The
news came through earlier today that two of my choices for induction into the
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for 2020 – Depeche Mode and T. Rex – are amongst
the six chosen, although, confusingly, I was asked to pick just five from among
the 16 nominees. As well as Dep Mode and T. Rex, I also voted for Todd Rundgren,
Kraftwerk and Motörhead, so once again Todd and the
German electronic maestros have been snubbed, of which more later. Motörhead, my final choice, were the most popular among readers of my blog. They
hadn’t been nominated before so might get another chance to enter the Gilded
Palace of Cleveland but with Lemmy now four years gone (and Fast Eddie, Phil
Taylor and others also casualties), who’s left to pick up the award if they do?
The other 2020 inductees are The Doobie
Brothers, Nine Inch Nails, The Notorious B.I.G., and Whitney
Houston.
This will come as something of a
disappointment to fans of the Dave Matthews Band, Pat Benatar, Soundgarden and
Judas Priest who grabbed first, second, fourth and fifth places respectively in
the fans’ vote, a fairly recent innovation that seems to have made little
difference to the final selection. Although I didn’t vote for any of them, I
can’t help but wonder what was the point of this exercise when the top two
fans’ choices were rebuffed. For the record, in this poll the Doobies came third, Whitney sixth,
Depeche Mode seventh, Nine Inch Nails eleventh, T. Rex twelfth and Notorious B.I.G.
thirteenth.
The fans’ vote underlines the truism
that, unlike most rock critics, the majority of American rock fans have rather conservative
tastes. The bottom five in the fans’ poll were T. Rex, B.I.G., Rufus/Chaka
Kahn, Kraftwerk and MC5, all of whom, although hardly alternative by most
standards, were the most alternative among the choices on offer. And the top
five were the least alternative.
I’m glad that Marc Bolan has finally found
a resting place alongside many of his friends, although inducting T. Rex when
Marc is so long gone (as are Steve Peregrin Took and Mickey Finn) is on the
same level as Lemmy and Motörhead – see above. Nevertheless, I feel
quite strongly that between 1971 and 1975 T. Rex were outgunned and outclassed
by the criminally overlooked Slade when it came to making hit singles. I
suppose Marc deserves his posthumous induction if for no other reason than it
is now over 50 years since he released his first record and in his time he served
rock’s cause honourably, which is why I voted for him. I wonder who’ll collect
his award.
Of the other winners, The Doobie
Brothers have been around a long time too, and on this count they were probably
the favourites anyway. Nevertheless it is ignominious that, unless I’m mistaken,
the infinitely superior Little Feat have never been nominated, let alone
inducted. Anyone who happened to see both bands any time between 1973 and 1976
will know what I’m on about.
Re the rest, Trent Raznor seems like
the kind of guy I would enjoy a drink with; Dep Mode, whom I voted for, made
some ace records; I’m not a rap fan so can’t judge B.I.G., who died of shotgun
wounds in 1997, on his work but it’s notable that he’s been inducted in his first
year of eligibility; and Whitney probably got the nod for having so many hits
even though she isn’t rock’n’roll in my book regardless of those top notes she could
hit.
I’ve lost count how many times
Kraftwerk have been nominated but not inducted. Their pioneering use of
synthesiser and repetitive beats are the foundation for modern dance music and for
them to have been snubbed again seems to reflect an ongoing anti-European bias that I’ve
commented on before. They certainly deserve to be inducted, even if
the way in which they conducted their career was the antithesis of the clichéd
rock'n'roll lifestyle. There are bitter feelings amongst the members of the ‘classic’
KW but
Ralf Hütter’s annexation of
the group as his personal domain is no reason to disbar them.
I am far more surprised that Todd Rundgren hasn’t been inducted
as he seems to fit the HoF’s requirements to a tee: a cult musician with some
fabulous songs (inc. ‘Hello It’s Me’ & ‘I Saw The Light’) and two classic
albums (Something/Anything & A Wizard, A True Star) in his CV, leader
of two bands (The Nazz & Utopia), a record producer (Grand Funk & NY
Dolls), innovative electronics pioneer and all-round DIY, slightly eccentric rock’n’roll
talent. He’s even had an interesting personal life so what’s not to like about
Todd?
The
induction ceremony will take place at the Public Auditorium in Cleveland on May
2, later in the year than usual. This year, for the first time, HBO will
broadcast the event live rather than edited and aired a few weeks later,
so with a bit of luck the speeches won’t be censored as they have been in the
past.
2 comments:
According to them, Notorious BIG and Whitney Houston are rock 'n roll, and Pat Benatar is not. And where the hell is Nicky Hopkins?
Well written digging your vibe. If Motorhead got it wouldnt it be Slash collecting cos he had Phil campbell motorhead guitarist band support euopean dates last year ?
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