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Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Big Al ()
Date: October 11, 2015 17:43

I appreciate Green Lady's point regarding the inclusion of The Smiths, despite not being a fan. The fact I adore them aside, their influence has been immense and continues today. From those who worship at the alter of Morrissey's whimsy and lyrical prowess, to the guitar-heads who appreciate Marr's playing-skills and ability to create flawless melodies. The Smith's importance and relevance is undeniable and should be deservedly recognised. They probably won't make the final-cut in such a seemingly U.S.-centric event, but it's nice to the American industry acknowledging the groups' widening appeal.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: usetobesampeg ()
Date: October 11, 2015 22:53

Quote
mr_dja
In an effort to get some props for some of my fellow bass players I'll share this link and article

11 Bass Players Who Should Be In The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

We serve the singer, the song, the soloist, and ultimately the listener. Though we do not possess the harmonic nor sonic range of a guitar, keyboards, voice, horns, wind instruments, nor the dynamics of drums and percussion-the bass player determines how a musical chord actually sounds - which, in essence -often determines whether or not you'll like the track. Do the math!

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominees have been announced and I congratulate all the artists: The Cars, Chic, Chicago, Cheap Trick, Deep Purple, Janet Jackson, The J.B.'s, Chaka Khan, Los Lobos, Steve Miller, Nine Inch Nails, N.W.A., The Smiths, The Spinners, and Yes.

Since the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation began in 1983 there has been much controversy over who belongs and who does not. It's no different than sports Halls of Fame. Controversy, dispute, and rock 'n' roll are siblings, and I accept that. However I must stand up for my woefully neglected bass brethren, some of whom no longer lay down the groove on this mortal coil.

As such, history reveals that when iconic Rock and Roll Hall of Famers fired their signature bass players, their commercial and artistic fortunes waned considerably: Elton John, Elvis Costello, Bruce Springsteen - who recovered when he re-hired the E Street Band, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, and Alice Cooper - who dumped his entire original band; among others, were never the same sans their formative four string bandmates.

Obviously there are more than eleven bass players who deserve recognition in the Hall. Based on conversations with my fellow players, musicians, engineers, producers, writers, and vinyl loving devotees, herein are eleven from the classic rock era who must be cited, especially given the fact that they appear on several Rock and Roll Hall of Fame artists' most important recordings.

This list, in the tradition of Spinal Tap, goes to 11!

Dee Murray: To atone for producer Gus Dudgeon's curious refusal to utilize his extraordinary road band in the studio until 1972, Elton John released 11-17-70 which is among the essential live albums of any era in rock. Bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson, who, along with guitarist Davey Johnstone, also created the vocal harmonies to Elton's early classics, distinguished themselves as an elite rhythm section. The original Elton John Band's absence from the Hall of Fame is inexcusable.

Carl Radle: From the late 1960s until his untimely passing in 1980, bassist Carl Radle's jaw-dropping resume includes enduring releases by Hall of Famers Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Dr. John, Leon Russell, Buddy Guy, Art Garfunkel, Donovan, and Bob Dylan. Carl's work on Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs is irreplaceable: every bassist in Slowhand's subsequent ensembles renders Radle's lines from that album nearly note-for-note - that's how extraordinary Carl was!

Kenny Aaronson: Cited as Bassist of the Year in 1988 by Rolling Stone, Kenny is among rock's most versatile and resourceful players. His career spans scores of seminal sides and concert performances, including Hall of Famers Ronnie Spector, Bob Dylan, Sammy Hagar, Joan Jett, Daryl Hall & John Oates, and one artist whose omission from the Hall is sacrilege: Rick Derringer.

Harvey Brooks: Session bassist and producer Harvey Brooks was the go-to player on the New York studio scene in the 1960s. As the electric bass was essentially in its infancy, Brooks brought his deep understanding of blues, pop, soul, folk, and jazz to the instrument, appearing on such influential albums by Hall of Famers Bob Dylan (Highway 61 Revisited) Miles Davis (Bitches Brew -with Dave Holland), the Doors (Soft Parade), and Al Kooper's Super Sessions with Mike Bloomfield, to name a few.

John Dalton and Jim Rodford: Behold the missing Kinks! Of the bassists who served Muswell Hill's favorite sons following the departure of founding member Peter Quaife, John Dalton is likely the one player whom American rock fans heard the most on FM radio by way of "Lola," "Victoria," "20th Century Man," "Celluloid Heroes," and "Jukebox Music," among many others from 1969 to 1976. Jim Rodford was a founding member of the progressive pop powerhouse Argent (1969-76) and the longest tenured (1978-96) and most musically adept bassist The Kinks ever employed.

Klaus Voorman: In addition to his brilliant performances on the Beatles' extensive solo canon, Klaus was a first- call studio bassist for Hall of Famers B.B. King, Donovan, Jerry Lee Lewis, Lou Reed, Randy Newman, and Dion, among others. Voorman's intro to Carly Simon's "You're So Vain," a hit song about another Hall of Famer, is among the most recognizable motifs in the history of pop music.

Herbie Flowers: "Being a bass-player is like being a truck driver...you're paid to arrive on time and safely at your destination!" His repetitive, major 10th interval glissando created rock's greatest bassline for Hall of Famer Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side." With a blue 1960 Fender Jazz which he purchased from Manny's in New York City for $79.00, Herbie Flowers emerged as the quintessential session player in his native UK. His drop-tuning bass on David Essex's "Rock On," and riveting counterpoint beneath David Bowie's "Space Oddity" remain watershed.

Lee Sklar: A session giant with album credits in the thousands, Lee was the foundation for "The Section" - a musical assemblage of Los Angeles based virtuosos who were the catalyst on scores of iconic album and singles sessions. Among the Hall of Famers Lee enhanced include: James Taylor, Ray Charles, Daryl Hall & John Oates, Donna Summer, Jackson Browne, Diana Ross, David Crosby, Graham Nash, and Michael Jackson, among others.

Doug Yule: For all the hipster hosannas heaped upon the Velvet Underground - and deservedly so, one essential member is oft overlooked - bassist Doug Yule, who joined the band upon John Cale's dismissal in 1968. Unlike Cale, who was indifferent to the instrument, Yule was a fine bass player and singer who complimented Lou's gravitation from the avant-garde towards the then burgeoning singer-songwriter movement. Though The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967) and White Light/White Heat (1968) were influential, groundbreaking efforts; to my ears Velvet Underground (1969) and Loaded (1970) both with Yule, are the VU's most enduring works.

Will Lee: Assuming the mantle created by Doc Severinsen's legendary NBC Orchestra as heard on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson - bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee's groundbreaking tenure in the World's Most Dangerous Band for David Letterman's Late Night and Late Show brought the language of rock, blues, soul, folk, country, jazz fusion, and funk to the Great American Songbook.


Peace,
Mr DJA

I must reach over the 60’s Tbird hanging around my neck to get to the keyboard to type, “Thank you!” for posting this Mr_dja,
Cheers,

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: bassaleman ()
Date: October 12, 2015 07:17

How about Peter Wolf and J Geils Band??? !!! Really, is there any justice??? !!!

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: RollingFreak ()
Date: October 12, 2015 07:26

Quote
bassaleman
How about Peter Wolf and J Geils Band??? !!! Really, is there any justice??? !!!
They never truly made the splash other bands did. They didn't have a monster live album like Frampton Comes Alive or Cheap Trick At Budokan (even though Blow Your Face Out or Full House might be better than those), and they didn't get a real worldwide hit until Centerfold, or maybe Love Stinks, which are both songs that don't truly represent them and unfortunately come off pretty dated to the casual listener.

So its sad, but I get why they are never in the discussion. It was just more a wrong time, wrong place kind of deal, despite the fact that they had success. Even though they're never in the running, I agree though that they should be consider as they are on par with the Cheap Tricks and those guys and certainly paid their dues to be in. I just think they are a bit too much regional to get the recognition.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: bassaleman ()
Date: October 12, 2015 07:37

RollingFreak,

Just go see them once and you will understand.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: mr_dja ()
Date: October 12, 2015 19:18

Quote
usetobesampeg
Quote
mr_dja
In an effort to get some props for some of my fellow bass players I'll share this link and article

11 Bass Players Who Should Be In The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

We serve the singer, the song, the soloist, and ultimately the listener. Though we do not possess the harmonic nor sonic range of a guitar, keyboards, voice, horns, wind instruments, nor the dynamics of drums and percussion-the bass player determines how a musical chord actually sounds - which, in essence -often determines whether or not you'll like the track. Do the math!

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominees have been announced and I congratulate all the artists: The Cars, Chic, Chicago, Cheap Trick, Deep Purple, Janet Jackson, The J.B.'s, Chaka Khan, Los Lobos, Steve Miller, Nine Inch Nails, N.W.A., The Smiths, The Spinners, and Yes.

Since the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation began in 1983 there has been much controversy over who belongs and who does not. It's no different than sports Halls of Fame. Controversy, dispute, and rock 'n' roll are siblings, and I accept that. However I must stand up for my woefully neglected bass brethren, some of whom no longer lay down the groove on this mortal coil.

As such, history reveals that when iconic Rock and Roll Hall of Famers fired their signature bass players, their commercial and artistic fortunes waned considerably: Elton John, Elvis Costello, Bruce Springsteen - who recovered when he re-hired the E Street Band, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, and Alice Cooper - who dumped his entire original band; among others, were never the same sans their formative four string bandmates.

Obviously there are more than eleven bass players who deserve recognition in the Hall. Based on conversations with my fellow players, musicians, engineers, producers, writers, and vinyl loving devotees, herein are eleven from the classic rock era who must be cited, especially given the fact that they appear on several Rock and Roll Hall of Fame artists' most important recordings.

This list, in the tradition of Spinal Tap, goes to 11!

Dee Murray: To atone for producer Gus Dudgeon's curious refusal to utilize his extraordinary road band in the studio until 1972, Elton John released 11-17-70 which is among the essential live albums of any era in rock. Bassist Dee Murray and drummer Nigel Olsson, who, along with guitarist Davey Johnstone, also created the vocal harmonies to Elton's early classics, distinguished themselves as an elite rhythm section. The original Elton John Band's absence from the Hall of Fame is inexcusable.

Carl Radle: From the late 1960s until his untimely passing in 1980, bassist Carl Radle's jaw-dropping resume includes enduring releases by Hall of Famers Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Dr. John, Leon Russell, Buddy Guy, Art Garfunkel, Donovan, and Bob Dylan. Carl's work on Layla & Other Assorted Love Songs is irreplaceable: every bassist in Slowhand's subsequent ensembles renders Radle's lines from that album nearly note-for-note - that's how extraordinary Carl was!

Kenny Aaronson: Cited as Bassist of the Year in 1988 by Rolling Stone, Kenny is among rock's most versatile and resourceful players. His career spans scores of seminal sides and concert performances, including Hall of Famers Ronnie Spector, Bob Dylan, Sammy Hagar, Joan Jett, Daryl Hall & John Oates, and one artist whose omission from the Hall is sacrilege: Rick Derringer.

Harvey Brooks: Session bassist and producer Harvey Brooks was the go-to player on the New York studio scene in the 1960s. As the electric bass was essentially in its infancy, Brooks brought his deep understanding of blues, pop, soul, folk, and jazz to the instrument, appearing on such influential albums by Hall of Famers Bob Dylan (Highway 61 Revisited) Miles Davis (Bitches Brew -with Dave Holland), the Doors (Soft Parade), and Al Kooper's Super Sessions with Mike Bloomfield, to name a few.

John Dalton and Jim Rodford: Behold the missing Kinks! Of the bassists who served Muswell Hill's favorite sons following the departure of founding member Peter Quaife, John Dalton is likely the one player whom American rock fans heard the most on FM radio by way of "Lola," "Victoria," "20th Century Man," "Celluloid Heroes," and "Jukebox Music," among many others from 1969 to 1976. Jim Rodford was a founding member of the progressive pop powerhouse Argent (1969-76) and the longest tenured (1978-96) and most musically adept bassist The Kinks ever employed.

Klaus Voorman: In addition to his brilliant performances on the Beatles' extensive solo canon, Klaus was a first- call studio bassist for Hall of Famers B.B. King, Donovan, Jerry Lee Lewis, Lou Reed, Randy Newman, and Dion, among others. Voorman's intro to Carly Simon's "You're So Vain," a hit song about another Hall of Famer, is among the most recognizable motifs in the history of pop music.

Herbie Flowers: "Being a bass-player is like being a truck driver...you're paid to arrive on time and safely at your destination!" His repetitive, major 10th interval glissando created rock's greatest bassline for Hall of Famer Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side." With a blue 1960 Fender Jazz which he purchased from Manny's in New York City for $79.00, Herbie Flowers emerged as the quintessential session player in his native UK. His drop-tuning bass on David Essex's "Rock On," and riveting counterpoint beneath David Bowie's "Space Oddity" remain watershed.

Lee Sklar: A session giant with album credits in the thousands, Lee was the foundation for "The Section" - a musical assemblage of Los Angeles based virtuosos who were the catalyst on scores of iconic album and singles sessions. Among the Hall of Famers Lee enhanced include: James Taylor, Ray Charles, Daryl Hall & John Oates, Donna Summer, Jackson Browne, Diana Ross, David Crosby, Graham Nash, and Michael Jackson, among others.

Doug Yule: For all the hipster hosannas heaped upon the Velvet Underground - and deservedly so, one essential member is oft overlooked - bassist Doug Yule, who joined the band upon John Cale's dismissal in 1968. Unlike Cale, who was indifferent to the instrument, Yule was a fine bass player and singer who complimented Lou's gravitation from the avant-garde towards the then burgeoning singer-songwriter movement. Though The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967) and White Light/White Heat (1968) were influential, groundbreaking efforts; to my ears Velvet Underground (1969) and Loaded (1970) both with Yule, are the VU's most enduring works.

Will Lee: Assuming the mantle created by Doc Severinsen's legendary NBC Orchestra as heard on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson - bandleader Paul Shaffer and bassist Will Lee's groundbreaking tenure in the World's Most Dangerous Band for David Letterman's Late Night and Late Show brought the language of rock, blues, soul, folk, country, jazz fusion, and funk to the Great American Songbook.


Peace,
Mr DJA

I must reach over the 60’s Tbird hanging around my neck to get to the keyboard to type, “Thank you!” for posting this Mr_dja,
Cheers,

You're welcome! One of the reasons I like the google news site and the fact that I can personalize it for my interests. Pretty sure I never would have found the article without it being suggested. Glad that you, and others have enjoyed the article.

Peace,
Mr DJA

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: mr_dja ()
Date: October 12, 2015 19:35

Quote
RollingFreak
Quote
bassaleman
How about Peter Wolf and J Geils Band??? !!! Really, is there any justice??? !!!
They never truly made the splash other bands did. They didn't have a monster live album like Frampton Comes Alive or Cheap Trick At Budokan (even though Blow Your Face Out or Full House might be better than those), and they didn't get a real worldwide hit until Centerfold, or maybe Love Stinks, which are both songs that don't truly represent them and unfortunately come off pretty dated to the casual listener.

So its sad, but I get why they are never in the discussion. It was just more a wrong time, wrong place kind of deal, despite the fact that they had success. Even though they're never in the running, I agree though that they should be consider as they are on par with the Cheap Tricks and those guys and certainly paid their dues to be in. I just think they are a bit too much regional to get the recognition.

Plenty of room on my "The R&RHOF doesn't DESERVE the JGB" bandwagon for all.

I think Rolling Freak got it right with the not enough "splash" comment. Their biggest hit's/popular albums are not the reason to put them in the HOF. It's the albums that no one heard and their live shows that should have got them in there.

Side question (and I don't know the answer): Does anyone know what band has the fewest number of hit singles/albums that IS in the R&RHOF. Since Led Zeppelin never released singles, possibly it's them? Velvet Underground? Sex Pistols?

Peace,
Mr DJA

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Date: October 12, 2015 22:44

Quote
mr_dja
Quote
RollingFreak
Quote
bassaleman
How about Peter Wolf and J Geils Band??? !!! Really, is there any justice??? !!!
They never truly made the splash other bands did. They didn't have a monster live album like Frampton Comes Alive or Cheap Trick At Budokan (even though Blow Your Face Out or Full House might be better than those), and they didn't get a real worldwide hit until Centerfold, or maybe Love Stinks, which are both songs that don't truly represent them and unfortunately come off pretty dated to the casual listener.

So its sad, but I get why they are never in the discussion. It was just more a wrong time, wrong place kind of deal, despite the fact that they had success. Even though they're never in the running, I agree though that they should be consider as they are on par with the Cheap Tricks and those guys and certainly paid their dues to be in. I just think they are a bit too much regional to get the recognition.

Plenty of room on my "The R&RHOF doesn't DESERVE the JGB" bandwagon for all.

I think Rolling Freak got it right with the not enough "splash" comment. Their biggest hit's/popular albums are not the reason to put them in the HOF. It's the albums that no one heard and their live shows that should have got them in there.

Side question (and I don't know the answer): Does anyone know what band has the fewest number of hit singles/albums that IS in the R&RHOF. Since Led Zeppelin never released singles, possibly it's them? Velvet Underground? Sex Pistols?

Peace,
Mr DJA

still though a lot of rock fans can name 3-4 j geils hits. buffalo springfield is in. can anyone who is just an average rock fan name more than 1 song by buffalo springield?

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: mr_dja ()
Date: October 12, 2015 23:10

Quote
keefriffhard4life
Quote
mr_dja
Quote
RollingFreak
Quote
bassaleman
How about Peter Wolf and J Geils Band??? !!! Really, is there any justice??? !!!
They never truly made the splash other bands did. They didn't have a monster live album like Frampton Comes Alive or Cheap Trick At Budokan (even though Blow Your Face Out or Full House might be better than those), and they didn't get a real worldwide hit until Centerfold, or maybe Love Stinks, which are both songs that don't truly represent them and unfortunately come off pretty dated to the casual listener.

So its sad, but I get why they are never in the discussion. It was just more a wrong time, wrong place kind of deal, despite the fact that they had success. Even though they're never in the running, I agree though that they should be consider as they are on par with the Cheap Tricks and those guys and certainly paid their dues to be in. I just think they are a bit too much regional to get the recognition.

Plenty of room on my "The R&RHOF doesn't DESERVE the JGB" bandwagon for all.

I think Rolling Freak got it right with the not enough "splash" comment. Their biggest hit's/popular albums are not the reason to put them in the HOF. It's the albums that no one heard and their live shows that should have got them in there.

Side question (and I don't know the answer): Does anyone know what band has the fewest number of hit singles/albums that IS in the R&RHOF. Since Led Zeppelin never released singles, possibly it's them? Velvet Underground? Sex Pistols?

Peace,
Mr DJA

still though a lot of rock fans can name 3-4 j geils hits. buffalo springfield is in. can anyone who is just an average rock fan name more than 1 song by buffalo springield?

What's funny... I can't even name the 1st song by Buffalo Springfield. Off the top of my head, I would say that one or two of their members went on to be a part of CSN&Y but I couldn't tell you exactly who. Crosby? Young? I know Graham Nash was in the Hollies so it wasn't him. I'd have to google/wiki Buffalo Springfield to get any more specific. Apparently I wasn't much of a fan!

Anyway... We now have another nominee (in addition to the three I put forward) in the "least number of chart "Hits" for a R&RHOF member" category!

Peace,
Mr DJA

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: 2000man ()
Date: October 12, 2015 23:10

Quote
keefriffhard4life
still though a lot of rock fans can name 3-4 j geils hits.

J. Geils had 3-4 hits?

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: mr_dja ()
Date: October 12, 2015 23:19

Quote
2000man
Quote
keefriffhard4life
still though a lot of rock fans can name 3-4 j geils hits.

J. Geils had 3-4 hits?

I kinda thought the same thing. Even I, who would claim to be a pretty big fan of JGB could only come up with 3 off the top of my head - Love Stinks, Centerfold & Freeze Frame. According to their info page on Wikipedia, they had 11 top 40 singles out of 27 released. Who'd'a thunk it?

Peace,
Mr DJA

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Tops ()
Date: October 12, 2015 23:30

Chic must be in the hall of fame. The most important act in the discoera. Nile Rodgers still has it.

The Smiths and the Cars are also great candidates.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: gripweed ()
Date: October 13, 2015 03:56

And I'll roll and smoke a BIG FAT ONE when the Doobie Brothers make it... they probably had as many hits in the 1970's than any other band, even a Grammy Award... and they still Tour and put on a good show

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Hairball ()
Date: October 13, 2015 04:13

Still no Doobie Brothers?
What the hell?!!!!

Here's a list of snubs, and while some probably don't belong in the Hall of Fame imo,
there are many listed here that do - and that's why the Rock Hall is nothing more than a big pile of bullcrap.

The Biggest Rock Hall Snubs

_____________________________________________________________
Rip this joint, gonna save your soul, round and round and round we go......

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: timmyj3 ()
Date: October 13, 2015 05:03

Since the R N R hall ignores Paul Revere and the Raiders.

I ignore the rock n roll hall of fame.

My understanding is that there are some serious political divisions within the hall. The winning side is more open to diverse acts while the losing side would like more 60's and 70's classic acts in.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Date: October 13, 2015 05:31

Quote
mr_dja
Quote
2000man
Quote
keefriffhard4life
still though a lot of rock fans can name 3-4 j geils hits.

J. Geils had 3-4 hits?

I kinda thought the same thing. Even I, who would claim to be a pretty big fan of JGB could only come up with 3 off the top of my head - Love Stinks, Centerfold & Freeze Frame. According to their info page on Wikipedia, they had 11 top 40 singles out of 27 released. Who'd'a thunk it?

Peace,
Mr DJA

those were the 3 i knew most rock fans could name. yes though they had a lot of hits and no one would have guessed it

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Come On ()
Date: October 13, 2015 09:07

Is there any real rock n rollers in that Place? I mean like Johnny Thunders or Walter Lure, Iggy Pop, Johnny Rotten?

2 1 2 0

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Date: October 13, 2015 14:37

Iggy and rotten are in

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Come On ()
Date: October 13, 2015 14:39

Quote
keefriffhard4life
Iggy and rotten are in

Mmm..to survive is the trick I guess...

2 1 2 0

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Hairball ()
Date: October 13, 2015 17:49

I bet sometimes they (leaders of the R&R Hall) can start fresh and do it all over again - clean the slate and cut the crap.
Too late now...it sucks beyond repair.

_____________________________________________________________
Rip this joint, gonna save your soul, round and round and round we go......

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: tatters ()
Date: December 14, 2015 14:51

Here are the final results for the fan vote. The inductees will be announced on Wednesday. Apparently, the way it works, is that the top five vote getters each receive ONE VOTE, which gets counted, along with the other 600 votes of the people who actually do the voting.

So, basically, it counts for nothing, though you'd have to think the people doing the actual voting would at least be influenced by the results of the fan vote. I mean, I'd be very surprised if Chicago didn't get in, even if they are universally despised by the kinds of people whose vote actually matters.



Chicago 23.41% (37666982 votes)

Yes 16.20% (26062479 votes)

The Cars 16.14% (25973030 votes)

Deep Purple 15.87% (25540426 votes)

Steve Miller 15.85% (25507096 votes)

Janet Jackson 5.88% (9461890 votes)

Cheap Trick 1.45% (2336605 votes)

The Spinners 1.28% (2066739 votes)

Chaka Khan 1.16% (1858917 votes)

Chic 0.84% (1348330 votes)

The J.B.'s 0.59% (949883 votes)

N.W.A 0.42% (673866 votes)

Nine Inch Nails 0.35% (564003 votes)

The Smiths 0.30% (490088 votes)

Los Lobos 0.25% (404767 votes)



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2015-12-14 14:52 by tatters.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Stones50 ()
Date: December 14, 2015 16:49

Quote
tatters
Nine Inch Nails
N.W.A
The Smiths
Deep Purple
Janet Jackson
Chic
Steve Miller
Chicago
Chaka Khan
The Spinners
Cheap Trick
The Cars
The J.B.'s
Los Lobos
Yes

Horrifice list. Not one deserve it. Well, maybe Deep Purple

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Date: December 14, 2015 18:24

Quote
Stones50
Quote
tatters
Nine Inch Nails
N.W.A
The Smiths
Deep Purple
Janet Jackson
Chic
Steve Miller
Chicago
Chaka Khan
The Spinners
Cheap Trick
The Cars
The J.B.'s
Los Lobos
Yes

Horrifice list. Not one deserve it. Well, maybe Deep Purple

I counnt 7, maybe 8 who deserve it

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Stones50 ()
Date: December 14, 2015 18:45

You need a calculator.

J GEILS should have been in years ago

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Date: December 14, 2015 20:31

Quote
Stones50
You need a calculator.

J GEILS should have been in years ago
los lobos
the cars
deep purple
cheap trick
steve miller
chicago
yes

thats 7 right there so calculator works fine

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: RollingFreak ()
Date: December 15, 2015 00:17

Thats despicable that Janet Jackson got more votes than Cheap Trick. Thats exactly the problem with this Hall. No one seems to get the definition and intention, which is why its so massively screwed up. I'm not even saying Cheap Trick should be in, but they should definitely get more votes than Janet.

The fan vote means nothing to anything. They don't look it and it represents almost no vote. Its a good way for them to make people feel they are being included when they aren't.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: mighty stork ()
Date: December 15, 2015 01:26

I'm sorry but I think the "Rock and Roll" Hall of Fame lost it's integrity when Abba was voted in in 2010. Pure pop music / not rock and roll.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: RollingFreak ()
Date: December 15, 2015 01:34

Quote
mighty stork
I'm sorry but I think the "Rock and Roll" Hall of Fame lost it's integrity when Abba was voted in in 2010. Pure pop music / not rock and roll.

Was gone way before then when Madonna got inducted. I'm not saying she's not an icon, but she's not rock and roll and at some point a line had to be drawn and that was mine. That was when it was all just like "this is insane these people are in and Deep Purple, The Moody Blues, KISS, Rush, etc aren't." There was no more excuses anymore, and they still haven't fixed it.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Naturalust ()
Date: December 15, 2015 03:35

Quote
keefriffhard4life
Quote
Stones50
You need a calculator.

J GEILS should have been in years ago
los lobos
the cars
deep purple
cheap trick
steve miller
chicago
yes

thats 7 right there so calculator works fine

Same picks for me. If Yes or Deep Purple don't make it this year I will be disappointed (once again).

Artists eligible this year that are missing for me include Alice In Chains, The Black Crowes, Jane's Addiction and Soundgarden. Perhaps they are too new in the eligibility for serious consideration yet but compared to Janet Jackson, Chic and Chaka Kahn they are infinitely more rock and roll.

Re: OT: 2016 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Nominees
Posted by: Sighunt ()
Date: December 15, 2015 04:08

I'm happy to see Steve Miller make the cut....keep on rockin' me you space cowboy!

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