Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2026

starting with Luther

Nominations for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2026 are out. One can vote for up to seven artists each day. Yes, it doesn’t much matter, but it entertains me. No, I don’t care if artist A or band B is “rock and roll.” 

There are two guys, now deceased, neither of whom had been nominated before. Jeff Buckley drowned at the age of 30 in 1997. His father Tim died at 28 of a drug overdose. But Jeff singing the definitive version of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah isn’t enough for me. I’m afraid NO.

By comparison, Luther Vandross, who died in 2005 at the age of 54, was a prolific arranger and producer, as well as singer and songwriter. He worked with David Bowie, Dionne Warwick,  Janet Jackson, Mariah Carey, and most of the New Edition, among many others, starting in the 1970s. A definite YES (1).

YES to Joy Division/New Order (2) and Black Crowes (3), who have been nominated before. I have some JD; I understand the JD/NO pairing but it’s weird. There are two or three Black Crowes albums in my collection.

NO to Phil Collins, who is in with Genesis; I have never been fond of folks being inducted two or three times. especially when it blocks a spot for someone else. However, I like him well enough to have three of his solo albums. Last I checked, he had a huge (50,000) lead in the fan vote.

Is Forever

By the same logic YES to Wu-Tang Clan (4), not just for their collective work but their various spinoffs. They are worthy of a fictionalized bio series. The lawn sign Wu-Tang Is Forever has been a thing for over a half a decade. And they are touring in 2026. Sad news: the Wu-Tang Clan‘s Oliver “Power” Grant, 55, passed away from pancreatic cancer on Feb. 24, 2026.

Is one album worthy of induction? The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is a critically acclaimed album, which I own. Yet I’m going with NO this time.

But I have one Sade album, yet she is a YES (5), in part because she’s the earlier act. Yes, I have an elder bias.

The fact that I have three of their albums makes INXS a YES (6).

I’ve admitted this before: I hate that Mariah Carey overuses her five-octave range. And also, she’s the queen of Christmas; feh. I have her greatest hits album, but NO.

I could not name an Iron Maiden song, and the group never stuck in my mind. They never made the pop charts, which is not a requirement to vote for them. Still, NO.

So, this leaves me with, in roughly chronological order, by when they first charted: Billy Idol, who has been nominated before, and who I voted for in past years; New Edition, who I recently saw; Melissa Etheridge – I have two of her albums; Oasis – I have the one album most people have;  P!NK – someone burned me one of her CDs, and I liked it well enough; and Shakira, who I know mostly from the ending of Zootopia movies.

The 7th YES goes to New Edition, over Idol and Etheridge, based not only on the group’s success but also on the impact of the solo and BBD spinoffs. Call it recency bias.

Final thing: the Hall needs Estelle Axton!

O is for Oasis

Do you recognize the Stevie Wonder song the chorus of Step Out by Oasis echoes?

oasisOasis is a British band of the 1990s and beyond, about which I know relatively little:

1) The group has often been described as Beatlesque,
2) The members have occasionally been accused of copyright infringement, and
3) The band, for a time, included brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher, who fought a lot, as brothers in these sagas often do.

I have but one album, and it’s the album that everyone who has but one Oasis album owns, the one that starts with a revisiting of the Gary Glitter song Hello [LISTEN].

Oasis had their first UK number one single in April 1995 with Some Might Say[LISTEN] … Although a softer sound led to mixed reviews, Oasis’ second album, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? was a commercial success, becoming the fourth best-selling album in UK Chart history with over four million copies sold. The album spawned two further hit singles, Wonderwall [LISTEN] and Don’t Look Back in Anger [LISTEN], which also reached numbers two and one respectively. [They got to #8 and #55 in the US, respectively]. It also contained the non-UK single Champagne Supernova [LISTEN] —featuring guitar playing and backing vocals by Paul Weller—that received widespread critical acclaim and peaked at number one on the US modern rock chart [and #20 on the US pop charts].

Here’s Step Out, which was removed from the Morning Glory album and relegated to a B-side. Stevie Wonder now has a co-writing credit; do you recognize the Wonder song this chorus echoes?

Apparently, the band has broken up and Noel Gallagher says the band will NEVER reunite, but that this album will be remastered soon.


ABC Wednesday – Round 14

Ramblin' with Roger
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