These Welsh talents loom large over rock in the 21st century.
Stereophonics: Influences
The sweaty rock and throaty vocalists behind the Welsh band.
Stereophonics: Deep Cuts
Go beyond the hits for many more reliable rock gems.
Stereophonics: Chill
Lean back and relax with some of the mellowest cuts.
About Stereophonics
Hometown
Cwmaman, Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales
Formed
1996
Genre
Rock
Formed in 1992, Stereophonics rose up alongside the nascent Britpop movement, but they always seemed to exist just outside that scene. For one, hailing from the small Welsh village of Cwmaman—where singer/guitarist Kelly Jones and drummer Stuart Cable grew up on the same street—put them at a geographic remove from the London hipsters, while the band’s formative tastes leaned more toward no-frills blue-collar classic rock. (Prior to 1996, they were known as Tragic Love Company, a nod to riff-wielding heroes The Tragically Hip, Mother Love Bone, and Bad Company.) But in Jones, the band possessed a raspy yet melodic mouthpiece who could scale the power-ballad peaks of Bends-era Radiohead (see: 1997’s debut Top 20 single “Traffic”), while making Rod Stewart standards his own (with a faithful 1999 rendition of “Handbags and Gladrags”). And long after the Britpop party flamed out, Stereophonics continued to rack up the hits—in 2005, the band scored their first No. 1 single with the driving indie anthem “Dakota,” while in 2022, Oochya! became their eighth album to top the UK charts.
Members of Stereophonics include, or have included, Kelly Jones, Richard Jones, Jamie Morrison and more.
Similar to: Stereophonics
Discover more music and artists similar to Stereophonics, like Kelly Jones, Oasis, Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds