
Sydney garage-rockers central to the early-2000s rock revival.
- #302 Jet
Melbourne brothers whose 'Are You Gonna Be My Girl' became a 2000s rock standard.
- #303 Powderfinger
Brisbane band, one of Australia's most successful 2000s rock acts.
- #304 Silverchair
Newcastle teen-grunge phenomenons who matured into ambitious art rock.
- #305 Midnight Oil
Sydney pub-rock turned protest-rock, fronted by future minister Peter Garrett.
- #306 Cold Chisel
Adelaide pub-rock institution with deep cultural roots in Australia.
- #307 Hoodoo Gurus
Sydney garage-power-poppers and longtime Australian rock favorites.
- #308 Crowded House
Trans-Tasman rockers behind enduring hits like 'Don't Dream It's Over'.
- #309 Split Enz
Auckland New Wave band led by the Finn brothers, precursor to Crowded House.
- #310 Tame Impala
Kevin Parker's Perth project who took psychedelic rock into pop's mainstream.
- #311 King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard
Melbourne septet of relentless output across psych, metal, and microtonal experimentation.
- #312 The Living End
Melbourne psychobilly-punk trio of upright-bass-driven anthems.
- #313 You Am I
Sydney indie-rock veterans whose 90s peak set Australian alternative rock.
- #314 Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
Cave's Berlin-formed band of literary, often gothic alternative rock.
- #315 The Birthday Party
Cave's pre-Bad-Seeds outfit, post-punk's most violent, theatrical band.
- #316 The Saints
Brisbane band whose '(I'm) Stranded' was the first non-American/British punk single.
- #317 The Easybeats
Sydney British-Invasion-style band whose 'Friday on My Mind' is a global classic.
- #318 Men at Work
Melbourne band whose 'Down Under' became Australia's unofficial anthem.
- #319 Skyhooks
Melbourne glam-rockers whose costumes and satire defined Aussie 70s rock.
- #320 The Triffids
Perth band of gothic Western Australia, beloved by 80s indie.
- #321 The Go-Betweens
Brisbane indie-pop band of literary jangle and slow-burn international acclaim.
- #322 Hunters & Collectors
Melbourne pub-rock big-band of brassy anthems and beloved deep cuts.
- #323 The Church
Sydney band whose 'Under the Milky Way' became a global indie touchstone.
- #324 Augie March
Shepparton indie-folk band of literary songwriting and lush arrangement.
- #325 Gang of Youths
Sydney band of stadium-scale indie rock and emotional candor.
- #326 Triumph
Toronto power trio of hard-rock anthems and progressive flourishes.
- #327 Bachman-Turner Overdrive
Winnipeg blue-collar hard-rockers behind 'Takin' Care of Business'.
- #328 Loverboy
Calgary band synonymous with 'Working for the Weekend' and red leather pants.
- #329 April Wine
Halifax-formed band who became a Canadian classic-rock institution.
- #330 The Tragically Hip
Kingston band synonymous with Canadian rock identity for three decades.
- #331 The Guess Who
Winnipeg pioneers behind 'American Woman' and Canadian rock's first big export.
- #332 Steppenwolf
Toronto-formed band whose 'Born to Be Wild' coined 'heavy metal thunder'.
- #333 Neil Young & Crazy Horse
Young's ragged-glory band of feedback and moonlit Americana.
- #334 Arcade Fire
Montreal collective whose 'Funeral' is a 2000s indie cornerstone.
- #335 Broken Social Scene
Toronto indie-rock collective and 2000s Canadian indie hub.
- #336 Metric
Toronto synth-rock band of Emily Haines vocals and propulsive hooks.
- #337 Stars
Montreal indie-pop band of cinematic sweep and dual lead vocals.
- #338 Death from Above 1979
Toronto bass-and-drums duo of distorted dance-punk.
- #339 Billy Talent
Mississauga melodic-punk-rockers and a Canadian rock radio mainstay.
- #340 Three Days Grace
Norwood post-grunge mainstays of 2000s active-rock radio.
- #341 Nickelback
Hanna, Alberta band whose post-grunge anthems made them global hitmakers.
- #342 Theory of a Deadman
Vancouver post-grunge band aligned with the Nickelback-era radio sound.
- #343 Our Lady Peace
Toronto alt-rockers and one of Canada's biggest 90s rock exports.
- #344 Voivod
Quebec progressive thrash band of dissonant, sci-fi imagination.
- #345 Annihilator
Ottawa thrash-metal band of shred-virtuoso pedigree.
- #346 Strapping Young Lad
Devin Townsend's chaotic Canadian extreme-metal vehicle.
- #347 Cancer Bats
Toronto band welding hardcore, sludge, and southern rock.
- #348 Alexisonfire
St. Catharines post-hardcore band of dual vocal interplay.
- #349 Comeback Kid
Winnipeg melodic hardcore stalwarts.
- #350 Protest the Hero
Whitby technical-metalcore band of dazzling fretwork.
- #351 Propagandhi
Winnipeg progressive punk-rockers known for political fire and metallic chops.
- #352 The Cult
Bradford band who pivoted from goth post-punk into AC/DC-tinged hard rock.
- #353 The Mission
Leeds gothic-rock band founded by ex-Sisters of Mercy members.
- #354 The Wedding Present
Leeds jangle-and-noise indie band beloved by John Peel.
- #355 Pulp
Sheffield band whose Jarvis Cocker-led wit and class observation defined Britpop.
- #356 Suede
London band who lit Britpop's fuse with glam-tinged urban romance.
- #357 The Verve
Wigan band whose 'Urban Hymns' is one of Britpop's biggest sellers.
- #358 Supergrass
Oxford trio whose 'I Should Coco' captured Britpop's youthful rush.
- #359 Elastica
London band fusing Wire-leaning post-punk with Britpop crunch.
- #360 Kasabian
Leicester indie-rockers of swaggering, electronic-leaning rock.
- #361 Franz Ferdinand
Glasgow indie-rockers whose dance-punk hooks defined a 2000s sound.
- #362 Bloc Party
London indie-rockers of jagged guitars and political restlessness.
- #363 The Libertines
London band of Doherty-Barât chaos and Albion-tinged tabloid notoriety.
- #364 Babyshambles
Pete Doherty's post-Libertines vehicle of rambling indie poetry.
- #365 Razorlight
London indie-rockers of late-2000s UK chart prominence.
- #366 The Kooks
Brighton indie-poppers of breezy melodic chops.
- #367 Kaiser Chiefs
Leeds indie-rockers of rabble-rousing chants and post-punk rhythms.
- #368 The Cribs
Wakefield Jarman-brothers indie band of jangly DIY ethics.
- #369 Editors
Birmingham band of Joy-Division-tinged moody indie.
- #370 The Maccabees
London indie-rockers of layered guitars and acclaimed late-period work.
- #371 Mumford & Sons
London band whose nu-folk anthems reignited mainstream banjo-pop.
- #372 Florence + the Machine
Florence Welch's London band of cathedral-scale art-rock.
- #373 Foals
Oxford band whose math-rock interplay matured into stadium-rock anthems.
- #374 alt-J
Leeds-formed art-pop band of choral harmonies and quirky structure.
- #375 Wolf Alice
London band drifting between dream pop, grunge, and indie folk.
- #376 The 1975
Manchester band fusing 80s pop sheen with confessional indie.
- #377 IDLES
Bristol post-punks of anti-toxic-masculinity rage and cathartic noise.
- #378 Fontaines D.C.
Dublin post-punks whose poetic snarl headlines the new UK-Irish wave.
- #379 Black Country, New Road
London art-rockers of literary ambition and chamber-rock arrangement.
- #380 Black Midi
London art-rockers of dazzling improvisation and prog absurdity.
- #381 Squid
Brighton band of skittering post-punk and Krautrock flicker.
- #382 Shame
London band central to the new UK post-punk wave.
- #383 Dry Cleaning
London band of spoken-word lyrics over drifting post-punk.
- #384 Sleaford Mods
Nottingham duo of stripped-down beats and Jason Williamson rants.
- #385 Fat White Family
London band of seedy art-rock and provocative theatre.
- #386 The Horrors
Southend band who arc-ed from goth garage to layered shoegaze rock.
- #387 The xx
London trio of minimalist indie of whispered duet vocals.
- #388 Glass Animals
Oxford indie band whose 'Heat Waves' became a streaming-era smash.
- #389 Bombay Bicycle Club
London indie-rockers of polyrhythmic playfulness and warm production.
- #390 Vampire Weekend
NYC band of Afro-pop-inflected guitars and preppy literary pop.
- #391 Fleet Foxes
Seattle indie-folk band of choral harmonies and pastoral textures.
- #392 Bon Iver
Justin Vernon's Wisconsin band whose cabin-recorded debut became iconic.
- #393 The National
Cincinnati-via-Brooklyn band of literary baritone indie rock.
- #394 Modest Mouse
Issaquah indie-rockers whose oddball songcraft became a 2000s mainstream act.
- #395 Death Cab for Cutie
Bellingham indie-rockers of melancholy melodicism.
- #396 The Decemberists
Portland literary indie-folk band of theatrical narrative songs.
- #397 Wilco
Chicago alt-country pioneers turned restless American art-rock band.
- #398 My Morning Jacket
Louisville band of reverbed Americana and jam-band live reach.
- #399 Band of Horses
Seattle indie-rockers of widescreen Americana and harmony.
- #400 The Shins
Albuquerque indie-pop band whose 'Oh, Inverted World' is a 2000s touchstone.
- #401 Spoon
Austin indie-rockers of taut, minimalist groove and crisp production.
- #402 Yeah Yeah Yeahs
NYC trio whose Karen O-led art-punk became a 2000s indie touchstone.
- #403 LCD Soundsystem
James Murphy's NYC dance-punk band of restless, witty disco-rock.
- #404 TV on the Radio
Brooklyn art-rockers fusing post-punk, soul, and electronic experimentation.
- #405 Sleater-Kinney
Olympia riot-grrrl trio whose post-punk crackle defined a feminist indie generation.
- #406 Bikini Kill
Olympia band who launched the riot grrrl movement.
- #407 L7
L.A. all-women punk-grunge band whose 'Bricks Are Heavy' is a 90s classic.
- #408 Hole
Courtney Love-led L.A. band whose 'Live Through This' is a 90s pillar.
- #409 Garbage
Anglo-American band fronted by Shirley Manson whose 90s alt-rock hits remain canonical.
- #410 No Doubt
Anaheim band whose Gwen Stefani-led ska-punk crossover defined late-90s mainstream rock.
- #411 Sublime
Long Beach band whose ska-punk-reggae stew became a SoCal staple.
- #412 311
Omaha-via-LA band fusing reggae, ska, and rap-rock into a cult enterprise.
- #413 Reel Big Fish
Huntington Beach third-wave-ska mainstays.
- #414 Less Than Jake
Gainesville ska-punk lifers and a Warped Tour staple.
- #415 The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
Boston ska-core veterans behind 'The Impression That I Get'.
- #416 Operation Ivy
Berkeley ska-punk progenitors whose short run birthed Rancid and a movement.
- #417 Goldfinger
L.A. ska-punkers whose 'Here in Your Bedroom' became a 90s scene anthem.
- #418 Cake
Sacramento alt-rockers of trumpet-flecked deadpan and unmistakable groove.
- #419 They Might Be Giants
Brooklyn duo of clever, durable alt-pop across many decades.
- #420 Ben Folds Five
Chapel Hill piano-rock trio whose punkish virtuosity stood out in the 90s.
- #421 Counting Crows
Berkeley band whose 'August and Everything After' became a 90s alt-rock standard.
- #422 Hootie & the Blowfish
Columbia, S.C. band whose 'Cracked Rear View' was a 90s mass-market behemoth.
- #423 Matchbox Twenty
Florida band whose Rob Thomas-led adult-alternative dominated late-90s radio.
- #424 Goo Goo Dolls
Buffalo alt-rockers turned soft-rock hitmakers behind 'Iris'.
- #425 Live
York, Pennsylvania alt-rockers whose 'Throwing Copper' was a 90s ubiquity.
- #426 Bush
London band whose post-Nirvana grunge-rock found massive U.S. crossover.
- #427 Stone Temple Pilots
San Diego band whose Weiland-fronted grunge-rock topped 90s charts.
- #428 Audioslave
Chris Cornell-RATM supergroup of brawny post-grunge rock.
- #429 Velvet Revolver
GN'R-Weiland supergroup who briefly revived 90s arena hard rock.
- #430 Temple of the Dog
Soundgarden-Pearl-Jam tribute project whose lone album is a grunge cornerstone.
- #431 Mother Love Bone
Pre-Pearl-Jam Seattle band whose lone LP previewed the grunge era.
- #432 Mudhoney
Sub Pop fuzz-rock standard-bearers and grunge OGs.
- #433 Screaming Trees
Mark Lanegan-fronted grunge band of psychedelic shading.
- #434 Tad
Sub Pop heavyweights who bridged Seattle grunge and bigger riff metal.
- #435 Melvins
Aberdeen, Washington sludge originators whose influence runs through Sub Pop's roster.
- #436 Butthole Surfers
Texas chaos-rock band whose live shows were 80s underground legend.
- #437 Big Black
Steve Albini's drum-machine-and-knives noise-rock trio.
- #438 Shellac
Chicago Albini-led trio of meticulous, mathy noise rock.
- #439 Slint
Louisville band whose 'Spiderland' is a foundational text for math rock and post-rock.
- #440 Don Caballero
Pittsburgh instrumental math-rockers of polyrhythmic intensity.
- #441 Battles
NYC math-rock band of looped riffs and dance-leaning experimentation.
- #442 Tortoise
Chicago instrumental band central to post-rock's American emergence.
- #443 The Sea and Cake
Chicago indie-jazz-rockers of summery groove and Sam Prekop vocals.
- #444 Built to Spill
Boise indie band whose Doug Martsch-led guitar sprawl is hugely influential.
- #445 Yo La Tengo
Hoboken indie lifers fluent in everything from drone to bossa nova.
- #446 Pavement
Stockton lo-fi indie cornerstone whose albums remain indie-rock canon.
- #447 Sebadoh
Lou Barlow's lo-fi indie band, an essential 90s touchstone.
- #448 Guided by Voices
Dayton indie-rock institution of Robert Pollard's prolific four-track songwriting.
- #449 Galaxie 500
Boston dream-pop band whose three records remain quietly enormous.
- #450 Mazzy Star
L.A. duo whose 'Fade Into You' is dream pop's best-known hit.
- #451 Beach House
Baltimore dream-pop duo whose woozy guitars define the modern genre.
- #452 The War on Drugs
Philadelphia band of Springsteen-meets-Krautrock heartland indie.
- #453 Real Estate
Ridgewood, NJ indie-rockers of jangle and suburban melancholy.
- #454 DIIV
Brooklyn shoegaze band of Slowdive-tinged guitar haze.
- #455 Deerhunter
Atlanta art-rock band of restless reinvention and Bradford Cox songwriting.
- #456 Animal Collective
Baltimore experimental-pop collective whose 'Merriweather' is a 2000s touchstone.
- #457 of Montreal
Athens, Georgia indie-pop band of Kevin Barnes' theatrical psychedelic glam.
- #458 The Flaming Lips
Oklahoma City psychedelic-rock band of cosmic ballads and confetti-cannon shows.
- #459 Mercury Rev
Buffalo psychedelic-rockers of orchestral, pastoral indie.
- #460 Spiritualized
Jason Pierce's post-Spacemen-3 band of gospel-rock cosmic excess.
- #461 Spacemen 3
Rugby drone-rock duo whose riff-and-repetition aesthetic shaped indie psych.
- #462 Loop
London drone-rock band of motorik pulse and feedback haze.
- #463 Primal Scream
Glasgow rock chameleons whose 'Screamadelica' fused indie and dance.
- #464 The Stone Roses
Manchester band whose self-titled debut anchored Madchester and shaped Britpop.
- #465 Happy Mondays
Manchester baggy-rave-rockers central to Madchester.
- #466 Inspiral Carpets
Oldham Madchester organ-rock band, an early 90s indie crossover.
- #467 The Charlatans
Northwich indie-rockers and a long-running Britpop survivor.
- #468 The La's
Liverpool band whose lone LP gave us 'There She Goes' and a lasting myth.
- #469 The Boo Radleys
Wallasey band whose hazy psych-pop briefly went chart-pop with 'Wake Up Boo!'.
- #470 Mansun
Chester band of late-Britpop ambition and conceptual songwriting.
- #471 Gomez
Southport indie-rockers whose 'Bring It On' won the 1998 Mercury Prize.
- #472 Travis
Glasgow band whose post-Britpop melodicism opened the door for Coldplay.
- #473 Snow Patrol
Glasgow-formed band whose 'Chasing Cars' became a global radio staple.
- #474 Stereophonics
Cwmaman, Welsh rock veterans of working-class Britpop carried into the 21st century.
- #475 Manic Street Preachers
Welsh rockers whose literary, politicized arena-indie outlasted their dramatic 90s.
- #476 Catatonia
Welsh band fronted by Cerys Matthews, late-Britpop crossover hitmakers.
- #477 Super Furry Animals
Welsh indie-rock psychonauts of bilingual brilliance and concept-album imagination.
- #478 Gorillaz
Damon Albarn's animated band crossing alt-rock with hip hop and electronica.
- #479 Placebo
London band of androgynous glam-tinged alt-rock and 90s-into-2000s prominence.
- #480 Skunk Anansie
London band fronted by Skin, whose Britrock crunch broke into late-90s charts.
- #481 Therapy?
Belfast trio whose noise-pop crunch made them 90s UK rock mainstays.
- #482 The Boomtown Rats
Dublin band fronted by Bob Geldof, behind 'I Don't Like Mondays'.
- #483 The Cranberries
Limerick band fronted by Dolores O'Riordan whose 90s alt-rock hits remain ubiquitous.
- #484 Ash
Downpatrick band whose '1977' is a beloved Britpop-era melodic-rock LP.
- #485 Two Door Cinema Club
Bangor indie-rockers of bright, danceable guitar-pop.
- #486 Hothouse Flowers
Dublin band of Celtic-tinged soulful rock.
- #487 The Frames
Dublin band led by Glen Hansard, indie-folk lifers.
- #488 And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
Austin post-hardcore prog-leaning band of cinematic ambition.
- #489 Cursive
Omaha emo-leaning indie-rock band of literate concept albums.
- #490 The Get Up Kids
Kansas City Midwest-emo standard-bearers.
- #491 Sunny Day Real Estate
Seattle emo originators whose 'Diary' shaped second-wave emo.
- #492 American Football
Urbana emo-twinkle pioneers whose lone 90s LP became a cult classic.
- #493 Mineral
Texas emo band whose two 90s LPs remain genre essentials.
- #494 The Hold Steady
Brooklyn-via-Minneapolis bar-rockers of literary Craig Finn songwriting.
- #495 Boris
Tokyo experimental band fluent across drone, doom, J-pop, and ambient.
- #496 Mono
Tokyo instrumental post-rock band of orchestral grandeur.
- #497 X Japan
Tokyo visual-kei pioneers whose theatrical metal made them Japan's biggest rock band.
- #498 Boredoms
Osaka noise-rock collective central to Japan's underground.
- #499 The Pillows
Tokyo indie-rock veterans whose anime-soundtrack work brought them global fans.
- #500 Hyukoh
Seoul indie-rock band among Korea's most acclaimed contemporary rock acts.