The Boys from Britain don't need no stinking HOF! |
Iron Maiden has been nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
My reaction? Who gives a shit.
Evidently I’m supposed to be excited by this news… I find
myself feeling rather apathetic, with a smattering of bemusement and a (slight)
bit of anger. I do recognize the considerable
irony in stating “who gives a shit” and then spending my time writing a post
about the news. Evidently I have some level of investment. But I’m writing this
as much for as my own amusement as anything else.
A little history on my relationship with the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame. In the past I have kept tabs on the list of inductees. I was
happy to see the likes of Black Sabbath and KISS eventually get in, though both
are kind of no-brainers. I didn’t get too wrapped up in either nomination, because
I figured it was a done deal. And it was (an aside: it took KISS, eligible for
induction since 1999, FIFTEEN YEARS to get in, which it finally did in 2014).
My typical level of detached minor interest ratcheted up in
2018 when stupidly, I got wrapped up in the fan vote for Judas Priest. The Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame includes a fan vote, with the top five acts in the
popular vote earning what amounts to a single “vote.” These five bands then get
that one vote added to the couple hundred votes cast by the real power-holders,
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Committee, a shadowy cabal of unknowns who hold
all the power of who gets in and who gets left “Out in the Cold” (pun
intended).
As should be obvious by the formula, one fan vote stacked against
a couple hundred “educated” votes by the “critics,” counts for next to nothing.
I spent time--too much, as you can vote over and over again, though only once
per day--voting on the HOF platform, only to see Priest—which did get in the
top five in the fan vote—get croaked by the committee.
So, in 2018 Judas Priest—a band who revolutionized heavy
metal by adding an iconic sound (the twin guitar attack) and establishing its iconic
look (leather and studs), immortal songs like “You’ve Got Another Thing Coming”
and “Breaking the Law,” and a 50+ year legacy of influencing countless bands—lost
to the likes of Nina Simone.
Since then Priest has failed to make it any further, to the
Hall’s eternal shame.
That brings me to Iron Maiden, another personal favorite band
of mine about
whom I’ve made my love abundantly clear here on the blog.
Maiden has had a career that would turn 90% of the
previously inducted acts’ faces green with envy. I don’t think people outside
of heavy metal circles understand how massively popular and influential these
guys are. They’ve been selling out sports arenas (pre-COVID of course) for 40
years. They’ve sold more than 100 million copies of their albums worldwide, all
without any commercial airplay or support. At one point VH1 ranked them No. 24
in their “100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock.”
It’s utterly absurd to think that they need to add a Hall of
Fame credential to justify whether or not they are great, or influential on the
development of rock-and-roll. But frankly, it’s the “hard” part of “hard rock” that
makes Maiden an unlikely candidate for Hall of Fame acceptance.
The fact is, the voting on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is
calculatedly political, and archly snobbish, and therefore actively hostile to brash,
loud, metal acts. Heavy metal can never get its just due in this stifling,
narrow-minded environment. Even relatively safe, mainstream party rock acts like
KISS only get a look when their case is so overwhelmingly obvious that to leave
them out would compromise any shred of validity the enterprise still holds.
Bruce Dickinson has voiced his opinions very clearly on the Hall
of Fame, calling the Hall "an
utter and complete load of bollocks" that is "run by a bunch of
sanctimonious bloody Americans who wouldn’t know rock ’n’ roll if it hit them
in the face." Go Bruce.
So in the end, it does not matter whether Maiden gets in. Their career
speaks for itself. When Maiden is finally retired and gone, the echoes of “Hallowed
be thy Name” and “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” will ring through the ages, long
after most of the acts in the Hall of Fame have been forgotten.
Unlike 2018 I will not waste a moment voting for Maiden. Not
because I don’t love the band, but because the institution itself is corrupt. No
Maiden, Priest, or Motorhead renders the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame utterly irrelevant.
2 comments:
"Unlike 2018 I will not waste a moment voting for Maiden"
Good for you. Would your life be greatly...even moderately...improved if any of those bands were in some BS Hall of Fame? I doubt it. It's as grotesque as Jethro Tull winning the first hard rock/heavy metal Grammy. HR/HM has never needed mainstream adoration or respect...it spits a mouthful of grog that it slurped from the skull of a defeated enemy in the face of the mainstream. I'm quite sure I've never heard of many of those that did get "enshrined". Such a Hall doesn't deserve Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, or those like them.
Yeah, that's where I've arrived. Other than perhaps the opportunity to see them perform, or some old band members reunited on stage with the present lineup, metal bands getting into the HOF is meaningless.
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