Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
No Rose as G N' R inducted
Frontman skips Rock and Roll Hall of Fame bash
CLEVELAND -- Axl Rose may regret missing this bash.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, a musical celebration that in past years has included awkward moments, touching tributes and unforgettable performances, kicked off Saturday night in historic Public Hall where 6,000 fans, 1,400 well-heeled guests and many of music's biggest stars were set to party with the class of 2012.
Hard rockers Guns N' Roses headlined this year's eclectic group of inductees. Others are the Red Hot Chili Peppers, the Beastie Boys, folk icon Donovan, late singer-songwriter Laura Nyro and British bands the Small Faces and Faces.
Rose, the Guns N' Roses lead singer with an affinity for drama, is skipping the event.
Cleveland rocked without him. Green Day got the show started with a rousing performance.
Rose, the screeching frontman and ringmaster of the G N' R travelling circus of dysfunction for decades, said earlier this week he didn't want to be part of the ceremony because it "doesn't appear to be somewhere I'm actually wanted or respected."
Rose cited a continuing rift with his former bandmates as the main reason for not attending. His decision disappointed fans and ended months of speculation about whether the original Guns N' Roses lineup would unite for the first time since 1993 and perform any of their classic hits such as Welcome to the Jungle or Sweet Child O' Mine.
Although he asked not to be inducted, the Hall plans to enshrine him with whether Rose likes it or not.
As the ceremony approached, fans gathered on the sidewalks outside the historic venue, which hosted the Beatles in 1964, for a peek at some of rock's royalty.
Alice Cooper was the fan favourite on the red carpet, signing autographs, telling stories and waving in response to cheers of "Alice, Alice!"
"New York is glitz, Cleveland is the nuts and bolts," said Cooper, comparing the cities that share the rock Hall induction ceremonies, which are held at New York's Waldorf-Astoria and come to Cleveland every third year.
"I'm from the Midwest. Cleveland feels normal to me," said Cooper, dressed in a decidedly Hollywood-style black no-lapel tuxedo with a flowered shirt.
Cooper, standing under a canvas canopy protecting against threatening skies, marvelled at the scene and said he was glad to be around.
"It's our version of the Academy Awards," he said. "If you can stay alive to 27 -- that seems to be the expiration date for rock stars."
Funk icon George Clinton made a splashy entrance, arriving in a silver bullet-shaped vehicle familiar to amusement park thrill-riders. Wearing a grey herringbone coat and black fedora, he stood and waved from the back seat.
Darlene Love, who was to perform Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow for deceased inductee Don Kirshner, showed some love to her Rust Belt fans when she arrived. "They show their appreciation," said Love, glamorous in a one-shoulder red dress, black wrap and red clutch purse.
Rose isn't the only lead singer missing.
Rod Stewart, who was to be inducted and perform with Faces, came down with the flu this week.
"I'm absolutely devastated," Stewart said in a statement. "Shattered that I'm going to miss my second induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame -- and this time alongside my mates."
Faces will be joined for a short set of songs by Simply Red's lead singer Mick Hucknall, a friend of the band who has played with them before and will take Stewart's spot.
Like Guns N' Roses, the Red Hot Chili Peppers emerged from Los Angeles during the 1980s when Sunset Strip's rock scene was dominated by "hair" bands more concerned with their tight lycra pants and eyeliner than their sound. Not the Chili Peppers, who found their unique groove by blending funky hooks and a punk ethos.
While their lineup has undergone some changes -- founding guitarist Hillel Slovak died of a heroin overdose in 1988 -- lead singer Anthony Kiedis and bassist Flea have survived personal highs and lows and the band remains one of music's top live acts.
Three white middle-class smart alecks from New York, the Beastie Boys were initially dismissed as beer-swilling frat boys following their 1986 debut album License To Ill, which featured songs like (You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party!) and Girls. But their followup, Paul's Boutique, was acclaimed by critics and brought the Beasties credibility in the black hip-hop community.
-- The Associated Press
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition April 15, 2012 A16
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