2005 Rock Hall Inductees

Written by Eric Olsen
Published December 13, 2004
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4


Akron-native Chrissie Hynde spoke to the Plain Dealer after her nomination:

    "Personally, I hope it doesn't happen, because I don't like awards," she said.

    Hynde put together the Pretenders after she relocated to London in the mid- '70s. The pop-rock group released its first single, "Stop Your Sobbing," in 1979, followed by such hits as "Brass in Pocket (I'm Special)" and "Back on the Chain Gang."

    The band performed at the Concert for the Hall of Fame at Cleveland Municipal Stadium in 1995.

    "It was one of the greatest days of my life," Hynde said. "I'm glad the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is in Cleveland. . . . It's nice if people like that sort of thing, they can go and see, you know, the trousers that Jimmy Page wore in 1910.

    "But as far as the awards part of it and being inducted, I could give that a miss."

    The Pretenders have gone through numerous lineup changes through the years. Founding members James Honeyman-Scott (guitar) and Pete Farndon (bass) died of drug overdoses in 1982 and 1983, respectively.


The founder and president of Premier Talent Agency, Barsalona created the first legitimate rock and roll booking agency. Along the way, he single handedly reinvented the way artists, agents, venues and promoters did business. His roster included Led Zeppelin, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, The Pretenders, The Who and U2.


The Chairman of Sire Records, Stein co-founded the label in 1966, and has been one of the most successful and influential executives in the music business. His ability to discover new talent led to signings of many groundbreaking artists such as The Ramones, Madonna, The Pretenders, Talking Heads, Seal, Depeche Mode, Ice-T, The Cure, The Smiths, kd Lang and Barenaked Ladies. The label is still going strong after nearly 40 years and still innovative with recent signings including The Von Bondies, HIM, Regina Spektor, The Fags and The Veronicas.

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
2005 Rock Hall Inductees
Published: December 13, 2004
Type:
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: News
Writer: Eric Olsen
Eric Olsen's BC Writer page
Eric Olsen's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Eric Olsen
Music: News
All Music Articles
Eric Olsen's personal weblog
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — December 13, 2004 @ 14:29PM — Bill Lamb [URL]

You're exactly right, Eric - it's a truly outstanding set of inductees.

Since my main focus on music is Dance music I am quite pleased that U2, the O'Jays and Pretenders have all crossed boundaries to have Dance hits in the past.

I just reported about a week and a half ago that Vertigo is U2's 5th Top 20 Dance hit in the U.S. The O'Jays 'Love Train' and 'I Love Music' are Disco classics, and some of the Pretenders' first success in the U.S. was when 'Brass In Pocket' spent a lengthy time on the Dance chart in the days when New Wave was quite welcome in clubs.

Thanks for the story, and it will be an amazing show!

#2 — December 13, 2004 @ 16:07PM — Eric Olsen

thanks Bill, much appreciated; cool news on the dance music angle, which always interests me as well. The early New Wave days were when I first started DJing - I remember the openness and eclecticism of the time very fondly

#3 — December 13, 2004 @ 19:08PM — Al Barger [URL]

Just want to take a second to recognize "Wake Up Dead Man," which is THE unrecognized U2 classic. They took a break from the irony schtick to deliver it straight up again, and a lot of bottled up realness poured forth in one hard dose.

#4 — December 14, 2004 @ 02:16AM — Lono [URL]

U2 being selected is a no brainer. However, I was also very pleased to see Buddy Guy and the Pretenders make the cut as well. This was a good year for inductees.

#5 — December 14, 2004 @ 09:48AM — Eric Olsen

yes, the first three Pretenders albums (2 and an EP, actually) are absolutely seminal - Chrissie's tough edge has dirffted away over the years and that makes it easy to forget what a kick in the gut she was

No holes in this year's class

#6 — December 14, 2004 @ 09:50AM — andy marsh [URL]

Sorry, but I don't think the pretenders should have made it into the hall before Lynyrd Skynyrd or J. Geils!

#7 — December 14, 2004 @ 09:52AM — Eric Olsen

remember there is a delicate balance and symmetry to the process - I think they'll be ready for a sort of standard "classic rock" band by next year

#8 — December 14, 2004 @ 12:01PM — SFC Ski

"yes, the first three Pretenders albums (2 and an EP, actually) are absolutely seminal"
NO arguments there, when 2 of the original members died the Pretenders were thereafter never really anything more than Hynde's backing band, sad to say. THey did rock back then, though.

#9 — December 14, 2004 @ 12:08PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

oh gawd, the segue from "Space Invader" to "Wait" on the the first Pretenders record is one of them "turn it up to 11" things.

i'm gettin' all tingly just thinking about it.

#10 — December 14, 2004 @ 12:29PM — SFC Ski

I know what you mean, in ediscovering my old cassettes, I had the frst 2.5 of the Pretenders in my deck for a week. Backed with, BTW, David Gilmour's first Solo Album.

#11 — December 14, 2004 @ 12:45PM — Eric Olsen

the first album in particular almost justifies their inclusion, similarly to "Never Mind the Bollocks" for the Sex Pistols.

My favorite song of theirs has always been "Mystery Achievement" which is one of the most perfect songs ever recorded

#12 — December 14, 2004 @ 13:01PM — ClubhouseCancer

True about the first two albums being seminal, but I also love the later stuff that's more Chrissie plus band, especially Viva La Amor. And Learning to Crawl is both a great and a huge-selling album.

Chrissie just kicks ass.
Their 2002 release, Loose Screw, just disappeared, but it's great if you like Chrissie. "Fools Must Die" rocks kinda like 1981, "Saving Grace" is lovely. There's good stuff on all the albums, period. And Chrissie sings great live, too.

#13 — December 14, 2004 @ 13:07PM — ClubhouseCancer

Eric, you picked my second favorite. To me, "Talk of the Town" should be brought up when talking about the greatest pop/rock recordings. "MA" has all that, plus an appealing obliqueness lyrically.

I like "Kid" and "precious" almost as much.

And a perfectly stupid and beautiful rock lyric is this:
"When love walks in the room, everybody stand up!

#14 — December 14, 2004 @ 13:50PM — Eric Olsen

and CC, I agree with you that there is good stuff scattered throughout the later albums, and that Learning to Crawl is great: "Middle of the Road," "Back On the Chain Gang," "My City Was Gone" and "2000 Miles" on one studio album? Bowel-shaking goodness.

#15 — December 14, 2004 @ 15:23PM — Phillip Winn [URL]

I don't know what Buddy Guy has to do with the "Rock" Hall of Fame, but he deserves pretty much any accolades people want to throw his way.

Is there a Blues Hall of Fame? That's where Buddy belongs.

#16 — December 14, 2004 @ 16:19PM — Eric Olsen

the Rock Hall has a whole bunch of "influences," which include blues, country and a few jazzers, but in Buddy's case, what he plays IS pretty much what used to be called rock 'n' roll, or at least blues rock

#17 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:21PM — ClubhouseCancer

Eric, do you listen to a lot of rock music while sitting on the can? It seems like you really feel great music in your digestive system, which must make really good concerts almost unbearable!

#18 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:25PM — Eric Olsen

you're right about feeling it in the old internal organs, although it isn't specific to my digestion: it includes lungs and heart especially.

In all seriousness, in the presence of really great live music, sometimes I have a hard time breathing

#19 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:28PM — Mark Saleski [URL]

in the presence of really great live music, sometimes I have a hard time breathing

exactly!

#20 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:30PM — Eric Olsen

I knew we were simpatico, Mark

#21 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:34PM — ClubhouseCancer

I don't get that. But whenever I hear really great music, even hapy, sunny pop music, I embarrassingly start to get teary. It's only started for me over the last few years (I'm 37) but it's really strange. Not just sadly beautiful music. Just particularly beautiful music.

The last year, this has happened at:
Patti Smith
Bill Frisell
Vincent Herring
Yo La Tengo
Cassandra Wilson
Stereolab
Neko Case
Arcade Fire

These acts do not perfrom sad songs, as a rule.

It is indeed embarrassing to do this at an alternative rock show. Strange.

#22 — December 15, 2004 @ 12:36PM — Eric Olsen

CC, I think that is a very similar reaction, just manifest through different organs.

And don't feel bad, I sometimes tear up at freaking high school halftime shows

#23 — December 16, 2004 @ 00:56AM — Sean Hackbarth [URL]

It's just crap a great band like Rush gets ignored year after year after year. It just ruins the HOF's crediblity.

#24 — December 16, 2004 @ 01:03AM — Aaman [URL]

Hear! Hear! mod parent up

#25 — December 16, 2004 @ 11:56AM — Phillip Winn [URL]

Aaman, the beauty is, the act of commenting "mods up" the entire post. :-)

#26 — December 16, 2004 @ 12:00PM — Eric Olsen

Rush's problem, and the problem for metal and prog bands also (the intersection of which would be, um, Rush) is that the critics collectively just don't dig 'em. I would guess at some point there will be a backlash against the backlash

#27 — December 16, 2004 @ 12:02PM — Phillip Winn [URL]

Eric, you don't consider King's X to be a progressive/metal band?

#28 — December 16, 2004 @ 12:03PM — Phillip Winn [URL]

I mean, they're probably not hall-of-fame material, at least not until Ty Tabor quits producing them, but I think they qualify for your parenthetical statement, no?

#29 — December 16, 2004 @ 12:22PM — JR

Dream Theater is both more metal and more prog than Rush now. But Rush pretty much put the stoplights up at that intersection, so it's theirs.

#30 — December 16, 2004 @ 20:39PM — Paul Roy [URL]

Not a bad list this year. I am always dissapointed with some of the omissions each year, as well as some of the additions. It seems like each year they have to throw in the token 60's motown group, no matter how good they actually were, just so it is not only rock bands. Some were fantastic but others like The Flamingos, The Dells, etc....come on!

U2 and Buddy Guy are definately deserving. The O'Jays maybe, but Percy Sledge and The Pretenders are very borderline. Each had SOME great stuff, but not hall of fame worthy, in my opinion.

A lot of you are right about Rush's shameful ommission -- the critics simply hate them. They should consider however that the same three guys have been putting out platinum albums for over 35 years, and touring non-stop to sell out crowds. F.U. critics! I would also love to see Lynryd Skynyrd in there as well. Great body of work, and nobody sounds like Skynrd. Totally unique. A few people mentioned King's X, who used to be one of my favorite bands, but have just sucked lately. They were certainly on their way to the hall of fame, until they started producing their own albums.

#31 — December 17, 2004 @ 00:44AM — Natalie Davis [URL]

"My favorite song of theirs has always been 'Mystery Achievement' which is one of the most perfect songs ever recorded"

A-frickin'-men. Chrissie Hynde is a goddess to me, and the first Pretenders albums present her at her edgiest, ass-kickingest best. I only hope James Honeyman-Scott and Pete Farndon will be inducted posthumously.

The Pretenders... U2 (I've adored the band since day one)... the O'Jays (awesome pick... wonder if Trump's use of "For the Love of Money" played a part in the group's selection)... Buddy Guy (blues is rock music)... etc. ... what a terrific set of inductees! The HOF got it right this year. It gives me hope that perhaps we'll see deserving yet overlooked artists (such as Rush and Skynyrd) get the nod in the near future.

#32 — December 17, 2004 @ 08:24AM — Eric Olsen

hi Nat! Did you feel your ears burning from the Grateful Dead post?

I think this is a pretty great class - good point about the Trump exposure for the O'Jays. I think eventually the Rock Hall voters are going to have to expand their rather narrow range and fairly predictable MO (as Paul mentions), specifically as regards metal and prog, and to answer the question, I didn't mean to imply that Rush is the only group at the intersection of prog and metal, just the most prominent. MY comment was really just an aside saying "wow, rush is really SOL given they fit in BOTH the categories he critics/voters hate

Oh and the original Pretenders are the ones being inducted

#33 — August 6, 2006 @ 11:41AM — Buddy Rogers

At this point, I don't want RUSH in the Crap Hall of Fame. Sorry if you don't like them critics, but they influenced numerous bands in different genres of music..but I guess that doesn't matter. How many bands are still making relevant music 30 plus years into their careers? Forget the hall..RUSH is too good for it.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/23195)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments