Post-punk revival

[3][5] The genre has an emphasis on "rock authenticity" that was seen as a reaction to the commercialism of MTV-oriented nu metal, hip hop and "bland" post-Britpop groups.

[11] They shared an emphasis on energetic live performance and used aesthetics (in hair and clothes) closely aligned with their fans,[12] often drawing on fashion of the 1950s and 1960s,[11] with "skinny ties, white belts [and] shag haircuts".

[11] AllMusic argued that rather than a revival, the history of post-punk was more of a continuum from the mid-1980s, with scattered bands that included Big Flame, World Domination Enterprises, and Minimal Compact extending the genre.

[13] According to music critic Jim DeRogatis, the Strokes, the White Stripes and The Hives all had a sound "to some extent rooted in Nuggets-era garage rock".

[18] In Los Angeles & San Francisco, the scene was centered around Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Brian Jonestown Massacre, the Dandy Warhols and Silversun Pickups.

[27] A second wave of bands that managed to gain international recognition as a result of the movement included Interpol, the Black Keys, the Killers, Kings of Leon, Modest Mouse, the Shins, the Bravery, Spoon, the Hold Steady, and the National in the US,[9] and Franz Ferdinand, Bloc Party, the Futureheads, The Cribs, the Libertines,[28] Kaiser Chiefs and the Kooks in the UK.

[31] In the years following Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not there was a proliferation of bands, such as the Pigeon Detectives, Milburn, The Fratellis and the Rifles, who created a more formulaic derivative of the earlier acts.

[32][33] By the end of the decade, critics had taken to referring to this wave of acts as "landfill indie",[34][35][36] a description coined by Andrew Harrison of the Word magazine.

"[38] A 2020 Vice article cited Johnny Borrell, vocalist of Razorlight, as the "one man who defined, embodied and lived Landfill Indie" due his forming of a "spectacularly middle-of-the-road" band despite his close proximity to the Libertines' "desperate kinetic energy, mythologised love-hate dynamic and vision of a dilapidated Britain animated by romance and narcotics".

[44]Post punk artists that attained prominence in the 2010s and early 2020s included Parquet Courts, Protomartyr and Geese (United States), Preoccupations (Canada), Iceage (Denmark), and Viagra Boys (Sweden).

"[50] Many of the acts are associated with producer Dan Carey and his record label Speedy Wunderground, and with The Windmill, an all-ages music venue in Brixton, London.

Interpol , one of the founding post-punk revival bands, pictured here in 2019
The Rapture performing in 2011
Franz Ferdinand on stage in 2006
Arctic Monkeys on stage in 2006
Black Country, New Road performing in 2020