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What happened to rock on the charts?

It seems like forever ago there was actual rock music on the charts. The closest thing is indie pop and maybe imagine dragons (which tow the line between indie rock and indie pop.) There was daylight by shinedown on hot ac, but it didnt get very high. Hell, most ac artists are also fading, except for a smaller song by andy grammar on hot ac. Thoughts?
 
It seems like forever ago there was actual rock music on the charts. The closest thing is indie pop and maybe imagine dragons (which tow the line between indie rock and indie pop.) There was daylight by shinedown on hot ac, but it didnt get very high. Hell, most ac artists are also fading, except for a smaller song by andy grammar on hot ac. Thoughts?
Nope, you're again basing your claims on personal observations from a small part of the nation. Picking individual artists or titles is not representative of an entire format, or stations in those formats.
 
It seems like forever ago there was actual rock music on the charts. The closest thing is indie pop and maybe imagine dragons (which tow the line between indie rock and indie pop.) There was daylight by shinedown on hot ac, but it didnt get very high. Hell, most ac artists are also fading, except for a smaller song by andy grammar on hot ac. Thoughts?
Changing demographics, changing musical preferences. Rock has become a fractured, dying genre, with islands of die-hards clinging to one style or another, or one band or another, while other genres keep developing new stars who connect with a vast majority of listeners to that genre. The longer rock goes without a mass-appeal sound or stars, the greater the chance that it becomes relevant only as nostalgia.
 
I think you're asking about rock crossover to the pop chart? That's an interesting topic, and says more about the state of rock music than anything else.

What you are seeing now is the revival of country crossovers to the pop chart. With artists like Morgan Wallen, Luke Combs, and Kane Brown, you're more likely to hear a country song on AT40 than a rock song.

What happened to rock? Bad music, bad promotion, bad marketing. The Hot 100 is a competition. Right now, Brenda Lee is eating up chart space with a 65 year old song. Nobody doesn't like Brenda Lee.
 
What is being called rock is changing, based on nominations in the rock category on awards shows.

I did hear a clip of Maneskin and I think that would qualify. It was a recent awards show.
 
Soft rock also does not seem to have much staying power like it used to. It seemed like in the '00s, soft rock was all over hot AC and even some on CHR like Lifehouse and David Cook. However, those days seem long and whatever soft rock song does not stay like (like "Arcade"). I am unsure why that is, as much of the softer rock tracks (like "Lips of an Angel") seem radio friendly.
 
Soft rock also does not seem to have much staying power like it used to. It seemed like in the '00s, soft rock was all over hot AC and even some on CHR like Lifehouse and David Cook. However, those days seem long and whatever soft rock song does not stay like (like "Arcade"). I am unsure why that is, as much of the softer rock tracks (like "Lips of an Angel") seem radio friendly.
Maybe some of the AC/CHR audience that preferred their rock softer has been siphoned off by country stations.
 
I think Rock, in general, has sort of run its course and said everything it had to say. It doesn't fit with the zeitgeist. That's why you're not hearing it on CHR or hot AC.
 
When the Hot 100 is perennially dominated by Taylor Swift, Christmas songs in December, and songs that can be best described as “bitch ass, bitch ass, bitch ass (X42)”, yeah I see the argument that we have no musical culture ahaha. Or, perhaps more accurately, we have an atrocious one.

A lot of those Hot 100 hits don’t get radio airplay either. A lot of pop radio’s “hits” often scrape the Hot 100 at best, because they can’t play the songs that are actually popular due to their subject matter and exceptional amounts of profanity. This has created a disconnect, but what can anyone do? You can’t make people listen to the songs that pop radio thinks should be popular.
 
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