The Greatest American Rock Bands Of All Time

Some of the most talented bands in the history of rock hail from the United States. Sure, England has The Beatles and Led Zeppelin, but America has certain musicians with the flair and bravado that other countries lack. All of these bands that came from the blue, red, and white should be household names.

A wide range of American cities has a good representation here. From classic rock to the hard rockers and punk lovers, this list has something for everyone.

The Beach Boys

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The Beach Boys would combine Chuck Berry with a rich harmony that made every tune sound like a daily trip to the beach.

That perfect scenario would be like driving in a car with a full tank, and the music blared at full volume. It's no surprise why they are one of the most influential acts of the rock era.

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Creedence Clearwater Revival

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John Fogerty's lyrics are great and they make a statement. The music these guys made was authentic with a side of southern charm, although they hailed from California.

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CCR was soft and made for easy listening, which makes it feel like you're sitting on a porch. In April 1969, the group became the first act to sign a contract for Woodstock.

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Eagles

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Glenn Frye had his soft sound, while Don Henley brought his raspy and passionate tone. Tim Schmidt came with his sweet sound, and it all worked thanks to the enthusiasm of Joe Walsh.

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These guys never skipped a beat, especially with their five-part harmony. They've always had an incredible sound, and they kept getting better with every album.

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Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band

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Anyone who's seen their over-the-top three-hour shows would be hardpressed to say they didn't have a good time. Springsteen has a mysterious power of rock n' roll with such extravagant force.

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With the most versatile band in the States, that force is used from garage-rock songs with a focus on joys, dreams, and hardships of being American.

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Van Halen

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Eddie Van Halen was a master on the guitar while frontman David Lee Roth was ecstatic on the vocals. Van Halen's early days saw the group write some awesome radio songs and make fans think differently about the color of M&M's.

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All hell broke loose when Lee Roth got the boot for Sammy Hagar. The band reformed, consisting of Eddie, his brother Alex, son Wolfgang with Lee Roth back on the mic. Sadly, Eddie lost his battle to throat cancer in October 2020.

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Lynyrd Skynyrd

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Many consider "Sweet Home Alabama" to be the most classic rock song of all time. Lynyrd Skynyrd became well-known for having popularized the Southern rock genre during the seventies.

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At the height of their musical success, Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines, and Cassie Gaines died in an airplane crash in 1977. Just ahead, one hard rock band wrote some awesome radio songs in their early days, and made fans think differently about the color of M&M's.

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Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers

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They hail from Florida, but they certainly don't dress like it. It didn't matter though — these guys just knew how to rock out.

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Tom and his bandmates had the longevity and hit-making consistency thanks to their excellent sense of rock history. "American Girl" was one of their most popular hits, but fans froze the moment Tom Petty passed away in 2017.

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ZZ Top

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Starting out with blues-inspired rock, ZZ Top incorporated new wave, punk rock, and dance-rock thanks to their use of synthesizers.

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The group is known for their humorous lyrics mixed with double entendres and innuendo. Since 1970, the band has consisted of bassist Dusty Hill, drummer Frank Beard, and guitarist Billy Gibbons.

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Aerosmith

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Aerosmith is the Led Zeppelin of America. The boys from Boston combined Zeppelin's rock crunch and the Rolling Stones' bluesy tunes. In fact, Steve Tyler and the gang are fully intact to this day.

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They went from being one of the most thrilling bands of the seventies to emerge as commercial hitmakers in the eighties and nineties.

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Heart

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Over the group's four-decade history, Ann and Nancy Wilson have been at the center of the group. Heart climbed their way to fame in the mid-seventies thanks to their hard and heavy metal style of music.

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However, their popularity rapidly declined in the eighties, but it didn't take long for them to enjoy a comeback in 1985. They've been on hiatus since 2016.

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KISS

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It's no surprise that these four men were well known for their face paint and stage outfits. KISS rose to the limelight with their elaborate live performances that featured fire breathing, blood-spitting, and pyrotechnics.

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The band has gone through a ton of changes, with Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons as the only remaining original members. Still on the way, two brothers provided fans with a two-guitar attack with one of the most soulful voices rock has ever heard.

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Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band

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In 1973, Bob Seger put together the Silver Bullet Band with a group of Detroit-musicians.

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Seger wrote songs that dealt with love, women, and blue-collar themes. Three years later, Seger achieved a national breakout with the popular album Night Moves, becoming the prime example of heartland rock.

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Steve Miller Band

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Miller left his first band to move to San Francisco to form the Steve Miller Blues Band. Shortly after negotiating a contract with Capitol Records, the group shortened its name to the Steve Miller Band.

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From the sounds of blues rock to psychedelic rock, Miller was inducted as a solo artist in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2016.

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The Doors

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These guys provided a rare combo of a unique sound, outstanding musicianship, and a passion for making hits.

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With Jim Morrison's stoned-like poetry and Ray Manzarek doing Bach fugues, The Doors were on another level of the edge of rock music. Unfortunately, the Lizard King's untimely death was the end of the band.

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The Allman Brothers Band

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Duane and Gregg Allman are the sound of Southern Rock. They provided fans with a two-guitar attack with one of the most soulful voices rock has ever heard.

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Their range was from hard blues to feel-good road trip songs to mesmerizing instrumentals like "Ramblin' Man" and "Jessica."

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The Ramones

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The Northeast features a variety of bands like Bon Jovi and Sonic Youth. But, the one group from that area turned A LOT of heads called Queens, New York, home.

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The leather-wearing punks adopted pseudonyms ending with the surname "Ramone" despite not being related. Their t-shirts are among the most popular thing about the band.

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Alice Cooper

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With his sharp, raspy voice and stage presence that included electric chairs, fake blood, and deadly snakes, Alice Cooper is considered the Godfather of Shock Rock.

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Cooper has been drawn similar to horror films, vaudeville, and garage rock to pioneer a theatrical brand of rock designed to shock the crap out of people. The next musician wasn't one of the headliners of Woodstock for nothing, he knew how to set a guitar on fire.

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Jimi Hendrix

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He wasn't one of the headliners of Woodstock for nothing. Because he was left-handed, he played the guitar upside-down, with dramatic effect. Hendrix paved the way for the next generation of guitarists to put their amps on overdrive.

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The Seattle native was everything a music fan wanted in a guitarist, singer, writer and flamboyant rock musician.

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Elvis

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The King of Rock & Roll has to be here. Presley is the pioneer of rockabilly, an uptempo fusion of country music with rhythm and blues.

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He's one of the most influential musicians of the 20th century. The Mississippi native is the best selling solo artist in the history of recorded music.

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Santana

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Carlos Santana caught the public's attention after their performance of "Soul Sacrifice" at Woodstock. That exposure helped them make their first album, Santana.

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Santana's increasing involvement with guru Sri Chinmoy took the band to an esoteric sound of music. However, it never lost its Latin influence.

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The Grateful Dead

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You don't have to be a devoted Deadhead to know The Grateful Dead's revolutionary contribution to the rock and roll scene. Their psychedelic sound fused with elements of rock, country, blues, and folk that turned music of the '60s counterculture on its head.

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Hailing from the San Francisco Bay Area, the group included the musical stylings of Bob Weir, Pigpen McKernan, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, and of course, Jerry Garcia. They continued to tour after Garcia's death in 1995 under different names, but things were never the same.

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The Stooges

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The Stooges came onto the rock scene and right up in our faces straight out of Ann Arbor Michigan. The proto-punk act was unlike anything rock and roll has ever seen in the late '60s and early '70s.

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Who could forget the grotesque stage performances of The Stooges' lead singer Iggy Pop, who gained attention for the band through his acts of self-mutilation on stage? Certainly not other members such as Ron Asheton, his brother Scott, and Dave Alexander.

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Nirvana

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No American band defines grunge better than Nirvana. Conceived in Seattle, Nirvana consisted of Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic, and their string of drummers, the most popular and longest-standing of which is Dave Grohl.

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After switching from independent label Sub Pop to major label DGC Records, Nirvana became a worldwide success with their hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit." The band broke up following Cobain's passing in 1994, but their music continues to define '90s-era rock in a way no other band has.

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Talking Heads

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Talking Heads entered rock as a punk band in the late '70s, but after adopting their New Wave sound they went on to become "one of the most critically acclaimed bands of the '80s," according to critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine.

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David Byrne and Chris Frantz were art students who started as The Artistics in the early '70s. Tina Weymouth was Frantz's girlfriend who would later join the band on bass. With the addition of Jerry Harrison, the band had their first hit with "Burning Down the House" in 1983.

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The Doobie Brothers

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The Doobie Brothers were a rock outfit out of San Jose, California. Tom Johnston led the band from 1970 to 1975, until Michael McDonald took over and thusly changed the band's sound with influences of soul. They eventually broke up in 1982.

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But even after, they continued to tour and still do as of 2018. The Doobie Brothers encouraged us to "Listen to the Music" and we did. When it came to their hits, "Black Water," "Jesus Is Just Alright," and "Long Train Runnin" are some favorites.

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Boston

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Tom Scholz was at the helm of the band Boston, whose hits like "More Than a Feeling," "Rock and Roll Band," and "Don't Look Back" had us rocking throughout the '70s and '80s (and even to this day).

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Over the course of their career, the group sold more than 75 million records worldwide and 31 million in the United States, with 17 million of the sales coming from their debut album. After their inception in 1970, the band had a career that that has spanned over 40 years, and is ranked the 63rd best hard rock artist by VH1.

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Pearl Jam

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Formed in Seattle, Washington in 1990, Pearl Jam is considered to be one of the leading bands in the grunge movement in the early 1990s. The group was known for looking down on popular music and denying interviews and other common industry practices.

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At one point, the band even sued Ticketmaster, claiming that they had monopolized the concert-ticket market. Commonly referred to as one of the most influential bands of the decade, the Rolling Stone described the band as having "spent much of the past decade deliberately tearing apart their own fame."

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Fleetwood Mac

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LOS ANGELES - SEPTEMBER 1: Fleetwood Mac (L-R Stevie Nicks, Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie, John McVie and Mick Fleetwood) backstage at the Los Angeles Rock Awards on September 1, 1977 in Los Angeles, California.
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Fleetwood Mac is a British-American rock band that was formed in London in 1969. They are one of the world's best-selling band, selling over 100 million records worldwide. Over the years, the band's lineup has changed, with select members being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998.

In 1974, the band added the rock-folk dup Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham, which gave the band a new pop sound. After the addition of Buckingham and Nicks, the band became incredibly successful with their 1977 album Rumors being the eighth-highest-selling album of all time.

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Journey

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Journey was formed in San Francisco in 1973 by former members of Santana and Frumious Bandersnatch. The band has undergone numerous transitions, although they were the most commercially successful between 1978 and 1987. The band released their hit song "Don't Stop Believing" in 1981, which became the top-selling track on iTunes for a song that wasn't released in the 21st century.

In 2005, a USA Today poll ranked Journey as the fifth-best U.S. rock band in history. Today, their songs can be heard in sporting arenas and on rock radio stations around the world.

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Red Hot Chili Peppers

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The Red Hot Chili Peppers are an American rock band that was formed in Los Angeles in 1983. Although the group is considered a rock band, their style also incorporates other genres such as funk, psychedelic rock, punk, with some traces as hip hop as well. The band still has his its family members which consist of Anthony Kiedis, Flea, Chad Smith, and Josh Klinghoffer.

The band has sold over 80 million records worldwide, winning six Grammy Awards and have have been nominated for 16 in total. They are widely considered as the most successful band in alternative rock radio history, holding the record for the most number on singles, most cumulative weeks at No.1, and the most top-ten songs on the Billboard Hot 100.

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Jefferson Airplane

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Credited with pioneering the genre of psychedelic rock, Jefferson Airplane was formed in 1965 in San Francisco, becoming the first band from the Bay Area to achieve international commercial success. During their height, they were headliners at three of the most famous American rock festival of the in the 1960s including Monterey Pop, Woodstock, and Altamont.

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Their breakthrough album titled Surrealistic Pillow had "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit" on it, two of the band's most popular songs to date. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 and earned a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016.

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Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young

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Also known as "CSNY", the band was a folk-rock supergroup originally made up of David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash, adding on Neil young as an occasional fourth member. The band is recognized for their vocal harmonies, internal fueds, and helping to forward the music culture of the time.

Crosby, Stills, and Nash were all inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as they were for playing in their other respective bands. Neil Young was also inducted as a solo artist, and for his work as a member of Buffalo Springfield.

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Soundgarden

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The rock band Soundgarden was formed by musicians Chris Cornell, Kim Thayil, and Hiro Yamamoto in Seattle, Washington in 1984. the band was joined by the full-time drummer Matt Cameron in 1986 and Ben Shepard replaced Yamamoto as the group's bassist in 1970.

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Although the band disbanded in 1997, they re-formed in 2010 until Chris Cornell's untimely death in 2017. While active, Soundgarden became the first grunge band to ever sign to a major label, although they did not achieve commercial success until the 1990s along with bands such as Nirvana, Alice in Chains, and more.

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Steely Dan

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Steely Dan was founded in 1972 by members Walter Becker and Donald Fagen. The group is known for combining numerous genres including jazz, pop, and even R&B. The band is considered influential for their complex studio production along with their cryptic lyrics that were often described as being ironic.

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The band was commercially successful from the early 1970s until they eventually broke up in 1981. However, by 1974, the band stopped touring and became a studio-only group. Rolling Stone has described them as "the perfect musical antiheroes for the Seventies."

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The Byrds

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Coming into the music scene in Los Angeles in 1964, the Byrds had numerous lineup changes throughout their career. Lead singer Roger McGuinn remained in the band as the only original member until they broke up in 1973.

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While they were slightly overshadowed by their contemporaries such as the Beatles, Rolling Stones, and the Beach Boys, today, they are regarded as being equally as influential. While the group began as a folk-rock band, over time, they transitioned to have a more psychedelic sound.

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Bon Jovi

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Hailing from Sayreville, New Jersey, Bon Jovi was formed in 1983 and consists of Jon Bon Jovi, David Bryan, Phil X, and Hugh McDonald. Former members include bassist Alec John Such (left in 1994) and co-songwriter/guitarist Richie Sambora (left in 2013). The band became recognized between 1984 and 1985 after releasing their first two albums along with their debut single "Runaway."

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In 1986, the band achieved international recognition with their album Slippery When Wet, which contained the two massively popular singles "You Give Love a Bad Name" and "Livin' on a Prayer." Today, the band has released 13 studio albums, have performed in more than 2,700 concerts, and were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018.

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The Velvet Underground

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Forming in 1964 in New York City, the Velvet Underground was an experimental rock group made up of Lou Reed, John Cale, Sterling Morrison, Angus MacLise, and later Moe Tucker. The group was active between 1965 and 1973 and spent some time being managed by pop artist Andy Warhol.

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During that time, they served as the primary band at the Factory and Warhol's Exploding Plastic Inevitable events. Although their debut album The Velvet Ground and Nico wasn't initially successful, it has been described as "the most prophetic rock album ever made" by Rolling Stone.

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The White Stripes

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Founded in Detroit in 1997, The White Stripes was made up of multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Jack White and drummer Meg White. After making a name for themselves in the in the Detroit music scene, the duo came to prominence in 2002, becoming a force in revitalizing the garage rock genre.

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They achieved major success after releasing their album White Blood Cells, on which was the hit single "Fell in Love with a Girl." Two years later they released Elephant, which had their most famous song, "Seven Nation Army." By the time the band broke up in 2011, they had released six studio albums, with their last three each winning the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music.

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Chuck Berry

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Born in 1926, Chuck Berry is an American singer-songwriter, and largely regarded as one of the original pioneers of rock and roll. Some of his most famous songs include "Maybellene," "Roll Over Beethoven," "Rock and Roll Music," and "Johnny B. Good."

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He took techniques from rhythm and blues music and tweaked them to create the basic aspects of rock and roll that we know today. His lyrics also helped to influence the connection between rock music and teenage angst, singing about consumerism, teen life, and daily struggles.

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Buffalo Springfield

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Active from 1966 until 1968, Buffalo Springfield was best known for their song "For What It's Worth," and it's prominent members Stephen Stills, Neil Young, and Richie Furay. The band combined folk, country, rock, and psychedelic music to create a distinctive sound that is described as helping to forward the folk-rock genre.

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Due to a series of drug-related arrests and lineup changes, the band broke up in 1968, with the musicians going on to either create or join new bands and projects. In 1997, Buffalo Springfield was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

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Alice In Chains

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After some early years of trying to find their footing, Alice In Chains emerged as one of the most musically gifted and lyrically evocative grunge bands to ever grace the '90s. But while former lead singer Layne Staley's haunting tales of addiction came from a real and raw place, that was exactly the problem.

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Staley's struggles with addiction and reclusiveness following a personal tragedy would put the band on hiatus in 1996, and they would sadly claim his life six years later. Nonetheless, the band reformed and has continued touring and recording in the decades since.

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R.E.M.

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After establishing themselves as the heroes of the 1980s college rock scene, R.E.M would find some success in the latter years of the decade thanks to quirky but catchy rock songs such as "It's The End Of The World As We Know It" and "The One I Love."

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However, their biggest years would come in the '90s thanks to the smashing success of accessible but artistically viable records like 1991's Out Of Time and 1992's Automatic For The People. Although intra-band conflicts and declining inspiration would dog them in the following years, they would return to form before breaking up with 2008's Accelerate.

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Pavement

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Although they're perhaps not the most famous band in American rock history, Pavement was nonetheless deeply influential on the American indie rock scene.

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Feeling at once laid-back and aggressively experimental on the classic albums Slanted And Enchanted and Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain, Pavement pioneered both the slacker vibe present in '90s counterculture and the disaffected whimsy of its non-angsty music. Although the band broke up after the 1999 album Terror Twilight, frontman Stephen Malkmus would continue to be a prolific and respected figure in American underground music.

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Black Flag

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Blisteringly aggressive and politically acerbic, Black Flag rose from the chaos of the California punk scene of the late '70s and early '80s as a pioneering force that melded the genre's righteous fury with the further extremity of the then-emerging hardcore movement.

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Although guitarist and songwriter Greg Ginn was the band's leader, its public face was outspoken vocalist Henry Rollins. Although the band broke up after cutting six wildly different albums between 1981 and 1985, Rollins would continue to be a notable and successful musician, actor, writer, and spoken-word performer for decades after the fact.

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Metallica

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Easily the biggest band in American metal, Metallica emerged as one of the masters of the aggressive thrash metal scene and excited metalheads with classic albums like Master Of Puppets, Ride The Lightning, and ...And Justice For All.

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But while many of the fans they gained in those years would be alienated by their self-titled album from 1991, it launched them into further superstardom until infighting and uncertainty with their place in modern metal led them to create the disastrous St. Anger in 2003. Nonetheless, they were able to weather that storm and remain one of the biggest touring acts in metal today.

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They Might Be Giants

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Although their geeky sensibilities and unusual subject matter tend to leave them overlooked in typical conversations about American rock, the solid musicianship, ambitious musical ideas, and penchant for cryptic lyrics have made They Might Ge Giants one of America's most enduring and engaging bands.

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Originally comprised of just John Linnell and John Flansburgh, They Might Be Giants have given the world a lengthy, eclectic, and impressive discography spanning from the '80s to 2021. Unafraid of chasing wacky ideas and genre shifts, They Might Be Giants has remained consistently entertaining and innovative.

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The Replacements

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Pioneering a brand of alternative rock and roll that pays homage to the classics while leaning into punk's harder edge, the Replacements hit the sweet spot with unpretentious but skillfully played and written music.

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Still, their rough edge and habit of intentionally alienating listeners at concerts meant it was often difficult for the public to recognize their merits until their initial breakup in 1991. By that point, they had been together for about 12 and made seven albums, the best-regarded of which being Let It Be from 1984 and Tim from 1985.

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Smashing Pumpkins

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It's hard to name a band with more boom and bust periods than Smashing Pumpkins, but their run in the '90s is hard to beat and made them one of the biggest bands of the decade.

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One of the band's defining features is frontman Billy Corgan's airy voice, which lends itself just as well to more downbeat and contemplative songs as the primal howls of rage that characterize his vocals on heavier Smashing Pumpkins songs. However, clashes of personality and substance issues among his bandmates have made him one of the only consistent members in their long, complicated history.

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Guns N' Roses

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Easily the most famous band to emerge from the Los Angeles hard rock scene of the late '80s, Guns N Roses proved just as musically exciting as they were publicly controversial.

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Their 1989 release, Appetite For Destruction, remains one of the best-selling debut albums of all time, and songs like "Welcome To The Jungle," "Sweet Child O' Mine," and "Paradise City" show a greater range in their capabilities than their first impression may have suggested. However, the same abrasive attitude that made Axl Rose stand out as a frontman also gave him a habit of alienating his bandmates, and the substance issues among them hardly helped their functionality as a group either.

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The Dead Kennedys

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Known for their fast and dark style of punk and Jello Biafra's gleefully demented warble and edgy, sarcastic lyrics, the Dead Kennedys laid a great deal of groundwork for California's wild punk scene in the late '70s and early-to-mid '80s.

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Although Biafra was no stranger to songs about acts of petty rebellion, he was particularly focused on bringing his bitter and darkly humorous sense of irony to the politics of the day. And while some of the band's songs have aged better than others, that excitement and infamy still make them a compelling listen for those with strong stomachs.

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Tool

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One of the most daring and cerebral acts in metal history, Tool established their credibility throughout the '90s and 2000s. They developed a reputation for complicated arrangements, earnestly philosophical lyrics, and trippy visual experiences. These were especially present on masterful albums like 1996's Ænima and 2001's Lateralus.

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Although the band went on a 13-year hiatus for creative, personal, and legal reasons after the release of their 2006 album 10,000 Days, they returned with their fifth studio album, Fear Inoculum, in 2019. Their concerts remain unforgettable experiences.

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Pixies

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The Pixies
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Clayton Call/Redferns via Getty Images
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Tuneful, innovative, and rough-edged all at once, Pixies spearheaded a movement in American alternative rock that favored what is often described as "loud, quiet, loud" compositions. If that sounds similar to the kind of experience one would get from a Nirvana album, it should be noted that Pixies were considered one of Kurt Cobain's biggest influences.

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A mix of tight yet energetic musicianship and the contrast between frontman Frank Black's unpredictable yelping and bassist Kim Deal's soothing vocals made Pixies one of the most beloved underground favorites of the late '80s and early '90s.

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Garbage

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1996 MTV Movie Awards
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Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images
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Shortly after forming in Madison, Wisconsin, in 1993, Garbage excited the world with their 1995 self-titled album that saw them blend the hallmarks of electronic music with powerful alternative rock.

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Although lead singer Shirley Manson emerged as a charismatic and inspiring presence that won the band many fans, Garbage is actually unique for ensuring that all members participate in the songwriting and production process. That's likely a big part of how they've managed to keep their entire original lineup together for over 30 years.

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Sonic Youth

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Sonic Youth
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Extolled as trailblazing legends by their fans and derided as tuneless noisemakers by their detractors, Sonic Youth was one of the true originators of America's alternative rock scene. Known for blending loud, fuzzy, and abrasive guitar work with gentle vocals from Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore, Sonic Youth all but created the blueprint for decades of indie rock to come.

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And while the band got into its share of trouble along the way, Sonic Youth was able to boast some impressive longevity, considering their first studio album came out in 1983 and their last dropped in 2009.

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Faith No More

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Faith No More At The 1990 Video Music Awards
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Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic via Getty Images
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Perhaps the most famous venture of endlessly creative indie legend Mike Patton, Faith No More incorporated subtle funk elements into their heavy music. Taking to unpredictably strange vocals and provocative lyrics that could be full of dread, lascivious, or surprisingly tender, Faith No More always had a way of keeping its fans guessing.

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Although Patton wasn't an original member of the band, his contributions drove the band's creative focus through its most successful years and defined its sound on albums like 1989's The Real Thing and 1992's Angel Dust.

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System Of A Down

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System Of A Down At The Metro
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Paul Natkin/Getty Images
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Although the nu-metal boom of the 2000s isn't generally considered the most creatively fertile or respectable chapter of rock history, that didn't stop some bands from producing truly great and imaginative music within that format.

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Perhaps the most exciting of these bands was System Of A Down, whose loud but musically rich style complemented their bizarre and often politically charged lyrics. Cathartic, silly, and meaningful all at once, System Of A Down kept fans wanting more despite the fact that those fans were never exactly sure what they would get each time.

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Foo Fighters

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The Foo Fighters Reopen Madison Square Garden
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Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for FF
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Arising from Nirvana's ashes after Kurt Cobain's sudden passing, the Foo Fighters' brand of heavy but straightforward rock and roll hit an enduring sweet spot to the present day. Indeed, Dave Grohl's signature band is one of the last holdouts of mainstream rock that used to rule the day when the Foo Fighters were showing their chops on records like their self-titled debut in 1995 and The Color And The Shape in 1997.

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But while recent years have dealt the band a serious blow with the tragic loss of their longtime drummer, Taylor Hawkins, Grohl has maintained that there are no plans to break them up anytime soon.

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Blondie

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Blondie
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Maureen Donaldson/Getty Images)
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Although they emerged from the punk scene of the late '70s, Blondie's eclectic tastes and chameleon-like ability to embrace different creative directions and genres made them well-equipped for the new wave moment of the '80s.

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In addition to being perhaps the first rock band to embrace hip-hop on the admittedly rudimentary "Rapture," Blondie made it clear throughout their run that they were just as effective at rocking hard and soothing their listeners as they were at making them dance. And that's not even mentioning Deborah Harry's electrifying presence as a lead singer.

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Green Day

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Photo of GREEN DAY
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Robert Knight Archive/Redferns via Getty Images
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Beginning life as a rascally Bay Area punk band, Green Day showed their songwriting chops were a little more ambitious than the scene was prepared for on their celebrated major label debut, Dookie.

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And while Green Day would see even more success with the bittersweet farewell anthem "Good Riddance" two years later, their decision to turn their Bush-era frustrations into a rock opera with 2004's American Idiot brought the band to its commercial peak. Although they didn't quite turn out to be the saviors of rock they hoped to be at the time, this once-unserious punk band showed exactly what they were capable of.

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Rage Against The Machine

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Rage Against The Machine
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Politically ambitious, musically eclectic, and full of blistering, righteous anger, Rage Against The Machine made their mark on the '90s as a hard band to pigeonhole. Tom Morello's inventive riffs perhaps made them share a genus with funk-metal outfits like The Red Hot Chili Peppers or Faith No More, but Zach de la Rocha's ranting vocal style and hip-hop influence set them apart even from this nebulous style.

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Although they had the unfortunate timing of breaking up right before the Bush administration gave them years of potential writing material, Rage Against The Machine has nonetheless inspired countless political minds to stick it to authority.