Active: 90's, 2000's, Formed: 1995 in Seattle, WA
AC/DC, Robin Zander, Sonic Youth, Pixies, Ric Ocasek, Kiss, Hüsker Dü, The Stooges, Flipper, Elvis Costello, The Beatles, Big Star, Black Sabbath, The Cars, Cheap Trick, Killing Joke, The Jam, Fugazi, Mudhoney
Matchbox Twenty, Fuel, Bush, Third Eye Blind, Incubus, Semisonic, Everclear, The Fray, The Flys, Veruca Salt, Weezer, Stone Temple Pilots, Candlebox, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Eve 6, Alkaline Trio, Paw, The Vines, CKY
Oh No Not Stereo, Broadcast Oblivion, The Almost, June, The Appearance, Noogie, Autovein, Brand New, Spitalfield, Signal Home, Splender, Fuel, Marcy Playground, Third Eye Blind, Los Lagartos, Size 14, Semisonic, Eve 6, Rubber Planet
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During the last dark days of Nirvana in 1994, tapes of Dave Grohl’s solo demos circulated among alt rock royalty -- Greg Dulli commented positively about them in more than one place -- but it never seemed that these home-made tapes would be the origin of one of the biggest modern rock bands of the post-grunge era. As it turns out, that’s exactly what Grohl’s Foo Fighters became, perhaps the one band of the alt rock revolution to continually have success on the charts and in the stadiums without a dip in popularity. It was this consistency that distinguished the Foos; other bands burned brighter, or had bigger hits, but Grohl’s band -- which eventually coalesced into a permanent lineup around the group’s third album -- always climbed into the upper reaches of the charts, churning out singles like “Everlong,” “Learn to Fly,” and “My Hero” that built upon the heavy and melodic, loud-quiet-loud template of the Pixies and Nirvana, pushing it ever so slightly toward the realm of classic guitar rock
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