Rock is dead

You have 10 seconds to name a rock band from the last 25 years that is both critically acclaimed and culturally relevant. Please note that commercial success is not synonymous with cultural relevance.

Impossible Mode: No Nirvana.

Oh wait, you can't.

R.I.P Rock

Please note:
>The Strokes, Arctic Monkeys, Queens of the Stone Age, The Mars Volta, Franz Ferdinand, The Smashing Pumpkins, Oasis, Bloc Party, The Libertines, Blur, Pulp, Suede, and Interpol are not culturally relevant, all of them are fad artists associated with a certain 3-5 year timespan with no real longevity or standing cultural relevancy. You're not going to hear their music being played at a high school dance or have a large number of normies sharing them on Facebook the way you would a contemporary hip hop artist like Drake or Kendrick Lamar
>Jack White is not a culturally relevant artist. Seven Nation Army may be a culturally relevant track but having only one culturally relevant track indicates a lack of longevity and thus a lack of cultural relevance as artists.
>Radiohead's praise comes from the fact that they "destroyed" rock music and became a primarily electronic act. Their success is evident of rock's death, not continued relevance.
>Muse, Foo Fighters, Coldplay, Tool, Kings of Leon, The Black Keys, Pearl Jam, Green Day, My Chemical Romance, Fall Out Boy, Blink-182, Brand New, Taking Back Sunday, Mumford & Sons, and Red Hot Chili Peppers are not critically acclaimed.
>King Gizzard, The Flaming Lips, Sufjan Stevens, Tame Impala, The National, The Hold Steady, Dinosaur Jr, Deerhunter, Mac DeMarco, Porcupine Tree, Beach House, Ween, Titus Andronicus, Bon Iver, Pixies, Spoon, Pavement and Modest Mouse are far too niche to be considered culturally relevant. This is also true for all metal.
>R.E.M., Bruce Springsteen, and U2 have not been critically acclaimed in the last 25 years.
>LCD Soundsystem, and Arcade Fire are not rock bands

Other urls found in this thread:

rbt.asia/mu/thread/75972579/
acclaimedmusic.net/Current/1948-02a.htm
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

>>R.E.M., Bruce Springsteen, and U2 have not been critically acclaimed in the last 25 years.
Yes they have and this was even more true the first time you posted this pasta two years ago

How can rock music be dead if people are still making rock music?

>culturally relevant

who gives a shit?

>name a rock band that's culturally relevant
>except all the ones in this arbitrary and incorrect list I've provided

Why did I even respond to this b8

Death Grips

the killers

>name a rock band from the last 25 years that is both critically acclaimed and culturally relevant
>Oh also you can't name any of these bands. because I say that they don't count.
You sound like the kid on the playground who no one wants to play with because he makes up his own stupid rules.

This pasta is so stale it hurts.

OP, be honest. Would you have made these two pointless threads if this hadn't been posted the other day?

rbt.asia/mu/thread/75972579/

KISS was culturally relevant for as long as those bands you greentexted. QotSA has continued to find acclaim for almost 20 years now.

This pasta is absurdly low effort. Apply yourself next time.

The only reason Kiss is relevant is because Gene Simmons shills out merchandise with the Kiss name

>Red Hot Chili Peppers are not critically acclaimed
acclaimedmusic.net/Current/1948-02a.htm

190 on the spot, out of 3000 albums.
KYS.

Oh, and Linkin Park still has cultural relevancy and critical acclaim. Checkmate, atheist.

nick cave. and now shut the fuck up and realize you need to take your life in a different direction because being a smartass on an image board from your parents' basement is not gonna help your further life.

Nick Cave.

Mastodon. Fits all your criteria. Was formed in 2000, still on the way up.

this is actually a great post

Sup Forums acclaimed > critically acclaimed

...

Who cares. All the best shits already been done and is all there to enjoy. Let the cucks have their pseudo folk shit and white boy rap. Digital downloading killed the music industry as a whole anyway.

Is this 2002?