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Rock Hall Chairman Rules Out Name Change, Says New Categories Could Be Added in theĀ Future

Rock Hall Chairman Rules Out Name Change, Says New Categories Could Be Added in theĀ Future

“Rather than throwing the name out, it’s doing a better job of communicating to people where rock and roll came from and what it’s truly about,” says chairman John Sykes.

John Sykes attends the 2019 Billboard Power 100 on Feb. 7, 2019 in Los Angeles.

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The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is destined to always evolve, says chairman John Sykes, but while new categories could arrive in the future, a new name for the establishment is out of the question.

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Sykesā€™ comments were published in a new interview with Vulture, which arrived on Tuesday (Dec. 31), just one day before the 2024 Rock Hall induction ceremony hit streaming services. In the piece, Sykes opens up about the current state of the foundation, and touches on previous calls for a name change, especially given how more pop and hip-hop artists have found themselves inducted in recent years.

ā€œI think itā€™s because some people donā€™t understand the meaning of rock and roll,ā€ Sykes explains. ā€œIf you go back to the original sound in the ā€™50s, it was everything. As Missy Elliott calls it, it was a gumbo. It just became known as rock and roll. So when I hear people say, ā€˜You should just change it to the Music Hall of Fame,ā€™ rock and roll has pretty much covered all of that territory. Rather than throwing the name out, itā€™s doing a better job of communicating to people where rock and roll came from and what itā€™s truly about. Once they hear it that way, they understand.

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ā€œThe best story to convey this was when a great friend of mine, Jay-Z, got inducted a few years ago,ā€ he continued. ā€œI was so excited. But he told me, ā€˜Rock is dead. It should be called the Hip-Hop Hall of Fame.ā€™ And I said, ā€˜Well, hip-hop is rock and roll.ā€™ He goes, ā€˜No, it isnā€™t.ā€™ And I said, ā€˜Weā€™ve got to do a better job explaining it. Little Richard, Otis Redding, Chuck Berry ā€” these artists were the cornerstones of rock and roll. If you look at the sounds over the years, those artists ended up influencing hip-hop.ā€™ Jay-Z hemmed and hawed, but he showed up to the ceremony. That made me feel like we had done our job to communicate that rock and roll is open to all.ā€

These comments echo Sykesā€™ previous recollection of the discussion, as printed in Jay-Zā€™s Book of HOV just last month.

ā€œMy last words, as I pleaded for Jay to come to Cleveland to accept his award, were that rock nā€™ roll is not any one sound, rather a gumbo,ā€ he wrote. ā€œTo paraphrase the great Berry Gordy, rock nā€™ roll created the sound of young America. Itā€™s a spirit, and the spirit of hip-hop and rap connected rock nā€™ roll with an entirely new generation.ā€

Elsewhere in his new discussion, Sykes also looked towards the future of the Rock Hall and the potential for further new categories. While the annual induction ceremony has always featured Performers, Musical Influences (previously called ā€˜Early Influencesā€™ before 2023), and the Ahmet Ertegun Award (previously called ā€˜Non-Performersā€™ before 2008) as categories, it has expanded further in the past.

In 2000, the Rock Hall introduced the Sidemen category to honor those who are often overlooked in the grand scheme of things, with the category being renamed the Award for Musical Excellence in 2010. Likewise, between 2018 and 2020, roughly half-a-dozen songs were chosen each year as the singles that shaped rock history. As Sykes explains, thereā€™s the potential to dig even deeper into the music industry to honor those who keep the industry turning.

ā€œWeā€™ve discussed ways we could recognize not only artists but those around them whoā€™ve had an impact on the sound of rock and roll. Fans often donā€™t even know who helped break these artists,ā€ he added. ā€œIt could be record-company presidents, it could be lawyers, it could be agents. We also want to look at specific songs that change culture. That could be another category.ā€

Concluding his interview, Sykes also discussed a number of artists who have been overlooked in previous years, including The B-52s, ā€œWeird Alā€ Yankovic, the Pixies, and Phil Collinsā€˜ solo career.

Labelling Yankovic a ā€œgeniusā€ who is yet to make it ā€œcloseā€ to the ballot, Sykes expressed confidence that the others may make it in some day.

ā€œThereā€™s been a group of nominees whoā€™ve been passionate about the Pixies,ā€ he said. ā€œThe same thing with Warren Zevon, who actually did get on the ballot one year. Iā€™m passionate about Warren, and heā€™ll get in, too. But the Pixies have had a lot of support.ā€

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