Kids like classic rock, and so do adults.

Classic Rock radio gave us our longevity.

I usually listen to classic rock and roll.

I listen to classic rock for the most part.

I like hard rock, and classic rock, and even metal.

I'm into classic rock, Bruce Springsteen, Billy Joel.

I like a lot of old-school R&B, soul, and classic rock.

I'm big fan of soulful music - classic rock with a folk-ish twist.

I wanna write a classic metal record, a classic rock record, in 2013.

God bless classic rock. It's been very good to me; I'll tell you that.

I grew up listening to classic rock - the Kinks, Genesis, The Who, Pink Floyd.

I really like all music, but mostly Country, older R&B, and the good classic rock.

I'll hear us on classic rock radio stations, and I'll go, 'Oh, my God, we're getting old!'

But my everyday music is classic rock. It's what I relate to the most and where my heart is.

I love classic rock, rock and roll, that's the top notch. I love soul - bluesy music as well.

The reason it has lasted for 30 years is for one reason and one reason only: Classic Rock radio.

Classic rock, psychedelic rock - I like to dig up old music and see what I can get influenced by.

My dad was into classic rock and R&B, which I originally started in. And then my mom did the country.

My big brother listened to classic rock, and I grew up listening to a classic rock station called KSHE.

I love the blues. I love rock. I love classic rock. I love country. All types of music I can appreciate.

Salsa, classic rock, soul music, jazz... all of that was a part of my education in making hip-hop music.

I probably have the most versatile playlist in the world, from country to rap to classic rock to classical.

Over time, I've loved jazz, Miles Davis and Chet Baker, then Janis and Jimi and Creedence, then classic rock.

I don't like putting a name on my music. It's not just country and rap; it's got Southern rock, classic rock.

'Classic rock' is never a label that we've given ourselves - it's one of the many labels that's been imposed on us.

I love listening to Led Zeppelin and classic rock albums from the Seventies. They're just so brilliant because they breathe.

I listen to a lot of Pink Floyd, the Doors, Elton John, Sabbath, Metallica, GN'R, Megadeth - just classic rock, classic metal stuff.

I am a child of the '70s, so I love classic rock - Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Van Morrison, and I also love Coldplay.

I didn't necessarily grow up with country being my first priority as a music listener. I grew up listening to classic rock and Christian music.

The most important thing is I am trying to bring classic rock into pop culture, so I don't think anything is going to look like vintage or old-school.

My brother really shaped my musical taste when I was younger. He turned me on to classic rock like Led Zeppelin, and then he got me into R.E.M. and U2.

It's funny: here I am, a guy who plays in one of the world's biggest classic-rock bands, and to tell you the truth, I listen to classic rock the least.

I forever felt that I've fallen right between the crack of way too young for the first generation of classic rock 'n' roll and too old to be brand-new. It's hard.

At 14, I was in my own little classic rock country band. Then, after high school, I started another band called Northern Comfort. That was based out of Chico, Calif.

A big part of the Alice Cooper sound is the big classic rock licks, the big, classic thematic kind of... It's not about going crazy, it's not about playing super fast.

When people come to the show they think we are a legendary band because they hear us on Classic Rock radio all the time. It is psychological. That's okay - I'm down with that.

I was enamored with music at a very young age. Everything started with kundiman, then evolved to Carpenters, Barbra Streisand, Barry Manilow, and eventually classic rock music.

None of my family are musicians, but there was a lot of classic rock and country going on. I always wanted to sing. As soon as I expressed an interest my mom was super supportive of me.

I am Classic Rock Revisited. I revisit it every waking moment of my life because it has the spirit and the attitude and the fire and the middle finger. I am Rosa Parks with a Gibson guitar.

I listened to classic rock and roll, and punk rock. 'Goon Squad' provides a pretty accurate playlist of my teenage years, though it leaves out 'The Who,' which was my absolute favorite band.

I grew up loving classic rock music - The Beatles, The Rolling Stones - and then one day I heard 'Baby One More Time' on the radio and I thought 'What is this?' I was eight and it changed my life.

I equally love both, classic rock and hip-hop. I love all music, really, and I really use classic rock a lot. I'm heavily influenced by that melodically in my music. I can't really separate the two.

To see classic rock, you had to go to an arena. But punk was happening everywhere, even in little towns in the middle of nowhere in Maryland. I'd drive out to places I'd never been, just to go and see it.

My favorite composers are the ones that tell the story. I love Wagner. I love Mahler. Prokofiev. The programmatic music. I listen more to classic rock because I don't like the contemporary music very much.

I listen to all those kinds of music, from classic soul to hip-hop to Brazilian music to, you know, jazz to indie to alternative. So whatever. I listen to all if it. Classic rock and classic pop, all of that.

I love everything from soul to electronica and classic rock to weird rock. I'm a real cratedigger, so wherever I go, I search out a vinyl shop to find some unburied treasure - records by under-the-radar artistes.

I have truly eclectic taste in music, and I seem to cycle through phases in terms of to what's inspiring me. I'll go from Beethoven to Sigur Ros; world music, Brit-pop, classic rock, blues/jazz, even the odd bit of heavy metal.

I always wanted to tell the story of how Pearl Jam is the story of lightning striking twice. As well as being the flipside of the classic rock tale where great promise ends in tragedy. This is where tragedy begins great promise.

I was inspired by the classic rock radio of the Seventies. They separated Chuck Berry and the Beatles from the Led Zeppelins and Bostons and Peter Framptons of the time. In many ways, classic rock became bigger than mainstream rock.

The big stadiums get totally packed, and everyone knows the words, and it's screaming young girls. I met a whole bunch of great Nashville musicians, and they accepted me in their community. Classic rock and country music go well together.

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