Alternative

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    ALT CTRL

    Apple Music Alternative

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    Listen to Dexter and The Moonrocks’ “Sad in Carolina” in Spatial Audio.
  • Apple Music Nashville Sessions

    NEW IN SPATIAL AUDIO

    Apple Music Nashville Sessions

    Waxahatchee

    Apple Music Nashville Sessions
  • Alt-Rock Christmas

    HAPPY HOLIDAYS

    Alt-Rock Christmas

    Apple Music Christmas

    Alt-Rock Christmas
    Flipping the script on the same old holiday standards.
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    Headliners

    Apple Music Rock

    Headliners
    Stadium rock for the alternative era.
    • Open Wide
    • Inhaler
    • Peace Of Mind
    • Michigander
    • Monkey
    • Little Hurt & Hiser
    • Southern Life (What It Must Be Like)
    • Sharon Van Etten
    • This Side of the Island
    • Hamilton Leithauser
    • How It Was It Will Never Be Again
    • SYML
    • Night Or Day
    • Franz Ferdinand
    • Blood On The Hospital Floor
    • The Wombats
    • The Line (from the series Arcane League of Legends)
    • Arcane, League of Legends Music & twenty one pilots
    • Xmas
    • Bartees Strange
    • Young Strangers
    • Sea Girls
    • 2468
    • Horsegirl
    • Danish Eyes
    • The Criticals
    • You Got Me Searching
    • Jack White
    • People Watching
    • Sam Fender
    • Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree
    • The Linda Lindas
    • Jeanie
    • The Kooks & lovelytheband

About

In an age where alternative rock bands fill stadiums and ascend the pop charts, it begs the question: alternative to what? Early on, the alternative movement was a reaction to the commercial excesses of mainstream rock. Alt-rock instead brought quirky hooks, a do-it-yourself ethos, deeply personal songwriting and genre-bending adventures to audiences hungry for something different. Although it truly exploded in the early ’90s, the roots of alternative rock started with the punk revolution of the late ’70s, when bands like the Sex Pistols, Ramones and The Clash proved that just about anyone could get up onstage or make a record. Throughout the ’80s, an international network of under-the-radar bands developed, nurtured by a vibrant gigging scene. While hardcore kept the traditional loud-and-fast sound of punk alive, many newer bands had their own distinctive styles: R.E.M.'s jangling folk-influenced rock, Sonic Youth's dissonant noise, The Cure's epic gloom, The Smiths’ petulant indie, New Order's electronic grooves. Eventually, these bands were dubbed "alternative rock", thanks to their left-of-centre sounds and attitudes. By the early ’90s though, grunge bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam were combining punk’s raw energy with classic hard-rock hooks and entering the pop charts. Suddenly, other alternative heroes like Red Hot Chili Peppers and Soundgarden found massive audiences, while the Madchester scene spawned acts including The Stone Roses and Happy Mondays. Over the next decade, alternative bands of various subgenres introduced a whole generation of young rockers to punk (Green Day), hip-hop (Rage Against the Machine), industrial (Nine Inch Nails), art rock (Radiohead), power pop (Weezer), psychedelia (The Flaming Lips), metal (Tool), Britpop (Oasis), electronic music (The Prodigy) and much more. By the 21st century, alternative rock had grown popular enough to allow bands like Foo Fighters and Coldplay to sell out stadiums in minutes. At the same time, the anything-goes spirit of alternative rock remained alive and well, with newer bands embracing garage rock (The White Stripes), post-punk (The Libertines) and New Wave (The Killers).

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