This name is unique, even among band names. The original name for this outfit was Foster & The People – Mark Foster is the band’s front-man and creative force. However, when they started playing at clubs and other gigs, the fans who were dancing to the music kept mishearing the name, thinking that they were called “Foster the People.”
Foster later spoke to USA Today and said that since they performed for charity organizations in the beginning, the changed name just clicked. While the new name might be a bit strange syntax-wise, it still led to plenty of great music.
Flying Lotus
Every child wants to grow up to be a superhero. Steven Ellison – you may know him better as Flying Lotus – told "Hearty Magazine" in 2010. “I would always bother people about superheroes and I was like, 'Ok if you could have any superpower in the creation of comic books what would you have [...] what would you do?' I wanted to fly. That's it. That's all.”
Thus, when Ellison found his rap career taking off, he chose a moniker that got him into the stratosphere and turned him into a superhero, just like he always wanted.
The Human League
Synth music has always had a futuristic, science-fiction feeling. So, when the Sheffield synth pioneers were trying to find the right name for their outfit, they first went with The Future, aptly. However, this pair of gals added singer Phil Oakey and decided that their name needed an upgrade.
They went with The Human League, which was the name of a futuristic society from a 1970s science-fiction board game called Starforce: Alpha Centauri. There's nothing like a soundtrack for when you're gaming with friends, and this outfit now seems like the prime candidate for futuristic and sci-fi games.
The 1975
Were all the band members born in the year? Maybe just one? Didn't something important to them happen then? No, no, and no, as it turns out. The 1975 singer Matt Healy got the name of his band from a scribble in a book of beat poetry he's acquired from an artist.
The back page of the book has some rough messages and it was literally dated "1st June, The 1975", as he told Fame Magazine. The use of the word “The” before the year stuck out to Healy, and the band he began later got the name thanks to the dark and depressing messages.
Rush
With the sad passing of Neil Peart, eyes have been back on Rush. The Holy Trinity started out back in 1965 with original drummer John Rutsey and guitarist Alex Lifeson. They added one bassist, then traded him in for an upgrade with Geddy Lee, and christened themselves...The Projection. Not bad, but it wasn't Rush.
While working together to build their music, this famous group met with John Rutsey's brother, Bill, joined them for a brainstorming session to come up with a better name. It was Bill who suggested the name Rush. Rush it was, and music fans have been thanking the man for more than fifty years.