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  1. #1
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    Jann Wenner Removed From Rock Hall Board of Directors

    Had to share this:

    "In the interview with the Times’ David Marchese, Wenner was asked about the exclusion of people of color or female artists.

    “It’s not that they’re not creative geniuses. It’s not that they’re inarticulate, although, go have a deep conversation with Grace Slick or Janis Joplin. Please, be my guest. You know, Joni [Mitchell] was not a philosopher of rock ’n’ roll,” Wenner said. “She didn’t, in my mind, meet that test. Not by her work, not by other interviews she did. The people I interviewed were the kind of philosophers of rock. Of Black artists — you know, Stevie Wonder, genius, right? I suppose when you use a word as broad as ‘masters,’ the fault is using that word. Maybe Marvin Gaye, or Curtis Mayfield? I mean, they just didn’t articulate at that level."


    For the full article:

    https://www.rollingstone.com/music/m...ts-1234826701/

  2. #2
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    Many people saw this bias for years although we didn’t appreciate the depth of his ignorance.

  3. #3
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    until Mary Wells & the Marvelettes are both in there, the RRHOF is NOTHING to me.

  4. #4
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    He’s probably one of the people who have kept them and many other black artists out of the HOF!

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    I was one of a group of people who began collecting things for the RRHOF with the understanding that it was going to be built in San Francisco. When Wenner auctioned off all of our efforts to the highest bidder, I was not exactly pleased.

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    Yeah; heard about this Racist & Sexist P.O.S. over the weekend. Good thing he was removed from the Rock Hall's Board of Directors for his comments.

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    Joni Mitchell is nothing short of a philosopher! And as for the non-apology, tokenistic response, screw him. What a misogynistic, racist-ass douche-nozzle Wenner is and has always been.
    Last edited by sansradio; 09-19-2023 at 12:26 AM.

  8. #8
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    Nelson George made his thoughts well known last evening on the Joy Reid segment at the end of the show. This was the first time I have ever seen any media coverage of Nelson. He make a relatively strong critique of the situation. There are news stories published about his comments if you search Google.

  9. #9
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    What a racist and mysoginistic POS. Good luck promoting your book Jann. Hopefully you just killed all profits you had hoped to make. These bigoted old out of touch white men think they are untouchable. Thank the good Lord they are not.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by bob_olhsson View Post
    I was one of a group of people who began collecting things for the RRHOF with the understanding that it was going to be built in San Francisco. When Wenner auctioned off all of our efforts to the highest bidder, I was not exactly pleased.
    San Francisco was in the mix of cities being considered, but it was never a final candidate or agreed upon that was where it would be. Philadelphia, Memphis, New York, Cincinnati, Detroit and Cleveland were the serious contenders. Cleveland got the most public and artist support in terms of votes and signatures and ultimately put up the money for it.

  11. #11
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    Has Dylan, Springsteen, Mick or Bono commented on his remarks? i would love to know their thoughts on this situation.

  12. #12
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    Good article
    ============

    In 2020, I was a guest on the Who Cares About the Rock Hall? podcast, discussing why one of my favourite bands, Labelle, should be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They were certainly deserving: they sang socially conscious songs from a Black woman’s perspective, espoused a philosophy that reflected the intersectional politics of Black feminists such as the Combahee River Collective, and sported a space-age look now celebrated as an expression of Black futurism.

    The problem was that I didn’t know how to articulate Labelle’s significance in terms that made sense for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Labelle only had one big hit, Lady Marmalade, an ode to a Creole sex worker; the group’s most direct influence has been multiple covers of Lady Marmalade that have almost no connection with the group’s radical politics and style. I just didn’t see how I would be able to translate the group’s importance to the type of people who vote for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees, meaning the mostly white men who historically have voted to induct artists who are white men, partly because of the way they’ve influenced other white men.

    I thought about this podcast moment again when I read the comments of Rolling Stone magazine founder and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame co-founder Jann Wenner, in the New York Times. In his forthcoming book The Masters, Wenner compiles his interviews with seven rock musicians, all white men, “philosophers of rock,” as Wenner calls them. But Black musicians, he said, “just didn’t articulate at that level” and Joni Mitchell also “didn’t, in my mind, meet that test”. The likes of Mick Jagger and Pete Townshend expressed, he said, “deep things about a particular generation, a particular spirit and a particular attitude about rock’n’roll. Not that the others weren’t, but these were the ones that could really articulate it.”

    He later apologised, saying “I totally understand the inflammatory nature of badly chosen words”, ones that “don’t reflect my appreciation and admiration for myriad totemic, world-changing artists”. But his earlier comments linger, confirming as they do the unspoken biases I have experienced in the world of music criticism since entering the field as a Black gay man in the 90s.

    When Wenner created Rolling Stone in 1967, it reflected the sentiments he spoke of in the New York Times. As Joe Hagan writes in Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine: “It was a men’s magazine, though women read it; it was a white magazine, though African Americans were fetishised in it.” White men were the focus; women and Black people were secondary thoughts and objects of fascination rather than subjects in their own right.

    Some were critical of the magazine’s perspective almost from the very beginning. Feminist rock critic Ellen Willis, who viewed Rolling Stone as apolitical and “viciously anti-woman,” wrote in a 1970 letter: “When a bunch of snotty, upper-middle class white males start telling me that politics isn’t where it’s at, that is simply an attempt to defend their privileges.” Jazz great Miles Davis once said he liked Rolling Stone, “but the last time I saw it, they had all white guys in it.”..............

    It’s an open secret the music industry is sexist and racist – Jann Wenner just let it slip | Music | The Guardian

  13. #13
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    In its first few years, the RRHOF inducted those that needed to be there and it seemed inclusive and the inductees seemed obvious - those with massive hit catalogues and huge influence - Beatles, Beach Boys, Supremes, Temptations, Aretha, etc.

    There was nothing wrong with inducting less well known writers, early influences, pioneers, builders.

    But after something like 10 years, these influences that Wenner exhibited recently started creeping in and the RRHOF became increasingly criticized and ultimately irrelevant. They started inducting a bunch of people whose induction was met with a lot of people saying “Who’s that? What did they sing?” And the bias veered toward the white male rock band. If you are going to induct people that are fairly obscure to the public, they should be inducting somewhat lesser known groups like the Marvelettes and singers like Lesley Gore and Mary Wells.

    But maybe the RRHOF should have confined itself to the top tier of artists that touched the general public - and left it at that.

    The Grammys have made the same kind of error and they too are less and less important and relevant. They have gone from a very few awards that overlooked many artists in the 60’s and 70’s to now awarding everything such that people now say “They got a Grammy for what???”

    Both entities need a major overhaul.
    Last edited by jobeterob; 09-20-2023 at 01:45 PM.

  14. #14
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    Ah yes, they're starting to eat their own. Down goes Rolling Stone. Can The NY Times be far behind.

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    And the fallout continues in this piece from the Best Classic Band's site:

    The fallout continues for Jann Wenner, who disgraced himself in an interview that was intended to help promote his new book with the horribly ironic title The Masters. Two days after he had essentially been canceled by Rolling Stone, the magazine that he co-founded in 1967 and led to its once-mighty influence as the arbiter of cool music, his book publisher has apparently cancelled all of his upcoming promotional events. As the backlash continued from Wenner’s sexist and racist remarks about black and female artists in his interview with the New York Times, Rolling Stone released a statement in a post on the social media network formally known as Twitter [[and now calling itself “X”), that Wenner’s “recent statements… do not represent the values and practices of today’s Rolling Stone.” The magazine distanced itself from its longtime chief, noting in its Sept. 18, 2023, post that he “has not been directly involved in our operations since 2019,” adding, “At Rolling Stone‘s core is the understanding that music above all can bring us together, not divide us.”

    Full piece can be read here-
    Jann Wenner Fallout Continues as Book Publisher Cancels Promotional Events | Best Classic Bands

  16. #16
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    Maybe with Wenner gone, we can finally get Mary and the Marvelettes in, they're long overdue.

  17. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by midnightman View Post
    Maybe with Wenner gone, we can finally get Mary and the Marvelettes in, they're long overdue.
    Long overdue! Same with Tom Jones. I just finished reading his autobiography and didn't realize he's not in the Rock Hall. He definitely deserves to be in there...more so than the rap artists they've been inducting lately.

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by carlo View Post
    Long overdue! Same with Tom Jones. I just finished reading his autobiography and didn't realize he's not in the Rock Hall. He definitely deserves to be in there...more so than the rap artists they've been inducting lately.
    Yeah a lot of '60s acts have been skipped over. Hopefully Little Steven can get the thing back on the ball with inducting those acts [[Tom included lol).

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    Maybe Labelle with have a shot now.

  20. #20
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    Foreigner might get in now as Werner had a personal disliking of a member of the group.

    It is easy to see it is mostly about politics.

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    Cher Says Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Can 'You-Know-What-Themselves' After Repeated Nomination Snubs
    The “Believe” singer has no patience for the institution that she’s been eligible for since 1991.
    Cher vehemently doesn't want to be a member of any club that doesn't want her. The "Believe" legend said so in no uncertain terms on Friday's [[Dec. 15) Kelly Clarkson Show, when the host asked how a legend who has scored No. 1 hits over seven decades is somehow not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
    With a sly smile, Cher corrected Clarkson's claim that she's the only act to ever have that kind of chart dominance across the decades, noting that she's not, technically, alone. "Two of us have," Cher said, with Clarkson replying, "Are you gonna say a band? Don't say a band."
    "It's a band," Cher noted of her fellow chart champs the Rolling Stones, as Clarkson clarified that that doesn't count. "It took four of them to be one of me," the 77-year-old icon added with a twinkle in her eye, prompting Kelly to jump out of her seat and clap. "And I'm not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame!" Cher added.
    More from Us
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    Billboard Hot 100 Chart Reveal: Oct. 7, 2023 | Billboard News
    After the studio audience let out a collective groan, Cher told them it was okay. "You know what, I wouldn't be in it now if they gave me a million dollars. I'm not kidding you," she said, laughing that she almost dropped an f-bomb in her answer.
    "I'm never going to change my mind. They can just you-know-what themselves," Cher said to applause, while casually noting that she "changed music forever" with her 1998 dance pop hit "Believe," one of the best-selling singles of all time and the track that is widely credited with introducing the world to AutoTune.
    Cher's first holiday hit, "DJ Play a Christmas Song," hit No. 1 on Billboard's Dance/Electronic Digital Song Sales chart last month [[and topped the Adult Contemporary Chart this month), making her the first female artist to have a top hit for seven straight decades; that milestone put her in rarified air with the Stones, who have had at least one new No. 1 hit on the Billboard charts in every decades between the 1960s and 2020s.
    A spokesperson for the RRHOF had not returned Billboard's request for comment at press time.
    Cher's first No. 1 hit was 1965's "I Got You Babe" with late partner Sonny Bono and she has been eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame since 1991.
    While Cher has not been nominated to date, it's worth noting that last year country icon Dolly Parton was nominated fro the RRHOF and initially turned down the offer. She later accepted and was inducted in Nov. 2022 alongside Eminem, Pat Benatar & Neil Giraldo, Duran Duran, Eurythmics, Lionel Richie, Carly Simon, Judas Priest and Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis; she followed up by releasing her all-star, chart-topping first rock album, Rockstar, album last month.
    Watch Cher on the Kelly Clarkson Show below.

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    Cher should buy herself one of those Hollywood stars stuck in concrete.



    Quote Originally Posted by Boogiedown View Post
    Ah yes, they're starting to eat their own. Down goes Rolling Stone. Can The NY Times be far behind.

    December 14, 2023:

    http://When the New York Times lost its way

    https://www.economist.com/1843/2023/...s-lost-its-way
    Last edited by Boogiedown; 12-17-2023 at 02:45 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by jobeterob View Post
    She'd be thrilled to get in! She had the same attitude about the Academy Award before she was nominated, saying if she won she'd say "F.U. I won in spite of all of you!" Well, she won and nothing much happened of controversy at the ceremony unless you want to consider her outrageous outfit [[which would hardly surprise anybody!).

    Come on, Cher, have a little graciousness about the whole thing...! I love Cher but it's not as if her recording career has been a series of successes. She's made some great albums but probably more clinkers. A lot of her early solo stuff would hardly qualify as rock 'n roll. Still, as far as talent and longevity, she well deserves to be in the R&R HoF. Here's hoping!

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    She should be in the RRHOF but they’ve got a lot bigger problems and pretty much no credibility left

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