Lorde takes Kurt Cobain’s place


Lorde has joined Joan Jett, St. Vincent’s Annie Clark, and Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon to front a Nirvana re-union.

The surviving members, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, and Pat Smear, performed at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at the Brooklyn’s Barclays Center today and have enlisted the help of four of the most outstanding leading ladies in rock of the last three decades.

Lorde sung All Apologies clad in a pink suit after Jett performed Smells Like Teen Spirit, Gordon Aneurysm and Clark Lithium.

Lorde joined Nirvana’s Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear to perform “All Apologies” at #RockHall2014 pic.twitter.com/L97xgEuXRM

— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) April 11, 2014

Nirvana join a class that includes Kiss, Peter Gabriel, Hall & Oates, Cat Stevens, Linda Ronstadt and Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band.

The original four members of Kiss didn’t perform due to a dispute between active original members Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley and retired members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley. But the original four made peace and saluted each other in heartfelt induction speeches.

“This is a pivotal moment for all of us,” said Simmons, the bass player and reality TV star. We are humbled that that the fans gave us the chance to do what we loved doing.”

The theatrical quartet put on makeup, belched blood, shot fireworks out of Frehley’s guitar and sang about wanting to “Rock and Roll All Nite.” They weren’t trendy, but Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello said that Kiss inspired him and their concert was the first he attended. He even fought high school bullies who ridiculed him for liking Kiss.

“Tonight proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that the high school bullies and critics were wrong,” he said. “Kiss fans were right.”

Stanley, to the cheers of the Barclays crowd, called for fans to be involved in the Rock Hall induction process.

Linda Ronstadt, the sexy siren of the Los Angeles country-rock scene of the 1970s, couldn’t make it to her induction. Now retired, she suffers from Parkinson’s disease and doesn’t travel much. Glenn Frey, who played with fellow future Eagle Don Henley in Ronstadt’s backup band, saluted her with an induction speech.

“From that first rehearsal, I felt we were working on a style of music that had never been heard before,” Frey said.

Ronstadt was saluted by some royalty of female country rock. Carrie Underwood sang Different Drum, Ronstadt’s first hit with the Stone Poneys. Underwood was joined by Emmylou Harris and Bonnie Raitt for Blue Bayou. Sheryl Crow and Frey made it a quintet to sing You’re No Good. Then Stevie Nicks came out to lead them in It’s So Easy and When Will I Be Loved.

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Nicks said hearing Different Drum when she was in high school made her want to get into music.

“I didn’t look that good in cutoffs, but that’s what I was going to do,” she said.

Cat Stevens, the 1970s era singer of Morning Has Broken and Wild World, was inducted by Art Garfunkel, who said his breakup with Paul Simon helped pave the way for Stevens’ entry into the charts.

“Thanks so much to my fans for believing,” said Stevens, who gave up music and converted to Islam, going by the name Yusuf. “I can still see some skeptical faces, but my fans believed.”

Stevens performed Father and Son, Wild World and Peace Train, joined by a robed choir in the final song.

Springsteen’s 1999 entrance into the Rock Hall without the E Street Band was a sore point for some of its members. Thursday they got their due in the sidemen category, although it was a posthumous honour for saxman Clarence Clemons and keyboard player Danny Federici.

Springsteen told stories, many familiar to fans who have seen them onstage, of the formation of the band, which includes his wife, Patti Scialfa. David Sancious, who was with the band only briefly, was the only one to ever live on E Street, he said.

“We suffered aging, illness and death together,” Springsteen said. “We took care of each other when trouble knocked, and we hurt each other in big and small ways. In the end we stuck with each other.”

Gabriel was inducted by Coldplay’s Chris Martin, who later sang with him on Gabriel’s “Washing of the Water.”

Martin said he turned to the Bible for inspiration in his speech, “the book of Genesis,” referring to the band with which Gabriel started and with which he was inducted into the Hall in 2010.

“An angel of the Lord descended and appeared to Phil the Collins,” Martin said, telling Genesis’ drummer that Gabriel was starting a solo career.

He credited Gabriel with creating a cathedral of sound and “he helped John Cusack get back his girlfriend in the movie ‘Say Anything.”‘ That movie’s climactic moment featured Gabriel’s song “In Your Eyes,” and Gabriel performed a soaring version to celebrate his induction.

Gabriel said aspiring musicians should surround themselves with brilliance and, noting his early failures as a drummer, shouldn’t be afraid to try different things.

“Dream big, and let your imagination guide you, even if you end up dressing as a flower or a sexually transmitted disease,” said Gabriel, known for his theatrical outfits during early Genesis days.

Nirvana was being inducted in its first year of eligibility. The trio’s Smells Like Teen Spirit hit like a thunderclap upon its 1991 release, briefly making the Pacific Northwest rock’s hottest scene before the band ended abruptly with singer Kurt Cobain’s suicide in 1994.

The Philadelphia-bred duo of Daryl Hall and John Oates is known for a string of blue-eyed soul hits including Sara Smile, Rich Girl, Private Eyes and Maneater. Another Philly musician, Questlove of the Roots, was to offer the induction speech.

The first two artist managers were inducted into the Hall: the late Brian Epstein, of the Beatles, and Andrew Loog Oldham, of the Rolling Stones.

-with AP

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