Stop Waiting for Artists to Die
Joe Bonamassa implored the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame to reckon with its many eligible artists of superior age, saying the establishment “cannot wait for them all to die” earlier than inducting them.
Bonamassa made his level throughout a latest Artists on Record episode whereas reflecting on the loss of life of pioneering British blues guitarist John Mayall on the age of 90. Mayall, whose 1966 album Blues Breakers With Eric Clapton grew to become a blues-rock cornerstone, will posthumously enter the Rock Hall this 12 months as a recipient of the Musical Excellence Award.
“I’m glad he was aware that he was going into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame,” Bonamassa informed host Stefan Adika. “I am sad and slightly pissed off that he didn’t live to see it because he deserved to go in decades ago.”
This tragedy, Bonamassa added, will not be distinctive to Mayall. “Same thing with Alexis Korner [who will also receive the Musical Excellence Award this year]. He deserved to go in — these are first, second-ballot people. There’s a lot of omissions that I think they need to start reconciling quickly, because you cannot wait for them all to die to then go, ‘Well, we’re gonna put you in posthumously.’ It means something. It would have meant something to John to get that statue. It would have meant something to people like my friend Chris Squire from Yes. Yes goes in the year after he dies — it would have meant something.”
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Joe Bonamassa Names Other Key Rock Hall Snub
Mayall will not be the one rock icon to die shortly after receiving the information of his imminent Rock Hall induction. Dennis Thompson, the drummer and final remaining member of MC5, additionally died in May, a couple of months of the proto-punk legends’ long-awaited induction. When he discovered of the induction, Thompson reportedly stated, “It’s about fucking time!”
Bonamassa stated the Rock Hall wants to work to keep away from this difficulty with different senior artists. “There’s a lot of people that are now aging out or becoming in their late 70s and 80s that really should have been in decades ago,” he defined. “They need to get them in because it’s the right thing to do for the artist. And I like the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. They’re very nice people, always had a great relationship with them. Just for their own organization and credibility, something with Paul Rodgers needs to go in the fucking Hall. You mean to tell me Free is not a Hall of Famer? Come on.”
The guitarist had a suggestion for how to accomodate extra inductees. “They have to reconcile the TV broadcast as well, because the arguments of, ‘Well, this is a TV broadcast, so we need to stay relevant,’ that’s great,” he stated. “You do the TV broadcast. But how about the day before, you have a ceremony, a dinner, and you induct 10 people that maybe are not hip or not active playing-wise so they can’t do the playing? A Mayall, somebody like — how about Los Lobos? Let’s start there. Anything with Paul Rogers. Pick one: The Firm, Free, Bad Company.”
145 Artists Not within the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Many have shared their ideas on attainable induction.
Gallery Credit: Ultimate Classic Rock Staff