gold star for USAHOF
Site Admin

Site Admin

268. Kenny Loggins

Although he wrote countless songs over multiple decades, Kenny Loggins may be best known for seemingly writing every single soundtrack song in the 1980’s. It seemed like that was his best niche as he never seemed to nail a complete album but with a lot of scattered hits and his work in previous acts, he could net a look form the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame committee.

353. Petula Clark

Petula Clark was not just the biggest female solo star in England, she may have been one of the biggest female stars in the world. Clark’s upbeat Pop seemed to translate to every country and once they heard her music they embraced it as their own. She was certainly accessible, and maybe too much so as she didn’t really fit into the rebellious sounds around her. Maybe it was that fact and that her music is not played often today in relation to her past albums sold that have made a lot of people (including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame) so easily forget Petula Clark.

452. Charlie Rich

Although Charlie Rich was best known for his hits in the early 70’s when he was a “Countrypolitan” superstar, a closer look at Charlie Rich’s career saw an artist who was a true Country artist who blended other genres like Soul, Jazz and Rockabilly effortlessly in some of his lesser known work. Despite the mass success he enjoyed, Rich became pigeonholed to that success and seemed disinterested in creating original material by the decade’s end. A true rebel, the “Silver Fox” was massively successful, though had he wanted to he would have achieved even greater fame.

Possibly the Doo Wop group with the most “Rock and Roll” credibility, Danny and the Juniors performed Doo Wop with a fast danceable pace that might be the definition of late 50’s Rock and Roll. They scored a couple big hits and a few minor hits, but it seems indefinable to have a late 1950’s compilation album without one of their hits on it.