What is classic rock?
Classic rock is guitar-driven popular music—mostly from the late 1960s through the mid‑1980s—that became the global template for stadium hooks, blues-rooted riffs, and album-oriented listening. Radio formats use the term for artists whose catalog defines “rock” for mainstream audiences: think British invasion aftermath through arena rock, without narrowing to a single subgenre.
The golden era: 1965–1985 — why this music endures
Those decades saw the electric guitar move from novelty to primary storytelling voice. Bands stretched song lengths, doubled down on virtuosity, and toured at a scale that turned albums into shared folklore. The repertoire stayed in rotation because the songwriting is melodic enough for casual listeners and detailed enough for repeat study.
New Clear Radio treats that era as living repertoire—not a golden-oldies afterthought. Familiar hits sit next to deeper cuts so the lineage stays audible.
What you'll hear on New Clear Radio's classic rock stream
Core rotation includes: Led Zeppelin, Queen, David Bowie, AC/DC, The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, The Who, Fleetwood Mac, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath.
Programming emphasises dynamics and stereo interplay—exactly the details that cheap streams smear when bitrate drops.
Classic rock vs oldies — what's the difference
“Oldies” is a time-period format built from chart nostalgia across genres—including pop, soul, and novelty hits. Classic rock is rock-first: guitar bands, album tracks, and subgenre identity matter more than whether a single cracked the Top 40 in a given week.
Why classic rock demands high audio quality
Large-scale productions pile drums, multi-miked guitars, and room ambience into the same frequency range. Low-bitrate encoders compress those layers together, so snares turn mushy and vocal air disappears. Switching to a high-bitrate stream restores separation—see our 320kbps radio streaming guide for why it matters on real speakers.
How to tune in — web player and app
Open the New Clear Radio web player, choose your preferred bitrate (up to 320kbps where available), and bookmark the stream. Install the mobile app for quality presets, car-friendly buffers, and casting to bigger systems.