MusicBands

Picture This Band! (Part 2)

Can you name the band from the literal image?

Picture This Band! (Part 2)
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About This Quiz

This is visual karaoke. The screen flashes a pearl, a melon with sunglasses, or a bunch of doors in a hallway. You hum the right name. No melody needed. Your eyes do the singing.

Start loud. Pearl Jam. Blind Melon. The Doors. Then catch side quests like Jefferson Airplane or Gin Blossoms hiding in plain sight. If a stone is rolling, do not overcomplicate it.

Same mechanics in every part. Short rounds. Clean hits. Miss one and bounce to the next. Momentum beats theory. Finish strong and earn permanent skip the queue rights for the car radio. Victory playlist goes on loop. Friends pretend not jealous. Promise.

1/20

1. Queen

[A] Queen | A crown signals the regal British quartet. Mercury’s range, Brian May’s homemade guitar, and operatic excess turned sci-fi camp into arena consensus.

2/20

2. Heart

[B] Heart | Scarlet heart icon points to Seattle sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson. Zeppelin-sized power crossed with acoustic beauty made ‘Barracuda’ bite and ‘Alone’ ache.

3/20

3. Toto

[C] Toto | Dorothy’s terrier, Toto, by name. Studio-ace collective behind ‘Africa’ and ‘Rosanna,’ bridging yacht-polish chops with meme-proof choruses.

4/20

4. The Black Eyed Peas

[A] The Black Eyed Peas | Legumes with dark circles. Will.i.am’s pop-rap collective jumped from ‘Where Is the Love?’ to Super Bowl confetti, mixing party hooks with radio conscience.

5/20

5. Kiss

[D] Kiss | A couple mid-smooch. The face-painted hard-rock merchants sold fire, bloodcaps, and anthems like ‘Detroit Rock City.’ Merch tables became small nations.

6/20

6. The Police

[B] The Police | A line of officers. Sting, Summers, and Copeland fused reggae rhythms with post-punk nerves, making choruses that stalked charts and haunted karaoke forever.

7/20

7. Asia

[C] Asia | Continental outline. Supergroup of prog veterans known for ‘Heat of the Moment.’ Big choruses framed by shiny 1980s keyboards and yacht-adjacent optimism.

8/20

8. The Animals

[D] The Animals | A menagerie on one canvas. British-Invasion contemporaries who gave ‘House of the Rising Sun’ its brooding organ and garage-to-stadium snarl.

9/20

9. Oasis

[B] Oasis | Desert watering hole. Manchester rivals to Blur who wrote football-chant melodies and feuds sturdy enough to be studied in schools.

10/20

10. Slipknot

[A] Slipknot | Blue rope tied in a slippery hitch. Iowa metal unit famous for masks, percussion storms, and a festival literally named after themselves.

11/20

11. The Turtles

[C] The Turtles | Sunbathing reptiles on rocks. Sixties pop with cartoon whimsy and harmonies that made ‘Happy Together’ permanently live in supermarket speakers.

12/20

12. ZZ Top

[D] ZZ Top | Toy top with twin Zs. Texas trio, long beards, boogie shuffle; ‘La Grange’ and car-commercial guitars forever embedded in classic-rock DNA.

13/20

13. The Hollies

[A] The Hollies | Holly leaves and red berries. Manchester hit-makers behind ‘Long Cool Woman’ and meticulous harmonies that made AM radios sound gilded.

14/20

14. Florida Georgia Line

[C] Florida Georgia Line | Border between FL and GA. Nashville-bred duo who welded bro-country hooks to breezy truck-bed imagery and radio-proof choruses.

15/20

15. Bread

[B] Bread | Sliced loaves on a board. Soft-rockers whose ‘Make It with You’ delivered bakery-fresh sentiment and immaculate late-night FM warmth.

16/20

16. Eagles

[D] Eagles | Four bald raptors roosting. West-coast supergroup blended country polish and rock drive; ‘Hotel California’ made mythic exits sound luxurious.

17/20

17. Poison

[A] Poison | Bottle marked with skull-and-crossbones. Glam-metal hitmakers of ‘Every Rose Has Its Thorn’ and hair-spray balladry suited for denim sunsets.

18/20

18. The Doors

[B] The Doors | A grid of doors. Morrison’s Lizard King charisma met Ray Manzarek’s organ swirl to turn beat-poet moodiness into radio noir.

19/20

19. Train

[D] Train | Curving rails and a locomotive. Pop-rock outfit who made ‘Drops of Jupiter’ a café jukebox anthem and kept bay-window choruses in fashion.

20/20

20. Kansas

[C] Kansas | Kansas highlighted on the map. Topeka-born prog-meets-heartland combo whose violin-laced hits ‘Carry On Wayward Son’ and ‘Dust in the Wind’ refuse to age.

Your Scorecard

Picture This Band! (Part 2)

  • Correct
  • Correct Rate
    %Avg Correct Rate
  • L1Difficulty Level
    1xPoints
  • Get Points
  • Perfect100%
  • Excellent≥90%
  • Very Good≥80%
  • Good≥70%
  • Passed≥60%
  • Failed≤50%

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