Jeez, who do you leave out?
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/m...VANW6HMUSNOslIthe list features George Michael, Kate Bush, Missy Elliott, the White Stripes, Sheryl Crow, Iron Maiden, Joy Division/New Order, Cyndi Lauper, Willie Nelson, Rage Against the Machine, Soundgarden, the Spinners, A Tribe Called Quest, and Warren Zevon
Especially considering some of the recent inductees.
Past is gone, thou canst not that recall; Future is not, may not be at all;
Present is, [so] improve the flying hour; Present only is within thy power. - Friar Park Clock Tower [author unknown]
I can't describe the joy I will feel if Willie Nelson and Iron Maiden go in together (as they flippin' well better).
Depending on your age, you may not realize how brightly she burned.
She's So Unusual was the first debut album by a female artist to feature four top-five hits on the Billboard Hot 100.
Cyndi Lauper came out around the same time as Madonna, but was the bigger act for several years. Girls Just Wanna Have Fun was anthemic... bigger than anything Sheryl Crow has ever done.
Hard at work making beautiful things.
Zevon is LONG overdue.
“I do not think that word means what you think it means.”
Seconded. In my opinion, Lauper has 3 or 4 good songs (Time After Time, All Through the Night, I Drove All Night), some pretty good songs (Girls Just Want to Have Fun, True Colors, Change of Heart), several annoying songs (She Bop, Money Changes Everything, Iko Iko, The Goonies), and a tepid cover of a good Prince song (When You Were Mine). And that’s it.
Sheryl Crow on the other hand has at least four entire albums that are good. Sure, she’s certainly no Joni Mitchell. But who is?
Also, the other piece of Cindi Lauper's impact was just the cultural significance. Much like Madonna (who she will always be compared with) she was a shift in attitude and style and perception far beyond just her music and lyrics. The Rock and Roll HOF has historically recognized these things pretty well.
Oh, I do realize it. I'm exactly the right age for that. And given that it is the Hall of Fame, those are all fair arguments. And Cyndi Lauper is already in the Songwriters Hall of Fame, so putting her in this one wouldn't be that big a surprise. I just think Sheryl Crow wrote better, more innovative, and more interesting songs. But that's entirely a subjective judgment, of course, and there's no doubting who has had the bigger commercial success.
Past is gone, thou canst not that recall; Future is not, may not be at all;
Present is, [so] improve the flying hour; Present only is within thy power. - Friar Park Clock Tower [author unknown]
I ushered the Cyndi Lauper concert at Cameron, but it was only because I wanted to see The Bangles who opened. (I had — and still have — mad love for Susanna Hoffs).
If she is HOF worthy, but Little Feat is not, then the HOF is just one sick joke.
“I do not think that word means what you think it means.”