List of rock instrumentals

The following is a list of rock instrumentals. Only instrumentals that are notable are included.

Instrumentals which have charted

Instrumental rock is rock music that emphasizes musical instruments and features very little or no singing. An instrumental is a musical composition or recording without lyrics, or singing, although it might include some inarticulate vocals, such as shouted backup vocals in a big band setting.[1][2][3]

1950s and 1960s chartings

Artist Song title Date Highest position
on US charts
Highest position
on UK charts
Highest position
on R&B charts
Miscellaneous
Bill Justis "Raunchy" 1957 #3[4] #24[5] #1[6]
Ernie Freeman "Raunchy" 1957 #4[7] #1 <R&B charts> Joel Whitburn Top R&B Singles 1942-1999>
The Champs "Tequila" 1958 #1[8] #5[9] #1 [10]
Duane Eddy "Moovin' N' Groovin'" 1958 #72
The Champs "El Rancho Rock" 1958 #30
Link Wray & His Ray Men "Rumble" 1958 #16[11] #11[12]
Duane Eddy "Rebel Rouser" 1958 #6[13] #8[14] #19 [15]
Duane Eddy "Ramrod" 1958 #28
The Champs "Chariot Rock" 1958 #59
Duane Eddy "Cannonball" 1958 #15 #2 #22
Link Wray & His Ray Men "Raw-Hide" 1959 #23
The Rockin' R's "The Beat" 1959 #57
Duane Eddy "Yep!" 1959 #30 #17
The Virtues "Guitar Boogie Shuffle" 1959 #5[16] #27[17]
Dave "Baby" Cortez "The Happy Organ" 1959 #1[18] #5[19]
Johnny and the Hurricanes "Crossfire" 1959 #23
The Wailers "Tall Cool One" 1959 #36[20] #24[21]
Preston Epps "Bongo Rock" 1959 #14[22]
Duane Eddy "Forty Miles of Bad Road" 1959 #9 #17
Johnny and the Hurricanes "Red River Rock" 1959 #5[23] #3[24] #5[25]
The Wailers "Mau-Mau" 1959 #68
Sandy Nelson "Teen Beat" 1959 #4[26] #9[27] #17[28] The piano on the recording is by Bruce Johnston.[27]
Santo & Johnny "Sleep Walk" 1959 #1[29] #22[30] #4[31]
Santo & Johnny "Tear Drop" 1959 #23[29] #50[30] #17[31]
Duane Eddy "Some Kind-A Earthquake" 1959 #37 #12
Johnny And The Hurricanes "Reveille Rock 1959 #25 #17
The Fireballs "Bulldog" 1960 #24
The Champs "Too Much Tequila" 1960 #30
Johnny and the Hurricanes "Beatnik Fly" 1960 #15 #8
Bill Black's Combo "White Silver Sands" 1960 #9[32] #33[33] #1[34]
Bill Black's Combo "Don't Be Cruel" 1960 #11[32] #32[33] #1[34]
Duane Eddy "Shazam" 1960 #45 #4
Duane Eddy "Because They're Young" 1960 #4 #2 #17
Johnny and the Hurricanes "Rocking Goose" 1960 #60 #3
Duane Eddy "Peter Gunn" 1960 #8[35] #6[14] This was the second charting of the song in 1959.
Floyd Cramer "Last Date" 1960 #2[36] #32[33]
The Shadows "Apache" 1960 #1[37]
The Ventures "Walk, Don't Run" 1960 #1[38] #8[39] #13[40]
Duane Eddy "Pepe" 1961 #18 #2
B. Bumble and the Stingers "Bumble Boogie" 1961 #21[41]
The Fireballs "Quite a Party" 1961 #27[42] #29[43]
Kokomo "Asia Minor" 1961 #8[44] #35[39] Adopted from the Edvard Grieg, Piano Concerto in A minor[44] and subsequently banned by the BBC.[45]
The Mar-Keys "Last Night" 1961 #3[46] #2[47]
Sandy Nelson "Let There Be Drums" 1961 #7[26] #3[27]
The String-A-Longs "Wheels" 1961 #3[48] #8[30] #19[49]
Billy Joe and the Checkmates "Percolator (Twist)" 1962 #10[50]
The Champs "Limbo Rock" 1962 #40[8]
Jet Harris "Besame Mucho" 1962 #22[51]
King Curtis "Soul Twist" 1962 #17[52] #1[53]
Sandy Nelson "Drums Are My Beat" 1962 #29[26] #30[27]
The Tornados "Telstar" 1962 #1[54] #1[55] #5[56]
The Busters "Bust Out" 1963 #25[57]
The Dakotas "The Cruel Sea" 1963 #18[58]
Jet Harris and Tony Meehan "Scarlett O'Hara" 1963 #2[51]
Lonnie Mack "Memphis" 1963 #5[59] #4[60]
Lonnie Mack Wham! 1963 #24[59] From the album The Wham of that Memphis Man
The Marketts "Out of Limits" 1963 #3[46]
Link Wray & His Ray Men "Jack The Ripper" 1963 #64 Released in 1961, but didn't chart until 1963.
Jack Nitzsche "The Lonely Surfer" 1963 #39[61]
The Rockin’ Rebels
aka The Rebels
"Wild Weekend" 1963 #8[62] #3[24] #28[63]
The Surfaris "Wipe Out" 1963 #2[64] #5[65] #10[66]
The Pyramids "Penetration" 1964 #18[67] Adapted from Edvard Grieg's Piano Concerto in A minor.[44]
The T-Bones "No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In)" 1965 #3[68]
The Viscounts "Harlem Nocturne" 1966 #39 #17 Originally released in 1960, peaking at #52 on Billboard and #28 on CashBox. A 1965 re-release resulted in the record topping its previous peak, reaching #39.
The Bar-Kays "Soul Finger" 1967 #17[69] #33[70] #3[71]
Cliff Nobles & Co. "The Horse" 1968 #2[72] #2[73]
Fleetwood Mac "Albatross" 1968 #1[74] Charted again (#2) in Britain in 1972.
Hugh Masekela "Grazing in the Grass" 1968 #1[75] #1[76]
Mason Williams "Classical Gas" 1968 #2[77] #9[78] "orchestrated rock and roll" backed by the Wrecking Crew[79]
Booker T. & the M.G.'s "Time Is Tight" 1969 #6[44] #7[80] from the film Uptight[44]
The Ventures "Hawaii Five-O" 1969 #4[81]

1970s and 1980s chartings

Artist Song title Date Highest position
on US charts
Highest position
on UK charts
Highest position
on R&B charts
Miscellaneous
Dennis Coffey ‘'Scorpio’’ 1971 #6[82] #7[83] #9[84]
Hot Butter ‘'Popcorn’’ 1972 #9[85] #5[86]
Billy Preston Outa-Space 1972 #2[87] #44[88] #1[89]
Deodato ‘'Also Sprach Zarathustra (2001)’’ 1973 #2[90] #7[83] based on Richard Strauss’s Also sprach Zarathustra
Edgar Winter Group ‘'Frankenstein’’ 1973 #1[91] #18[92]
The Love Unlimited Orchestra Love's Theme 1973 #1[93] #10[94] #10[95] orchestra formed and song written by Barry White
Billy Preston Space Race 1973 #4[87] #1[96]
Average White Band Pick Up the Pieces 1974 #1[97] #6[98] #5[99]
B. T. Express Express 1974 #2[100] #34[101] #1[102]
The Commodores Machine Gun 1974 #22[103] #20[104] #7[105]
Focus Hocus Pocus 1974 #9[106] #20[104]
MFSB ‘'TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)’’ 1974 #1[107] #22[108] #1[109]
Silver Convention Fly, Robin, Fly 1975 #1[110] #28[111] #1[112]
Van McCoy The Hustle 1975 #1[97] #3[113] #1[71]
Mike Post The Rockford Files (Theme) 1975 #10
Walter Murphy A Fifth Of Beethoven 1976 #1[114] #28[115] #10[116] based on the first movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Fifth Symphony
Rhythm Heritage Theme from S.W.A.T. 1976 #1[117] #11[118]
Chuck Mangione Feels So Good 1977 #4
Herb Alpert ‘'Rise’’ 1979 #1[119] #13[120] #4[121]


0-9

10cc

A

ABBA

AC/DC

The Alan Parsons Project

Herb Alpert

The Allman Brothers Band

The Allman Brothers Band with special guest Eric Clapton.

And So I Watch You from Afar

Ray Anthony

Anthrax

Apocalyptica

  • Plays Metallica by Four Cellos (1996)
  • Inquisition Symphony (1998)
  • Cult (2000) The Standard Version it's all instrumental and the Special Edition Disk 2 include: "Path Vol. 2" feat. Sandra Nasić and "Hope Vol. 2" feat. Matthias Sayer on vocals.
  • Reflections (2003) On The Revised, Russian Edition & 2005 US Reissue it's include: "Seemann (Rammstein Cover)" feat. Nina Hagen on vocals.
  • Apocalyptica (2005) Vocals: "Life Burns!" & "Bittersweet" feat. Lauri Ylönen; "En Vie" feat. Manu; On Special Edition Bonus Tracks: "How Far" & "Wie Weit" Marta Jandová.
  • Amplified // A Decade of Reinventing the Cello It consists the band's most notable covers and original songs on 2 CDs, one for the instrumentals tunes and the other for the tunes with vocals.
  • Worlds Collide (2003) Vocals: "I Don't Care" Adam Gontier of Three Days Grace; "I'm Not Jesus" Corey Taylor of Slipknot, Stone Sour; "S.O.S (Anything but Love)" Cristina Scabbia of Lacuna Coil, additionals backing vocals: Mats Levén of Therion, Krux; "Helden" Till Lindemann of Rammstein.
  • 7th Symphony (2003) Vocals: "End of Me" Gavin Rossdale of Bush; "Not Strong Enough (Album Version)" Brent Smith of Shinedown; "Not Strong Enough (US Single Version)" Doug Robb of Hoobastank; "Broken Pieces" Lacey Mosley of Flyleaf; "Bring Them to Light" Joe Duplantier of Gojira.
  • Wagner Reloaded-Live in Leipzig (2013)

Reginald "Fieldy" Arvizu and various artists

Asia

August Burns Red

Average White Band

B

The Bar-Kays

Michael Angelo Batio

B. Bumble and the Stingers

The Beach Boys

The Beach Boys in 1964. From left: Al Jardine, Carl Wilson, Brian Wilson and Mike Love (drummer Dennis Wilson not shown).

Beastie Boys

The Beatles

Jeff Beck

Most of Beck's recordings following the dissolution of The Jeff Beck Group are instrumentals.

Jason Becker

Bee Gees

Bill Black's Combo

Most, if not all, of the Bill Black Combo's recordings are instrumentals.

Black Flag

Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath in 1970.

Blaqk Audio

The Bobby Fuller Four

Booker T. and the M.G.'s

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Boston

David Bowie

David Bowie in 1978.

B. T. Express

Roy Buchanan

Buckethead

Buckethead performing in Seattle in 2008.
Most, if not all, of Buckethead's recordings are instrumentals.

The Byrds

C

Café Tacuba

Cake

Calexico

Camel

Camel in 2003.

Camper Van Beethoven

Gustavo Cerati

The Champs

Most, if not all, of the Champs recordings are instrumentals.

The Chantays

The Chemical Brothers

Chicago

  • "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon: Anxiety's Moment" (Chicago, 1970)
  • "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon: West Virginia Fantasies" (Chicago)
  • "Ballet for a Girl in Buchannon: To Be Free" (Chicago)

Eric Clapton

Bruce Cockburn

Dennis Coffey

The Commodores

Dave "Baby" Cortez

Floyd Cramer

Most, if not all, of the Floyd Cramer's recordings are instrumentals.

Cream

Creedence Clearwater Revival

King Curtis

D

The Dakotas

Dick Dale

Most of Dale's recordings are instrumentals.

Dave Matthews Band

Deep Purple

Deep Purple in 1975.

Deodato

Derek and the Dominos

The Derek Trucks Band

Most of the band's early recordings, prior to their introduction of vocalist Mike Mattison, are instrumentals. Many of these recordings also veer strongly towards jazz fusion with rock elements.

Destroyalldreamers

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Dixie Dregs

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Bill Doggett

Dream Theater

Dream Theater performing in Brazil in 2008. Vocalist James LaBrie roams the stage while his bandmates perform an instrumental passage.

The Durutti Column

Most of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

E

Earthless

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Duane Eddy

Most, if not all, of the Duane Eddy's recordings are instrumentals.

The Edgar Winter Group

Electric Light Orchestra

Emerson, Lake and Palmer

Preston Epps

Eric Clapton and the Powerhouse

Explosions in the Sky

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

F

The Fabulous Thunderbirds

Harold Faltermeyer and Steve Stevens

Fleetwood Mac

A Flock of Seagulls

Focus

Peter Frampton

Marty Friedman

FromUz

Funkadelic

G

Peter Gabriel

Paul Gilbert

Paul Gilbert.

Godspeed You! Black Emperor

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

David Gilmour

Gary Glitter

God Is an Astronaut

Godsmack

Gov't Mule

The original lineup of Gov't Mule (shown here performing an acoustic set) regularly performed and recorded instrumentals.

Grails

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

H

Jan Hammer

Hammock

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Jet Harris

  • "Besame Mucho", (1962), No. 22 UK[51]

Jet Harris and Tony Meehan

George Harrison

Hellecasters

Jimi Hendrix

Jimi Hendrix

Gary Hoey

Most of Hoey's recordings are instrumentals.

Hot Butter

I

If These Trees Could Talk

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Iron Maiden

  • "Transylvania"
  • "The Ides of March"
  • "Genghis Khan"
  • "Losfer Words"

J

Jade Warrior

Jazz Is Dead

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

The Jeff Healey Band

Jefferson Airplane

Billy Joel

Elton John

Johnny and the Hurricanes

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Bradley Joseph

Bill Justis

K

King Crimson

Kiss

Kiss performing in Paris on March 21, 1999

Mark Knopfler

Kokomo

L

Laika and the Cosmonauts

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Led Zeppelin

Tony Levin

Most of Levin's solo recordings are instrumentals. Notable exceptions are "L'Abito della Sposa" from Double Espresso (2002), most of Resonator (2006) and some of its followup, Stick Man (2007).

Liquid Tension Experiment

The Lively Ones

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals in the surf music genre.

The Love Unlimited Orchestra

M

Lonnie Mack

Madness

Yngwie Malmsteen

Yngwie Malmsteen.

Manfred Mann

The Mar-Keys

The Marketts

Hank Marvin

Hugh Masekela

Mastodon

Tak Matsumoto

Brian May

  • Furia (2000) except "Dream of Thee".

John Mayall (& the Bluesbreakers)

Paul McCartney (and Wings)

Van McCoy

Meshuggah

Metallica

The Meters

MFSB

Moby Grape

Mogwai

Most, if not all, of Mogwai's recordings are instrumentals.
Mogwai.

Mono

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Vinnie Moore

Most, if not all, of Moore's recordings are instrumentals.

Van Morrison

Walter Murphy

Muse

Muse.

N

Sandy Nelson

  • Most, if not all, of Sandy Nelson's recordings are instrumentals.
  • "Teen Beat" (1959), No. 4 US,[26] No. 9 UK ,[27] No. 17 R&B ,[28] The piano on the recording is by Bruce Johnston.[27]
  • "Drums Are My Beat" (1962), No. 29 US,[26] No. 30 UK[27]

New Order

Nine Inch Nails

Nine Inch Nails.

Jack Nitzsche

Cliff Nobles and Co.

Ted Nugent

O

Ozzy Osbourne

Ozric Tentacles

Most of if not all of their albums consist of instrumentals.

P

Particle

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Pell Mell

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

John Petrucci

Pink Floyd

Pink Floyd in 1973 (top) and 2005 (above).

Pivot

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Chris Poland

The Police

Porcupine Tree

Billy Preston

The Pyramids

Q

Queen

Queen in 1984.

Quiet Sun

R

Rainbow

Rainbow in 1977.

Ramones

Red Hot Chili Peppers

Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Red Sparowes

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Rhythm Heritage

Rockin' Rebels, aka The Rebels

  • "Wild Weekend", (1963), No. 8 US,[62] No. 3 UK,[24] No. 28 R&B[63]

Rodrigo y Gabriela

Gabriela Quintero y Rodrigo Sánchez in Washington State on 30 May 2011

The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones in Milwaukee in 2015

Rush

Rush.
Neil Peart drumming.

S

Santana

Carlos Santana

Santo and Johnny

Most, if not all, of Santo & Johnny's recordings are instrumentals.

Joe Satriani

Joe Satriani.

Albums:

Savatage

The Shadows

The Shadows in 2009.
A significant number of the band's recordings are instrumentals. See The Shadows discography for more details.

Derek Sherinian

Silver Convention

Slade

Slayer

Slint

Sonic Youth

Soulfly

Steely Dan

Steve Morse Band

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Steve Stevens

Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble

Rod Stewart

The String-A-Longs

Styx

The Surfaris

Symphony X

T

The T-Bones

Tangerine Dream

Only three albums in this band's extensive discography contain any vocal tracks: Cyclone (1978), Tyger (1987) and Inferno (2002). Also, while the band's music does contain rock elements, it is often categorized within new-age, electronic and other genres instead.

Tarentel

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Timo Tolkki

The Tornados

Most of the band's recordings are instrumentals.

Tortoise

Tortoise.
Most, if not all, Tortoise recordings are instrumentals.

Traffic

Trans Am

Trans-Siberian Orchestra

V

Steve Vai

Steve Vai.

Van Halen

Van Halen in 1976.

Eddie and Alex Van Halen

The Ventures

Most, if not all, of the band's recordings are instrumentals. See The Ventures discography for more details.

The Virtues

W

The Wailers aka The Fabulous Wailers

  • "Tall Cool One", (1959), No. 36 US,[20] No. 24 R&B[21]

Rick Wakeman

Mike Watt

The Who

Mason Williams

Brian Wilson

Y

The Yardbirds

Yes

Yes.

Neil Young

Z

Frank Zappa

Frank Zappa playing in Oslo in January 1977.
A significant portion of Zappa's discography consists of instrumental works, but many of these could be classified as modern classical or avant-garde music rather than rock.

See also

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel, The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits, Billboard Books, New York, 1992
  2. Whitburn, Joel, The Billboard Book of TOP 40 R&B and Hip Hop Hits, Billboard Books, New York 2006
  3. Brown, Tony, Jon Kutner & Neil Warwick, The Complete Book of the British Charts: Singles and Albums, Omnibus Press, London, 2002
  4. Whitburn 1992, p. 254.
  5. Brown 2002, p. 538.
  6. Whitburn 2006, p. 306.
  7. Joel Whitburns Top Pop 1955 - 1982
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  9. Brown 2002, p. 201.
  10. Whitburn 2006, p. 94.
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  16. Whitburn 1992, p. 480.
  17. Whitburn 2006, p. 602.
  18. Whitburn 1992, p. 115.
  19. Whitburn 2006, p. 123.
  20. Whitburn 1992, p. 482.
  21. Whitburn 2006, p. 603.
  22. Whitburn 1992, p. 161.
  23. Whitburn 1992, p. 249.
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  25. Whitburn 2006, p. 294.
  26. Whitburn 1992, p. 329.
  27. Brown 2002, p. 712.
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  30. Brown 2002, p. 977.
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  78. Brown 2002, p. 1099.
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  105. Whitburn 2006, p. 117.
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  130. The Byrds, The Byrds: Fifth Dimension, Columbia/Legacy CK 64847, © 1996
  131. Hartman, Kent, The Wrecking Crew: The Inside Story of Rock and Roll’s Best-Kept Secret, Thomas Dunne Books, St. Martin’s Press, New York, 2012 p. 30
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  138. Whitburn 2006, p. 426.
  139. Brown 2002, p. 794.
  140. Whitburn 2006, p. 464.
  141. Steely Dan, A Decade of Steely Dan, MCA 11553 1985
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