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Rock and Roll (600)

Music.  It has the ability to bring people together.  It can stir up hidden emotions.  It can cause you to get up and physically move.  It can help you through your work day.  It separates generations.  We could describe it for page after page in terms both specific and vague but music simply means different things to different people.  Likely, many of these things were on the mind of the builders of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio, a tribute to those who built up the genre of Rock and Roll.

Their intentions certainly seemed clear enough.  Their website states that “The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame honors the legendary performers, producers, songwriters, disc jockeys and others who have made rock and roll the force that it is in our culture”.  For our purposes, we are going to focus on the performer section of the Hall.  That being said, the first rule of eligibility is very simple.  Once an artist has gone twenty five years after the release of their first record, they become eligible.  After that it becomes a little murky.  The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame states that “criteria include the influence and significance of the artists’ contributions to the development and perpetuation of rock and roll”.  Influence and significance is certainly open to interpretation.  For that matter, so is Rock and Roll.  When Bill Haley sang Rock around the Clock over sixty years ago was he describing a sound, a look or maybe just an attitude?  Did the songwriters just like the word “rock”?  The origin of Rock music is so difficult to pinpoint its subsequent evolution is just as equally hard to chart.

With these vague parameters we at Not in Hall of Fame put our own committee together and came up with the top 250 artists whom we feel deserve consideration for enshrinement in Cleveland.  Are we right?  Are we wrong?   We know two things for sure; the first is that while compiling this list we felt we could make a viable case for multiple artists to be in our number one slot, the second was that it was a blast coming up with it.  Let us know what you think and based on who gets inducted, who becomes newly eligible, your opinions and how our own perceptions change, we will see how we rank them in the following year.    

Until then, Keep on Rockin’ in the Free World!

Sincerely,

 

The Not in Hall of Fame Rock and Roll Committee.

When you think of great R&B/Pop artists Brandy does not always come to mind but there was a time when she was a teenage and was a major hitmaker.  She broke out into film and television and did reasonably well in those mediums and her musical success did stretch into her 20’s, however her career never took that critical turn…
Perhaps best described as Jefferson Airplane from Hell, the Chicago based band took Psychedelic music and infused with Harder Rock and every satanic and Wiccan image they could think of. Fronted by the siren, Jinx Dawson, Coven became an embodiment of the early look of Heavy Metal (though they did not always sound like it) with their horned finger salute…
While other Rock stars tried to play it safe in the late 50’s and early 60’s, Freddy Cannon did what he could to stay true to the Rock and Roll spirit. His music was fun, loud and full of energy and though he had the good looks of any other teen idol of his era, he really wasn’t in the…
One of the harder sounding of the Hair Metal genre, Mark Slaughter and his eponymously named band, Slaughter, delivered two successful albums in 1990 and 1992 respectively. However, like so many of their ilk, they were dismissed shortly thereafter as jean jackets gave way to flannel. With all that said, should there ever be a Hair Metal Hall of Fame,…
Seeming poised for eternal greatness, Fine Young Cannibals had a monster album in the late 80’s that appealed to both mainstream and independent audiences. They never did follow up with anything big; not because they failed but because they never tried. Fine Young Cannibals quietly disappeared and had they stayed together, we can’t help but think they had the potential…
Perhaps the biggest footnote about the Del-Vikings was that they were a successful racially integrated Doo Wop group in the 1950’s. They had a few hits, their biggest being the still sweet and calming “Come Go With Me”, which remains a very well known song today. The Del-Vikings have a shot as any successful Doo Wop group with more than…
Although Gwar did not create Shock Rock, they did take it to levels never before thought of. With bizarre costumes and concerts that often feature performance art and audiences getting wet (with varying liquids), a Gwar concert is unlike anything else. Musically, their intention is to be loud and fun and if you are looking for any depth, you won’t…
Of the Krautrock bands, the band labeled as the most mythical (due mostly to dropping off the musical landscape for awhile) is easily Faust. Their early 70’s work has been credited with laying some of the early fabrics of Ambient and even Industrial with their Experimental work. With Faust there is the question as to whether they were more influential…
Critics in England may have loved the Sophisti-Pop sound of Prefab Sprout and with their cerebral songwriting there was lot of positive elements to write about. They did sell some albums and had some hits (not in the U.S. though) but they never caught on to the masses who found them a little inaccessible. Those however who did try to…
Perhaps better known now for being Keith Emerson’s band before Emerson, Lake & Palmer, the Nice had the distinction of being one of the early Progressive Rock Bands of note. Their blend of Psychedelic Rock with Jazz and Classical led to unique arrangements and though they were not a hit with critics or with a large assortment of fans, the…
The star of the Power Pop movement of the 90’s, Matthew Sweet often did as much as he could to prove he was not going to be a mainstream artist. As such, Sweet did not always produce albums that would find an audience, but when he showcased his Alternative based Power Pop, there were few on his level. Without the…
Although he is a punch line for how to screw up a career (and Whitney Houston’s for that matter) Bobby Brown was the master of the New Jack Swing movement and for a time he was easily the biggest R&B star on the planet. Bobby Brown’s slick produced sound was copycatted across radio station across America. He attracted the women…
Jewel’s debut album caught the world by storm.  It was a sweet sounding, heartbreaking collection of songs that appealed to everyone from Folk, Adult Alternative, Pop and Mainstream.  Jewel never had an album that did as well, but she carved a very successful career for herself which she continues to enjoy today.  Should that debut album reach another level in…
An early Funk pioneer who did not find success in the music world until in his late 30’s, Lee Dorsey was symbolic of the Louisiana Sound. His gritty, playful voice was a perfect match for New Orleans R&B. His music showed swagger (before that was really thought of) and although he did not have as much commercial success as he…
The East Coast response to the Seattle scene brought the world Helmet, an Alternative Metal band that blended Metal with other influences to create their own unique sound. With powerful drumming and disjointed rhythms they carved their own niche in the Alternative music scene and successfully paved the way for other East Coast Metal bands to follow. They may not…
A band name that we find colossally cool, And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead, was an Alternative band that came from Texas, yet sounded far more artistic than other Alternative bands did. Merging Noise Rock and Hardcore Rock, the Trail of Dead did secure a decent following, but does a decent following make a Hall of…
They may have been classified as a Noise Rock band and band members themselves have thought have themselves as Punk Rockers, but in many ways they were a precursor to the Industrial scene that was about to follow. Singing about a myriad of disturbing topics (songs about mutilation were tame for them) they delivered with a blistering guitar attack pounded…
Although the Surfaris are predominantly only remembered for one song (Wipe Out), that song featured one of the most basic yet powerful guitar riffs of all time and more importantly one of the first (and still to this day one of the best) drum solos ever. Guitarists and drummers to this day still cut their teeth to that song and…
Many a Singer/Songwriter made a mark in the early 70’s, though few were as unique as Melanie. Her music (even when protest singing) had such a gentle quality that made audiences fall in love with her. Her biggest issue was her close association with the Flower Power Woodstock era, and when times changed, America did not look at her as…
They were rude, crude and misogynistic. They had nude women on stage and played straight up Heavy Metal. And they didn’t apologize for any of it! W.A.S.P. was another Metal band form Los Angeles who managed to conquer to the music world in the 80’s. They may not have been deep but to those looking for a fun brand of…