Rock bands come up with their names from all kinds of sources. Sometimes they’re unimaginatively straightforward — no prizes for guessing who leads up the Marshall Tucker Band, the Dave Matthews Band, or the Spencer Davis Group. Sometimes they’re named in tribute to someone fondly or less than fondly remembered: Kings of Leon honors the late Leon Followill, grandfather of the founders; Lynyrd Skynyrd was christened in remembrance of Leonard Skinner, the not-exactly-beloved high school gym teacher of the main band members.
The Rolling Stones borrowed their name from a song, “Rollin’ Stone,” by one of their early idols, blues great Muddy Waters. The Doobie Brothers were named for a marijuana cigarette. Boston, Chicago, and Berlin obviously take their names from cities. The names Steely Dan and the Velvet Underground have X-rated origins. (These are the 100 most popular rock bands of all time.)
Some band names sound downright threatening — Rage Against the Machine, the Killers, Five Finger Death Punch, And You Shall Know Them by the Trail of Dead. Others sound just plain silly: The The, Mr. Mister, Chumbawamba, Hoobastank. The website BandNameExplained tells the stories behind many of these.
A surprising number of bands, though, have names that reference food or drink, either directly or metaphorically. Many of these were founded back in the 1960s, and have been revived more than once since then. Here’s a roster of the most famous rock bands formed every year since 1960.
Click here to see 25 bands with food names
24/7 Tempo has assembled a list of 25 of the more prominent such musical groups, in styles ranging from psychedelic to electronic to blues-rock, explaining — whenever possible — how they got their gastronomically suggestive names.
Black Eyed Peas
> Years active: 1995-present
> Notable song: “Where Is the Love?”
Founded by rappers will.i.am and apl.de.ap and originally called Black Eyed Pods, this ensemble evolved into a pop-rap group and launched the career of Stacy Ann “Fergie” Ferguson, who joined the Peas in 2002.
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Bowling for Soup
> Years active: 1994-present
> Notable song: “Girl All the Bad Guys Want”
Formed in Wichita Falls, Texas, this punk/pop/power band took its name from a Steve Martin routine on the 1978 comedy album “Wild and Crazy Guy.”
Cake
> Years active: 1991-present
> Notable song: “Rock ‘n’ Roll Lifestyle”
John McCrea, founder of this Sacramento-born alt.rock band (not to be confused with the ’60s girl group The Cake) once explained to the Chicago Sun-Times that its name wasn’t about dessert. It was like, he said “when something insidiously becomes a part of your life…something that cakes onto your shoe and is just sort of there until you get rid of it”.
The Cranberries
> Years active: 1989-2003, 2009-2019
> Notable song: “Linger”
An alt.rock band from Ireland, with Irish folk influences, was originally called The Cranberry Saw Us (pronounce it quickly to get the joke). The name morphed into simple The Cranberry, but a tape sent to them as The Cranberries led to their eventual moniker.
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Cream
> Years active: 1966-1968
> Notable song: “Sunshine of Your Love”
This bluesy classic rock trio, consisting of guitar star Eric Clapton, bassist Jack Bruce, and drummer Ginger Baker, was so-named because the three were considered the “cream of the crop” among British blues musicians when the group formed.
Bread
> Years active: 1968-1973, 1976-1978, 1996-1997
> Notable song: “Make It With You”
A soft-rock band from L.A., Bread was originally called Pleasure Faire. One apocryphal story is that while they were trying to come up with a better name, one of the members saw a bakery truck drive past.
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Blue Öyster Cult
> Years active: 1967-present
> Notable song: “(Don’t Fear) the Reaper”
Originally formed in Stony Brook, Long Island, as Soft White Underbelly, this influential hard rock/metal band took its better-known name from a poem written in the 1960s by their manager, Sandy Pearlman. The superfluous umlaut is said to have been added to the “O” as an allusion to the “Wagnerian” aspects of heavy metal (see Motörhead and Queensrÿche).
The Apples in Stereo
> Years active: 1992-present
> Notable song: “Signal in the Sky (Let’s Go)”
At first called simply The Apples — a name they borrowed from the Pink Floyd song “Apples and Oranges” — this indie rock band hails originally from Denver. After “in Stereo” was added in the mid-1990s, co-founder Robert Schneider at first said that the group’s name was still just The Apples but they recorded “in stereo.”,
Chocolate Watch Band
> Years active: 1965-1970, 1999-present
> Notable song: “I’m Not Like Everybody Else”
This psychedelic-powered garage band came up with its nonsensical name as a joke, probably riffing off other curious band names of the period (see, for instance, the Electric Prunes, below).
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Country Joe & the Fish
> Years active: 1965-1970
> Notable song: “I Feel Like I’m Fixin’ to Die Rag”
A strongly political psychedelic folk rock band founded by Joseph Allen “Country Joe” McDonald and Barry “The Fish” Melton, the group got its name from Bay Area music business personality ED (sic) Denson, co-publisher of a left-wing alternative magazine called Rag Baby. The inspiration wasn’t culinary. It was a reference to Mao Zedong’s description of revolutionaries as “fish who swim in the sea of the people.”
Electric Prunes
> Years active: 1965-1970, 1999-present
> Notable song: “I Had Too Much to Dream Last Night”
Like many other band names, “the Electric Prunes” started off as a joke among members of this L.A.-based psychedelic rock group. Co-founder James Lowe liked the name because it was unique. “It’s not attractive,” he once said, “and there’s nothing sexy about it, but people won’t forget it.”
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Flying Burrito Brothers
> Years active: 1968-1972, 1975-1980, 1985-2001, and later under related Burrito names
> Notable song: “Sin City”
When the subsequently legendary Gram Parsons added country influences to his International Submarine Band, the other two members left amicably and founded something they called the Flying Burrito Brothers, for reasons unknown. When Parsons and Chris Hillman, formerly of The Byrds, formed a new band of their own, Parsons’ former colleagues offered him use of the name.
The Gourds
> Years active: 1994-2013
> Notable song: “Gin and Juice”
An alt.country group from Texas, The Gourds were once known as “the national band of Austin.” Their name might be an agricultural reference, or could reference a slang term for “brains” or “heads.”
Kid Creole & the Coconuts
> Years active: 1980-present
> Notable song: “Stool Pigeon”
Heading up a band known for its Latin and disco hits, August Darnell took the title of the 1958 Elvis Presley movie “King Creole” as inspiration for his stage name. Group co-founder Adriana Kaegi added “the Coconuts” — presumably to evoke the band’s tropical flavor.
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Strawberry Alarm Clock
> Years active: 1967-1971, 1974-1975, 1982-present
> Notable song: “Incense and Peppermints”
A psychedelic-tinged “sunshine pop” ensemble, the Alarm Clock was formed by members of two earlier groups, Thee Sixpence and Waterfyrd Traene. According to the band’s bio, they wanted to use the word “strawberry” in their name in tribute to “Strawberry Fields Forever,” but didn’t know what words to put with it. Then somebody noticed the ticking of an old-fashioned alarm clock in the room, and that was it.
Sugarcubes
> Years active: 1986-1992, 2006
> Notable song: “Hit”
International avant-garde-rock diva Björk came to prominence in this Icelandic band. The name is assumed to be a reference to LSD-soaked sugar cubes.
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Tangerine Dream
> Years active: 1967-present
> Notable song: “Force Majeure”
A pioneering electronic and ambient band from Germany, Tangerine Dream owes its name to a misheard Beatles lyric: Members heard “tangerine trees and marmalade skies” from “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” as “tangerine dreams…”
Vanilla Fudge
> Years active: 1967-1970, 1982-1984, 1987-1988, 1991, 1999-present
> Notable song: “You Keep Me Hangin’ On”
This Long Island acid rock band was originally called the Electric Pigeons, and later just The Pigeons. When the group got signed to Atlantic Records, though, the label didn’t like the name and asked them to come up with a new one. An employee at a Long Island club they were playing happened to mention that her childhood nickname had been Vanilla Fudge, and suggested that the band adopt it.
The Smashing Pumpkins
> Years active: 1988-2000, 2006-present
> Notable song: “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”
A Chicago-born alt.rock band, The Smashing Pumpkins (or just Smashing Pumpkins) has never revealed the origin of its name. However a one-time bass player for the group, D’arcy Wretzky, has declared that “smashing” is an adjective meaning “great” — not a reference to the Halloween-period prank of destroying jack o’lanterns.
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Red Hot Chili Peppers
> Years active: 1983-present
> Notable song: “Give It Away”
The great ragtime and pioneering jazz pianist Jelly Roll Morton had a band called the Red Hot Peppers, but this funky alt.rock band’s similar name is apparently not related. In fact, when the website BandNameExplained asked Chili Peppers co-founder Anthony Kiedis about the name, “All he brought out was a flavorless comment about ‘a psychedelic bus with the band’s name on it’.”
Neutral Milk Hotel
> Years active: 1989-1999, 2013-2015
> Notable song: “King of Carrot Flowers, Pt. 1”
Jeff Mangum, who launched this indie rock band out of Louisiana and gained a cult following across the country, has said that the origin of the group’s name is something he wants to keep to himself. He did record originally as simply Milk, but added a couple of words after somebody told him that there was already a group by that name.
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Moby Grape
> Years active: 1966-1969, 1971, 1973-1975, 1977-1979, 1883-1984, 1987-1991, 1996-2001, 2006-present
> Notable song: “Omaha”
This off-again, on-again folkish psychedelic band out of San Francisco took its name from the punchline of a joking ’60s riddle that asked “What’s big and purple and lives in the ocean?”
The Lemonheads
> Years active: 1986-1997, 2005-present
> Notable song: “Into Your Arms”
A Boston-born punk and alt.rock band, this group was originally called The Whelps. Lead singer Evan Dando changed it after encountering the hard candy called Lemonheads — which Dando described as sour outside and sweet within. He may have meant that as a metaphor for the band’s music.
Humble Pie
> Years active: 1969-1975, 1979-1983, 1988-2000, 2001-2002, 2018-present
> Notable song: “30 Days in the Hole”
In culinary history terms, humble (or umble) pie is a medieval savory pastry filled with minced organ meats, and metaphorically, to eat humble pie is to be forced to apologize in a humiliating way. When Steve Marriott announced that he was leaving the Small Faces to form a band with Peter Frampton, the UK music press hailed it as a potential “super-group.” Marriott chose to give his hard-rocking band this self-effacing name as a way to manage expectations.
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Hot Tuna
> Years active: 1969-1977, 1983, 1986-present
> Notable song: “Hesitation Blues”
The name of this blues-rock band founded by two former members of Jefferson Airplane was inspired by a line from a song the founders liked to sing. “Keep on Truckin'” was their version of old-time blues singer Blind Boy Fuller’s song “What’s That Smell Like Fish,” and incorporated Fuller’s title in the lyrics. As they sang the line one day, somebody in the audience answered “hot tuna!”
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