MusicBands

Three Members → Name That Band

Three names, one band—lock in your answer before the lights come up.

Three Members → Name That Band
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About This Quiz

Gallery. Quiet carpet. Glass case. The label reads only three names. No dates, no paintings, just the label. Yet you already know which wall they belong on.

Each card is one of those labels. Members first. Four band names wait underneath and only one matches the label above. Clean, fast, and weirdly satisfying.

Play straight through or dip in between songs. Keep a running score if you like. Or don’t. The table chatter is half the show, the reveals are the other half.

1/30

Michael Stipe, Peter Buck, Mike Mills?

[C] REM | College rock heroes who proved indie bands could conquer MTV. Their jangly guitars and cryptic lyrics defined alternative rock's commercial breakthrough in the 90s.

2/30

will.i.am, apl.de.ap, Fergie?

[D] Black Eyed Peas | Started as conscious hip-hop, then Fergie joined and boom! They became the soundtrack to every wedding reception from 2003 to 2010.

3/30

Donnie Wahlberg, Danny Wood, Joey McIntyre?

[C] New Kids on the Block | These Boston boys taught America that synchronized dancing plus leather jackets equals millions of screaming fans and sold-out arenas.

4/30

Morrissey, Johnny Marr, Andy Rourke?

[D] The Smiths | Morrissey's melancholy met Marr's jangle to create indie poetry. Their four-year run produced more quotable lyrics than most bands manage in decades.

5/30

Anni-Frid Lyngstad, Björn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Fältskog?

[A] ABBA | Swedish pop perfectionists who conquered Eurovision, then the world. Their songs are so catchy, scientists actually study why we can't stop humming them.

6/30

Ric Ocasek, Benjamin Orr, Greg Hawkes?

[C] The Cars | New wave pioneers who made synthesizers cool for rock fans. Benjamin Orr's voice on "Drive" still makes slow dances awkward and beautiful.

7/30

Jim Morrison, John Densmore, Ray Manzarek?

[B] The Doors | No bass player needed when Ray Manzarek's keyboard wizardry filled every frequency. Morrison's poetry turned rock concerts into theatrical séances.

8/30

Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Eric Singer?

[D] KISS | More makeup than a cosmetics counter, more merchandise than Disney. They turned rock concerts into comic book explosions with real pyrotechnics.

9/30

Lance Bass, Justin Timberlake, Joey Fatone?

[A] 'N Sync | Boy band mathematicians who calculated the perfect formula: harmonies plus choreography equals breaking sales records. Timberlake's ramen hair was just a bonus.

10/30

Pete Townshend, Roger Daltrey, John Entwistle?

[B] The Who | Inventors of guitar windmills and drum kit destruction. Their live shows were so loud, they literally helped create Marshall stack amplifiers.

11/30

Nathan Followill, Caleb Followill, Jared Followill?

[D] Kings of Leon | Three brothers and a cousin from Tennessee who transformed from garage rockers to arena gods while keeping their Southern drawl intact.

12/30

Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, Bob Weir?

[C] Grateful Dead | Jam band pioneers whose concerts were marathons, not sprints. Deadheads followed them religiously, creating mobile communities and the original social network.

13/30

Mike McCready, Eddie Vedder, Stone Gossard?

[A] Pearl Jam | Seattle survivors who fought Ticketmaster and won fans' eternal loyalty. Vedder's voice sounds like whiskey aged in flannel barrels.

14/30

Simon Le Bon, Nick Rhodes, John Taylor?

[B] Duran Duran | MTV's favorite pretty boys who filmed videos on yachts and made eyeliner acceptable. John Taylor's bass lines were funkier than their hair gel.

15/30

James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich, Kirk Hammett?

[C] Metallica | Thrash metal titans who went from garage to billions of streams. Their Black Album proved heavy music could dominate mainstream without losing its edge.

16/30

Nikki Sixx, Vince Neil, Tommy Lee?

[A] Mötley Crüe | Sunset Strip's most notorious band whose autobiography reads like fiction but it's all terrifyingly true. They survived themselves, barely.

17/30

Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, Brad Whitford?

[D] Aerosmith | Boston bad boys who proved second acts exist in rock. Their collaboration with Run-DMC taught MTV that genres are meant to be mixed.

18/30

Billy Corgan, James Iha, D'arcy Wretzky?

[B] Smashing Pumpkins | Alternative rock's orchestra, layering guitars until songs became sonic cathedrals. Corgan's voice: love it or hate it, you'll recognize it instantly.

19/30

Ann Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Ben Smith?

[C] Heart | Sister act who proved women could rock as hard as Zeppelin. Ann's voice could shatter glass while Nancy's guitar gently wept.

20/30

Belinda Carlisle, Jane Wiedlin, Margot Olaverra?

[D] The Go-Go's | First all-female band to write and play their way to number one. They made new wave fun, not just fashionable.

21/30

Thom Yorke, Jonny Greenwood, Colin Greenwood?

[B] Radiohead | Oxford experimentalists who treat albums like art installations. They leaked their own album online before it was cool, changing music distribution forever.

22/30

Rob Thomas, Kyle Cook, Brian Yale?

[A] Matchbox Twenty | Radio dominators whose debut album refused to leave the charts. Rob Thomas plus Santana equals the smoothest collaboration in Grammy history.

23/30

Dave Grohl, Nate Mendel, Taylor Hawkins?

[C] Foo Fighters | Grohl's therapy project became rock's most reliable band. They restore faith that guitars, drums, and screaming choruses will never die.

24/30

Ben Gibbard, Chris Walla, Nick Harmer?

[D] Death Cab for Cutie | Indie romantics whose album titles read like poetry. Gibbard writes love songs for overthinkers who prefer bookstores to nightclubs.

25/30

David Byrne, Chris Frantz, Tina Weymouth?

[A] Talking Heads | Art school nerds who made dancing intellectual. Byrne's oversized suit in "Stop Making Sense" became fashion's strangest iconic moment.

26/30

Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb, Maurice Gibb?

[C] Bee Gees | Brothers whose falsettos launched a thousand disco balls. They wrote more hits for others than most bands write for themselves.

27/30

Freddie Mercury, Brian May, Roger Taylor?

[B] Queen | Stadium rock royalty who mixed opera with hard rock. Mercury's voice had four octaves; their ambition had no limits whatsoever.

28/30

Jakob Dylan, Fred Eltringham, Greg Richling?

[D] The Wallflowers | Jakob Dylan stepped out of dad's shadow with "One Headlight." That song stayed on radio so long, DJs probably played it in their sleep.

29/30

Ray Davies, Dave Davies, Mick Avory?

[A] The Kinks | British Invasion's grumpiest brothers invented power chords accidentally by slashing speaker cones. Their feuds were legendary; their songs even more so.

30/30

Mark Knopfler, John Illsley, Pick Withers?

[B] Dire Straits | Knopfler's fingerpicking style made guitar picks obsolete for aspiring players. "Money for Nothing" ironically made them very rich indeed.

Your Scorecard

Three Members → Name That Band

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  • Get Points
  • Perfect100%
  • Excellent≥90%
  • Very Good≥80%
  • Good≥70%
  • Passed≥60%
  • Failed≤50%

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