Radiohead, Janet Jackson, Cure lead 2019 Rock Hall of Fame class

Acts are inducted 25 years after their first commercial music release


Afp December 13, 2018
Radiohead's Thom Yorke, pictured in 2016 performing in Austin, Texas PHOTO: AFP

NEW YORK: Pop icon Janet Jackson, angst rockers Radiohead and post-punk innovators The Cure on Thursday earned spots in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, organizers announced.

Also joining the Hall in the Class of 2019 is American folk-rock legend Stevie Nicks, already an inductee with her band Fleetwood Mac, but now also honoured as a solo artist.

British heavy metal group Def Leppard, pop experimentalists Roxy Music and English psychedelic rock harmonists The Zombies round out the list of artists entering the shrine to rock culture.

The Cleveland-based Hall of Fame — which surveyed more than 1,000 musicians, historians and industry members to choose the winners — will honor the seven acts in a gala concert on March 29 in New York.

(L-R) Musicians Rick Allen, Phil Collen, Joe Elliott, Rick Savage and Vivian Campbell of Def Leppard pictured on March 17, 2014 in West Hollywood. PHOTO: AFP

(L-R) Musicians Rick Allen, Phil Collen, Joe Elliott, Rick Savage and Vivian Campbell of Def Leppard pictured on March 17, 2014 in West Hollywood. PHOTO: AFP

The inclusion of Janet Jackson — whose socially conscious, sexually provocative and eminently danceable tracks made her a household name in the 1980s — comes as the Hall of Fame increasingly expands its definition of rock, considering it less of a strict musical genre and more of a certain swagger.

Acts can be inducted 25 years after their first commercial music release.

Michael Jackson earns more after death

Jackson, the younger sister of pop king Michael, spearheaded the creation of New Jack Swing with her 1986 album "Control," creating a fusion sound that came to define the cutting edge of New York's club scene in the late 1980s.

Janet Jackson, the younger sister of pop king Michael Jackson. PHOTO: FILE Janet Jackson, the younger sister of pop king Michael Jackson. PHOTO: FILE

During her decades-long career, Jackson gained fame as much for her intricate choreography and bold fashion sense as her forceful synth melodies —and many industry insiders consider her induction long overdue.

The genre-bending British anthem band Radiohead, which was chosen in their second year of eligibility, soared to fame in the 90s thanks to their haunting power ballad "Creep."

Led by singer and lyricist Thom Yorke, the visionary art rock band went on to radically play with their sound, first with their atmospheric, layered album, "OK Computer," and later with "Kid A" and "Amnesiac.

The band has enjoyed a cocktail of international commercial success, critical love and adoration from indie purists.

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