MTV Video Music Award for Best Rock Video

Annual music video award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The MTV Video Music Award for Best Rock was first given out in 1989, one of the four original genre categories added to the VMAs that year. In its first year, the award was called Best Heavy Metal Video, and from 1990 to 1995, it was renamed Best Metal/Hard Rock Video. The category underwent a third, brief name change in 1996, when it was renamed Best Hard Rock Video. In 1997, the award acquired its most enduring name, Best Rock Video, which it retained until 2016. The following year, the word "Video" was removed from all genre categories at the VMAs (despite nominations still going to specific videos), giving this award its current name: Best Rock.

Awarded forrock music videos
CountryUnited States
Presented byMTV
First award1989
Quick facts MTV Video Music Award for Best Rock, Awarded for ...
MTV Video Music Award
for Best Rock
Coldplay is the most recent recipient for All My Love
Awarded forrock music videos
CountryUnited States
Presented byMTV
First award1989
Currently held byColdplay — "All My Love" (2025)
Most awardsAerosmith (4)
Most nominationsFoo Fighters
Linkin Park (10)
WebsiteVMA website
Close

Like all other genre categories at the VMAs, this category was retired briefly in 2007, when the VMAs were revamped and most original categories were eliminated. In 2008, though, MTV brought back this award, along with several of the others that had been retired in 2007.

Aerosmith is the most frequent winner of this award, with a total of four wins between 1990 and 1998. The Foo Fighters and Linkin Park are the most nominated acts in this category, having received ten nominations each. Closely following them is Fall Out Boy, with nine nominations. In 1995, White Zombie's bassist Sean Yseult became the first woman to win this award, while in 2014, New Zealand singer Lorde became the first female solo act to win this male-dominated category.

Recipients

Guns N' Roses performing.
Inaugural winner Guns N' Roses
Aerosmith performing.
Aerosmith won the award four times
Metallica won the award twice
1993 winner Pearl Jam
1994 winner Soundgarden
1999 winner Korn
Limp Bizkit won the award twice
Linkin Park performing.
Three-time winner Linkin Park is one of three acts to have won the award for two consecutive years.
Green Day performing.
Green Day has won the award twice for their music videos "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" and "21 Guns"
Thirty Seconds to Mars during a performance.
Thirty Seconds to Mars won the award twice
Coldplay performing.
Three-time winner Coldplay
Lorde performing holding a mic.
Lorde is the first female singer to win this award
Fall Out Boy standing still while posing for a camera.
2015 winner Fall Out Boy
Twenty One Pilots performing.
Two-time winner Twenty One Pilots

1980s

More information Year, Winner(s) ...
Recipients
Year[a] Winner(s) Video Nominees Ref.
1989 Guns N' Roses "Sweet Child o' Mine" [1]
Close

1990s

More information Year, Winner(s) ...
Recipients
Year[a] Winner(s) Video Nominees Ref.
1990 Aerosmith "Janie's Got a Gun" [2]
1991 Aerosmith "The Other Side" [3]
1992 Metallica "Enter Sandman" [4]
1993 Pearl Jam "Jeremy" [5]
1994 Soundgarden "Black Hole Sun"
[6]
1995 White Zombie "More Human than Human" [7]
1996 Metallica "Until It Sleeps" [8]
1997 Aerosmith "Falling in Love (Is Hard on the Knees)" [9]
1998 Aerosmith "Pink" [10]
1999 Korn "Freak on a Leash" [11]
Close

2000s

More information Year, Winner(s) ...
Recipients
Year[a] Winner(s) Video Nominees Ref.
2000 Limp Bizkit "Break Stuff" [12]
2001 Limp Bizkit "Rollin' (Air Raid Vehicle)" [13]
2002 Linkin Park "In the End" [14]
2003 Linkin Park "Somewhere I Belong" [15]
2004 Jet "Are You Gonna Be My Girl" [16]
2005 Green Day "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" [17]
2006 AFI "Miss Murder" [18]
2007 N/a
2008 Linkin Park "Shadow of the Day" [19]
2009 Green Day "21 Guns" [20]
Close
2024 winner Lenny Kravitz

2010s

More information Year, Winner(s) ...
Recipients
Year[a] Winner(s) Video Nominees Ref.
2010 Thirty Seconds to Mars "Kings and Queens" [21]
2011 Foo Fighters "Walk" [22]
2012 Coldplay "Paradise" [23]
2013 Thirty Seconds to Mars "Up in the Air" [24]
2014 Lorde "Royals" [25]
2015 Fall Out Boy "Uma Thurman" [26]
2016 Twenty One Pilots "Heathens" [27]
2017 Twenty One Pilots "Heavydirtysoul" [28]
2018 Imagine Dragons "Whatever It Takes" [29]
2019 Panic! at the Disco "High Hopes" [30]
Close

2020s

Statistics

See also

Notes

    1. Each year is linked to the article about the MTV Video Music Awards held that year.

    References

    Related Articles

    Wikiwand AI