
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 2025: Predicting who will be inducted
We're about two weeks away from finding out the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame's class of 2025.
Why it matters: This year's ballot of 14 nominees features some of the most prominent artists of the 21st century as well as overlooked legends hoping for one more chance in the spotlight.
How it works: A pool of more than 1,200 journalists, music historians and current inductees vote for who should be inducted.
The Rock Hall typically chooses to honor the top six to eight vote-getters.
Considering previous voting trends, I did my best to predict which eight artists will be honored during a ceremony this fall in Los Angeles.
Who I think gets in:
Bad Company
Billy Idol
Cyndi Lauper
Joe Cocker
Mariah Carey
Outkast
Soundgarden
Joy Division/New Order
State of play: The first six acts in that list feel like solid bets given the industry support they've received and how the ballot lines up.
Carey and Lauper are the only women nominated and Outkast is the only hip-hop act, which bodes well for their chances.
Who I think's left out:
Chubby Checker
Maná
Oasis
Phish
The White Stripes
The Black Crowes
The other side: You can rule out The Black Crowes, Maná and Phish. Their nominations came as a surprise.
Phish will win the Fan Vote, but the annual poll doesn't guarantee induction, as Dave Matthews Band supporters learned in 2020.
Friction point: The final two spots are closer to a coin flip. Oasis and The White Stripes could sneak in, but neither act seems to care much about induction.
Voters could go for Chubby Checker. "The Twist" singer has waited longer than any other nominee, but he's also not the biggest name.
I ultimately went with Soundgarden, which rock purists will get behind on a ballot that features fewer hard rock acts each year.
The ballot also stacks up well for Joy Division/New Order, with an influence and impact above the rest of the pack.

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New York Post
23 minutes ago
- New York Post
Billy Idol reveals he nearly died from a heroin overdose — and more bombshells from his new doc
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But the overdose nearly turned deadly for him. 'I was basically dying. I was turning blue,' he recalls. 'So they put me in an ice cold bath, and I remember them walking me around on the top of the building, you know, on the roof.' Indeed, the artist born William Broad had been seduced by heroin as the '80s rock god known as Billy Idol. 'That's what was going on. The scene had embraced hard drugs really,' he reflects. 'A number of people were on it. [So] you know, you're wide open for it.' 7 Billy Idol rocked the red carpet at the Tribeca Festival world premiere of his new documentary. Sonia Moskowitz Gordon/ZUMA / 'A lot of the people we loved were all heroin addicts,' adds Idol. 'Lou Reed wrote the song 'Heroin.' The New York Dolls were all heroin addicts practically. So we weren't thinking how dangerous it was. In fact, you're thinking quite the opposite. Maybe this could unleash something.' But, at 69, Idol has survived his severe drug addiction and lived to tell the tale. And he's still going strong, taking off his shirt to reveal a ripped torso after finishing a five-song set with longtime guitarist Steve Stevens — including 'Dancing with Myself,' 'White Wedding,' 'Eyes Without a Face' and 'Rebel Yell,' plus new song 'People I Love' — following his doc's premiere. Here are five more of the biggest revelations from 'Billy Idol Should Be Dead.' He wrote 'Dancing with Myself' after, yup, seeing someone dancing by themselves. Idol's breakout 1981 US hit, which was originally recorded with his band Generation X, was inspired from a night out on the club scene in Japan. 7 'Billy Idol Should Be Dead' traces the singer's rise from Generation X to solo stardom in the '80s. Serial Pictures 'We were standing having a drink, and we were watching this kid dancing with his reflection in the mirror of walls in this club,' recalls Gen X bassist Tony James, who co-wrote the song with Idol. 'And Billy went, 'Wow, look at that kid. Look, he's like dancing with his reflection.' And I went, 'Yeah, dancing with myself.' I'm like, 'Billy, that's gonna be a great name for a song.' ' True enough, Idol came up with the beginnings of a tune to go with that title. 'Literally, in the space of like two minutes, we wrote all the lyrics, just the two of us,' says James, 'and by the afternoon, we'd recorded the demo.' While trying to kick heroin, he turned to crack. Idol, who once even lived next door to his drug dealer, hid out at the Park Meridien hotel in Midtown Manhattan while trying get off heroin. 7 Billy Idol's longtime guitarist Steve Stevens is among those featured in the punk-rocker's new documentary. Serial Pictures 'And it's only when I really tried to give up heroin that I did start to smoke crack,' he says. 'And, yeah, it was a nightmare. I mean, it's horrible because I was seeing and hearing things. Like, people in the next room talking about me or above me.' Shortly after that, friends convinced him to go to the hospital to detox, and his father flew in from London to clean house. 'My dad believed everybody was a drug dealer,' says Idol, who is now 'California sober.' He finally kicked heroin after one wild final binge in Bangkok — and a run-in with Mel Gibson. Idol and his friend Harry Johnson went on vacation to Bangkok, Thailand in 1989, with the idea that it would be a drug-free trip. 'We started out just drinking and stuff, but after a week or so of that, we asked a cab driver if he could get us some coke,' recalls Idol. 'But he brought back this long, thin vial of this white stuff' that turned out to be heroin. 7 Billy Idol and Steve Stevens performed five songs after the premiere of the singer's documentary. Serial Pictures 'It was so strong that … you only needed a pin prick, and you were just as high as a kite,' he says. During his long 'zombie' trip, Idol had a strange celeb encounter. 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This Brant,'' she says in the doc. A DNA test had also raised questions about who Brant always thought was his biological father. 'I was like, 'Mom, is there a chance Mark might not be my biological father?'m' he recalls in the doc. 'And she's like, 'Well, it's pretty crazy, but back in the day, we broke up and I actually spent a weekend with Billy Idol.' '


UPI
24 minutes ago
- UPI
Watch: Cyndi Lauper says 'Girls' farewell tour is a 'celebration'
1 of 5 | Cyndi Lauper discussed her farewell tour on "The Late Show" Tuesday. File Photo by Jim Ruymen/UPI | License Photo June 11 (UPI) -- "Time After Time" singer Cyndi Lauper described her farewell tour as "a celebration" when she stopped by The Late Show with Stephen Colbert Tuesday. Lauper, 71, launches the final leg of her Girls Just Wanna Have Fun Farewell Tour in July. The singer-songwriter said on The Late Show that the tour is inspired by music and art. "There was a living art movement between 1910 and 1930 in Paris, and that is what inspired mixing art and music, and I got to do it. And that's why I'm so excited," she told Colbert. "This is what I always wanted to do, and when they said, 'Why don't you do, you know, a farewell tour?' I said, 'If I do a farewell tour, I'm going to do what I always wanted.' And that was mix art and music in an arena." "I'm excited, and it's a celebration Stephen. Everybody comes, everyone's welcome. Some people dress up. Some people don't. It's a lot of fun. We sell wigs," she added. Lauper is also among the upcoming Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees. "I still believe that rock 'n' roll can save the world," she told Colbert. The induction ceremony will take place Nov. 8 in Los Angeles and stream on Disney+. Cyndi Lauper turns 70: a look back Cyndi Lauper opens for Cher at Vancouver's GM Place in Canada on August 13, 1999. Photo by H. Ruckemann/UPI | License Photo


Buzz Feed
15 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
9 Songs Ruined When Artists Revealed True Meanings
It's very common to start singing lyrics to a song without realizing what the artist is actually singing or rapping about — just going off vibes. But have you ever really sat down and researched lyrics or over analyzed them, only to find out the meaning behind them is completely different than what you envisioned? Well, then you're not alone. Here are a few songs where the fan interpretation is a complete 180 from the musician's inspiration: "You're Beautiful" by James Blunt Last month, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the single's worldwide release, James thanked fans for what they helped the song become. The hit song is the third single from James's debut album Back to Bedlam. It was nominated for three Grammy Awards, including Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Male Pop Vocal Performance. He also shared the meaning behind those notable interpretation: A love song about feeling a spark with someone, but not being able to do anything about meaning: "20 years ago today, I released a song that bought me this house," James said in a video post on X (better known as Twitter). "Whoever thought a song about being high as a kite on drugs, stalking someone else's girlfriend would resonate quite so much? Thank you. You guys are beautiful." "Hey Ya!" by OutKast While we were busy shaking it like a Polaroid picture, André 3000 had a deeper story behind the inspiration for the group's hit single from their fifth studio album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. "Hey Ya!" gained immense commercial success, topped the charts, and even won a Interpretation: A fun, upbeat party anthem about love and meaning: "'Hey Ya!' is pretty much about the state of relationships in the 2000s," André 3000 told MTV News per Genius. "It's about some people who stay together in relationships because of tradition, because somebody told them, 'You guys are supposed to stay together.' But you pretty much end up being unhappy for the rest of your life.""The song isn't autobiographical, it's more like fantasies or tangents based on real life," André 3000 told HuffPost. "Moments from my life spark a thought when I'm writing. The story was set in the '50s, so the song was me trying to do a Woody Allen kinda thing, a humorous kind of honesty. We actually reached out to Woody Allen to appear in the video for 'Hey Ya!' His schedule didn't work, though. We had also asked Ralph Lauren because I designed the clothes in the video to look like polo players, which is a style he popularized." "because i liked a boy" by Sabrina Carpenter Fan Interpretation: A sassy response to fan rumors about a love triangle with Olivia Rodrigo and Joshua Bassett. Real Meaning: A critique of how the internet vilifies young women and turns personal matters into public judgment.'It was very therapeutic. People made this narrative and put it on me — I never asked for that.'Many fans assumed this song was a way of Sabrina responding to Olivia's hit single "Driver's License," and tabloids only fueled the rumors.'One thing that experience did do was that it stripped back a lot of layers of tolerating anything that's less than real," Sabrina told Vogue. "Because I didn't really have the energy to tolerate anything that was less than genuine and authentic at that time,'"because i liked a boy" is featured on Sabrina's fifth studio album emails i can't send. The album title derived from the way the songs were created — they spawned from emails and notes she wrote herself during quarantine to help herself "cope" with her feelings. She went on to reveal that the love triangle speculations and treatment she received online also influenced some of the lyrics:"I had to fight the urge to do what I normally do — cover it up with confidence — and instead just actually feel those feelings," she told Rolling Stone per iHeart. "The tolerance for bullshit in the last two years really minimized for me. When you're younger, it's a lot easier to let the words and labels that people put on you affect you and become part of who you are. Once you start to rebel against that, it starts to feel a little bit scarier, but also a bit more freeing. That's why it felt like growing pains the whole time I was making it." "Thinkin Bout You" by Frank Ocean Fan Interpretation: A love song about a woman he can't get out of his mind. Real Meaning: A heartbreak song about a man he was in love with.'I don't have any secrets I need kept anymore," Frank wrote in an open letter on Tumblr per Genius. "4 summers ago, I met somebody. I was 19 years old. He was, too. We spent that summer, and the summer after, together. Every day, almost. And on the days we were together, time would glide."On July 4, 2012, six days before he released his debut studio album channel ORANGE, Frank released an open letter on Tumblr where he came out about his sexuality. He detailed his first experience falling in love with a man after spending almost every day together for nearly two summers, only for those feelings to go unrequited."I sat there and told my friend how I felt," he wrote. "I wept as the words left my mouth. I grieved for them, knowing I could never take them back for myself. He patted my back. He said kind things. He did his best, but he wouldn't admit the same. He had to go back inside soon; it was late, and his girlfriend was waiting for him upstairs. He wouldn't tell the truth about his feelings for me for another 3 years. I felt like I'd only imagined reciprocity for years. Now, imagine being thrown from a cliff. No, I wasn't on a cliff. I was still in my car, telling myself it was gonna be fine and to take deep breaths. I took the breaths and carried on. I kept up a peculiar friendship with him because I couldn't imagine keeping up my life without him. I struggled to master myself and my emotions." "Born in the U.S.A." by Bruce Springsteen Fan Interpretation: A patriotic anthem celebrating American Meaning: A protest song about the mistreatment of Vietnam War veterans and the struggles of the working class.'I'm usually pretty easy with people, but once we were at the centre, I didn't know how to respond to what I was seeing,' he said during his Springsteen On Broadway residency. 'Talking about my own life to these guys seemed frivolous. There was homelessness and drug problems and post-traumatic stress – guys my age dealing with life-changing physical injuries'."The verses are just an accounting of events,' he said. 'The chorus is a declaration of your birthplace, and the right to all the pride and confusion and shame and grace that comes with it.' "The Weekend" by SZA Fan Interpretation: A confident anthem about being the 'side chick' and owning it. Real Meaning: A commentary on non-traditional relationship dynamics and emotional detachment."Time-sharing a man is real AF," SZA told Vulture. "If we're all being honest there's very few men that are just dating one woman. I think, low-key, the internet makes it so difficult [to be in relationships] because we're taking in so much information. There's always new, new, new, more, more, more. Having one person seems like a restriction, like a limitation. Everyone's used to being overstimulated.I feel like men kind of do this thing where they don't wanna tell anyone about [who they're with], because they don't want to lose the opportunity to potentially call you if they needed to. Not saying that they would, but they need the option. So in this song, I'm opting in. Like, I know you have a bunch of girls, probably. Maybe you're not being honest with me — I just know that you have mad girls — and I still don't care, because I didn't want to be your girlfriend anyway! I'm not internalizing the way that you're acting as a disrespect towards me, it doesn't make me any less because you're not my boyfriend. And like, you're not her boyfriend, and you're not her boyfriend. You're just out here wildin'." "Every Breath You Take" by The Police Fan Interpretation: A romantic love song. Real Meaning (Sting): A song about obsession, surveillance, and possessiveness. 'It's about jealousy and surveillance and ownership — not love," Sting said in 1983. "It's a nasty little song, really quite evil.'Sting, the lead singer of The Police, wrote the song in 1982 while suffering what he referred to as a "mental breakdown while his marriage was falling apart. The song's composition was a mixture of light and darkness that represented his life, and the mood swings he dealt with while trying to balance the band's professional success as well as his failed marriage. But that wasn't all. It also spoke to the difficult internal dynamics the band was dealing with. Due to creative differences, the band broke up in 1984. "Every Breath You Take" was featured on The Police's final studio album, Synchronicity. "Eat Your Young" by Hozier Fan Interpretation: A seductive track about lust. Real Meaning (Hozier): A commentary on late capitalism, exploitation, and sacrificing the next generation for greed."It's kind of an idea for a song that has been cooking on me, I guess," Hozier told Genius. "This idea of sacrificing the future of other people for the sake of short-term gain. This idea of where children become the ground for culture war for adults to use as pawns in culture wars, especially when it comes to armed robbery, another school shooting, and then another debate about gun rights, etc. It's something that's quite alien to me, coming from the place in the world that I am. I wanted the voice in the song to be that voice of power that shrugs off any responsibility to any sort of future that anybody has." Lastly, "Swimming Pools (Drank)" by Kendrick Lamar Fan Interpretation: A drinking anthem or party track. Real Meaning (Kendrick): A critique of alcohol abuse and peer pressure, especially within his family and Black communities."That's another record going back to the influence of the people around me and the household I grew up in," Kendrick told Complex. "Each track flows into skits that really breaks down the understanding so that song goes into another skit. I wanted to do something that felt good but had a meaning behind it at the same time. Really bringing that mainstream world to us, rather than a rapper with content along to the nation. I wanted to do something that's universal to everybody, but still true to myself. What better way to make something universal than to speak about drinking? I'm coming from a household where you had to make a decision—you were either a casual drinker or you were a drunk. That's what that record is really about: me experiencing that as a kid and making my own decisions."He touched on it a little more in an interview with Billboard: "Teenagers don't get it — we selfish. Go drink, go smoke, go get fucked up. Why did I do these things? Because I was brought up around it? It damn sure was in the household. I said, 'I know what happens to my family and certain friends when they get drunk and they smoke. They get out of their minds, they get violent. And that's in my blood.' I have little sips on special occasions, but getting all the way out of my mind may not be a good idea." The fun thing about art is that it can mean different things to different people. Despite what evoked these emotions from these celebrities, that doesn't make the way we interpret it, as fans, any less valid. That's the beauty of it! Do you know any songs that have a completely different meaning than what audiences believe it to be? Share them with me in the comments!