We all know Liam Gallagher isn’t shy about speaking his mind. Still, his reaction to the news that Oasis are among this year’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame nominees (“I’ve done more for rock ’n’ roll than half of them clowns on that board, so it’s all a load of bollocks”) has scandalised American news outlets.
It’d be easy to put Gallagher’s attitude down to a very British mistrust of all things self-congratulatory, but fellow nominee Cher shares his sentiments. Despite being eligible since 1991, the pop powerhouse has somehow only been nominated this year, even though she said back in December that, “I wouldn’t be in it now if they gave me a million dollars… They can just go you-know-what themselves”.
Meanwhile, Paul McCartney has thrown his weight behind the campaign for Foreigner to be inducted this year with a short and sweary video (“Foreigner, not in the Hall of Fame, what the fuck?”). But fruity language aside, electioneering for a band famed for windswept power ballads doesn’t really feel very rock ’n’ roll. So what exactly is the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, who is inducted and how, and why is it
so divisive?
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The institution was set up in 1983 by Atlantic Records boss Ahmet Ertegun and began inducting performers three years later. Artists are eligible 25 years after their first release and the idea is to honour those who have made an indelible mark on music history and, where possible, get them on stage for a flabby, all-star jam at a swanky ceremony with eye-watering ticket prices (honourable exceptions include Al Green and Willie Nelson joining forces in ’95 and Prince channelling Hendrix before making his guitar disappear in 2004).
In 1995, the concept found a physical home with the opening of a seven-floor museum in Cleveland, Ohio, which was chosen ahead of New York, Detroit and Chicago thanks to the claim that local DJ Alan Freed coined the phrase “rock ’n’ roll” (the $65m that local civic leaders pledged couldn’t have
hurt either).