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Bruce Springsteen And Tom Morello Unite For The “Land of Hope and Dreams American Tour”

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Tom Morello is rescheduling his own spring solo dates to join Bruce Springsteen’s “Land of Hope and Dreams American Tour,” playing select songs at every stop on the 20-date run. The tour launches March 31st in Minneapolis and closes May 27th at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., with multiple nights at the Kia Forum in Inglewood and Madison Square Garden in New York along the way. Morello’s postponed solo shows will be rescheduled.

The pairing has deep roots. Morello first appeared onstage with Springsteen in 2008, rejoined him for the 2009 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony, temporarily filled in for E Street Band guitarist Steven Van Zandt in 2013, and appeared on tracks from both ‘Wrecking Ball’ (2012) and ‘High Hopes’ (2014) before joining the subsequent E Street Band tour. The collaboration has never been casual, and this run makes that history explicit.

The immediate context is political. Springsteen recently joined Morello at his Defend Minnesota! benefit concert, where they performed Springsteen’s new protest song “Streets of Minneapolis,” raising funds for families affected by federal immigration enforcement. That night is what set this tour in motion. “After Bruce joined me last month in Minneapolis for our Defend Minnesota! charity concert, I was reminded how important our platform is,” Morello said, “and how crucial the resistance work is that our music can do together at this dangerous historical juncture.”

Morello frames the full tour in those same terms. “Together, Bruce, the E Street Band, and I are going to turn a spotlight on the current threats to democracy and human rights happening all around us on the Land of Hope and Dreams American Tour in the spirit of freedom, justice and rock ‘n’ roll.”

TOUR DATES:

Tue. Mar. 31 – Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center

Thu. Apr. 3 – Portland, OR @ Moda Center

Mon. Apr. 7 – Inglewood, CA @ Kia Forum

Thu. Apr. 9 – Inglewood, CA @ Kia Forum

Mon. Apr. 13 – San Francisco, CA @ Chase Center

Thu. Apr. 16 – Phoenix, AZ @ Mortgage Matchup Center

Mon. Apr. 20 – Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center

Thu. Apr. 23 – Sunrise, FL @ Amerant Bank Arena

Sun. Apr. 26 – Austin, TX @ Moody Center

Wed. Apr. 29 – Chicago, IL @ United Center

Sat. May 2 – Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena

Tue. May 5 – Belmont Park, NY @ UBS Arena

Fri. May 8 – Philadelphia, PA @ Xfinity Mobile Arena

Mon. May 11 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden

Thu. May 14 – Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center

Sat. May 16 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden

Tue. May 19 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena

Fri. May 22 – Cleveland, OH @ Rocket Arena

Sun. May 24 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden

Wed. May 27 – Washington, D.C. @ Nationals Park

Are Hemp Smalls Any Good? Let’s Find Out

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By Mitch Rice

You are spoiled for choice when it comes to CBD products. You get so many options that it can feel overwhelming to choose one over the other, especially since most are promoted as wellness and recreational solutions. Nevertheless, some classic products like buds are in a different league altogether. Earlier, they were used conservatively and more discreetly due to legal restrictions in many places. Today, these products are widely accepted, particularly those cultivated in conformity with ethical practices and federal requirements regarding the availability of contents like THC. As long as you buy a cannabis flower with less than 0.3% THC, you may not have anything to worry about.

Experienced and savvy users like to smoke hemp flower to unwind, revitalize, or have a balanced experience of both. They are also quick to decide which strain would best serve their purpose and what small or large buds offer. Generally, people equate big buds with premium quality, while that’s just one aspect. If you buy hemp flowers from a reliable store, you can enjoy your experience even with hemp-based small buds. Still, knowing about hemp smalls is important to make an informed decision. So, here it is!

Hemp smalls

Suppose you visit an online store where the list looks like this: Hawaiian Haze, Hawaiian Haze Smalls, Orange Gas, Orange Gas Smalls, and Mothership and Mothership Smalls. If you are new to dried CBD flowers, you may relate the term “smalls” to the size, but that could be the beginning of your curiosity. Some may think these are an affordable version of the bigger buds, and that’s it, whereas small flowers are as potent as their larger counterparts. After all, these buds are smaller in size because they get only that much space on the branch to grow. Since they usually develop under the big buds or on the lower branches, they may not fully develop. Less exposure to sunlight is also a factor that may prevent them from fully blooming.

The important thing here is that hemp smalls may have the same cannabinoid and terpene content as larger hemp if they are trimmed and cured well. They may be small and less attractive; however, their performance can be expected to be no less than that of the top flowers, even at a lower price.

Benefits and uses of hemp smalls

Small hemp buds may not be aesthetically appealing, but they are budget-friendly. At an affordable price, you may reap many desired benefits with proper use. Of course, your health, tolerance level, prior exposure to buds, and other factors play an equally important role in your experience. Small buds are also easily available. You can buy them in large quantities. Since they are not as sticky as larger buds due to lower moisture levels, the risk of mold formation may also be minimal. You can pack them more conveniently because there are fewer stems. In fact, they are also easy to grind for use in pre-rolls, joints, and so on.

Small buds are more about price comparison than anything else. Their potency level can be similar to that of larger buds. However, if you also want an aesthetic experience with your buds, large hemp flowers are a better choice. Otherwise, small flowers may offer a comparable experience at a lower price.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

London’s Somerset House Summer Series Brings The Flaming Lips, The Cribs, and Benjamin Clementine To Its Iconic Courtyard

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The Somerset House Summer Series returns to London July 16th through 26th, and the lineup spans decades and genres with the kind of range that makes this one of the city’s essential summer events. Running in partnership with American Express at Somerset House’s open-air courtyard, the series opens July 16th with fast-rising pop act Naïka and builds from there. General sale tickets go live Friday, March 6th at 10 am GMT via the Somerset House website, with presales available to American Express cardholders and Somerset House newsletter subscribers.

The headliners land across the full run. The Lightning Seeds top the bill on July 19th, The Cribs follow on July 20th, jazz artist Venna plays July 23rd, The Flaming Lips bring their full-scale spectacle on July 25th, and Mercury Prize winner Benjamin Clementine closes the series on July 26th. Also on the lineup: Palace, Thee Sacred Souls, Agnes Obel, Black Country New Road, and Raf-Saperra.

The series has been a fixture in London’s cultural calendar since 2003, with past performances from Adele, Patti Smith, Amy Winehouse, Rosalía, Tems, and Olivia Dean among its history. This year’s edition adds another layer with HOLY POP!, a new exhibition running alongside the concerts, exploring fan devotion to pop icons through art, memorabilia, and photography, with subjects including David Bowie, Britney Spears, Aaliyah, Prince, and George Michael.

Country Music’s Biggest Summer Party Returns As CMA Fest Reveals Its Nissan Stadium Lineup For June

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CMA Fest presented by SoFi returns to downtown Nashville June 4th through 7th, and the Nissan Stadium lineup is out now. Four-night stadium passes are on sale at CMAfest.com/tickets. The festival draws an estimated 95,000 daily attendees and has been running continuously since 1972, making it the longest-running country music festival in the world. This year marks the 23rd consecutive year a CMA Fest television special will air on ABC and Hulu.

The Nissan Stadium nights feature Bailey Zimmerman, Blake Shelton, Carly Pearce, Cody Johnson, Deana Carter, Ella Langley, Gretchen Wilson, HARDY, Jason Aldean, Jordan Davis, Keith Urban, Luke Bryan, The Red Clay Strays, Riley Green, Russell Dickerson, Shaboozey, Tim McGraw, Tucker Wetmore, and Zach Top. The Band Perry and Stephen Wilson Jr. bring mid-field performances to the stadium floor. Additional performers across the Nissan Stadium and Platform stages will be announced in the coming weeks.

Beyond the stadium shows, CMA Fest takes over the streets of downtown Nashville with hundreds of performances across multiple stages and fan experiences throughout all four days. The television special will once again be executive produced and written by Robert Deaton and directed by Alan Carter. Media credential applications are open at CMApress.com through April 10th at 5 pm CT.

A portion of ticket proceeds supports the CMA Foundation’s music education programs nationwide, a commitment that has run through every edition of the festival. The Foundation, established in 2011, funds professional development for music teachers, classroom resources, and student programs across the country.

Soundcheck Study: Confronting the Mental Health Crisis in Canada’s Music Industry

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The Soundcheck Study, authored by Catherine Harrison and published this week, serves as the first comprehensive national report to document the pervasive mental health challenges within the Canadian music sector. Utilizing a mixed-methods approach, the study integrated quantitative data from 1,216 survey participants with qualitative insights from focus groups and interviews to reveal a workforce in significant distress. The findings indicate that mental health challenges are endemic, affecting 50-86% of industry members—a staggering contrast to the approximately 12% prevalence rate found in the general Canadian workforce.

At the heart of this crisis is a profound sense of financial precarity, cited by 84% of respondents as a primary stressor. The transition to digital streaming has drastically reduced artist revenues to mere fractions of a penny, while the disappearance of stable live performance income during the pandemic exacerbated existing instabilities. This economic fragility creates a “precarious labour” environment characterized by irregular income and a lack of basic benefits, leaving only 5% of music workers feeling a genuine sense of job security.

The study sheds light on alarming rates of suicidal ideation, with 53% of participants reporting they have felt life was not worth living and 43% admitting to having thought about taking their own lives. These lifetime prevalence rates are nearly four times higher than the 12% average for the general Canadian population. Such data underscores the high-risk nature of the profession, mirroring international trends where entertainers consistently rank among the highest-risk occupational groups for suicide.

Workplace culture and the normalization of substance use further complicate the mental health landscape. The industry’s traditional “sex, drugs, and rock and roll” mythology often frames substance use as a signifier of creative authenticity. Consequently, 42% of workers use substances for socializing and networking, while 40% do so to cope with work-related stress. This creates a dual stigma: 86% feel stigmatized for having a substance use challenge, yet 58% also feel stigmatized for choosing abstinence or recovery.

The report identifies systemic barriers to care, most notably a pervasive stigma surrounding mental health mentioned by 72% of participants. Despite high literacy—73% believe they have tools for self-support—80% are unaware of resources specifically tailored to the unique pressures of the music industry. This gap between need and awareness is critical, especially as 93% of respondents expressed a strong desire to learn how to better support their peers.

Demographic data reveals that marginalized groups experience compounded vulnerabilities due to systemic discrimination. For instance, 76% of women and non-binary individuals strongly or somewhat agree that sexism directly impacts their mental health, whereas 73% of men disagree with this sentiment. This “empathy gap” between those with privilege and those facing direct discrimination often leads to performative actions rather than the substantive systemic reforms required for true equity.

The study also emphasizes that work environments, rather than a lack of personal resilience, are the true drivers of mental health risk. Only 10% of participants strongly agreed that industry leaders implement measures to support well-being. Instead, workers are subjected to irregular schedules, all-on/all-off work cycles, and a “toxic” culture where harassment and bullying are widely recognized concerns across all career stages.

Leadership practices emerged as a decisive factor in psychological safety, with 82% of respondents stating that interactions with those in power directly impact their well-being. While workers value empathy, integrity, and accountability, they frequently encounter harmful behaviors such as micromanagement, poor communication, and unethical conduct. Alarmingly, only 26% of industry members have ever participated in any form of leadership training.

The prevalence of neurodiversity within the sector is notably high, with 42% of respondents identifying as neurodivergent (including autism, ADHD, and dyslexia). Self-reported ADHD approached 35%, a figure nearly twelve times higher than the 2.9% clinical prevalence in the general Canadian adult population. While this may reflect a natural gravitation of creative minds toward the industry, it also highlights the need for specialized workplace standards that accommodate diverse cognitive needs.

Physical health is intrinsically linked to these mental outcomes, yet basic biological needs are often neglected in the music industry. Only 10% of respondents strongly agreed they receive enough sleep to perform at their best. Furthermore, 75% of workers reported chronic fatigue and 73% reported sleep disturbances as physical manifestations of their ongoing psychological stress.

To address this “full-scale mental health crisis,” the Soundcheck Study proposes a multi-faceted call to action. Key recommendations include the implementation of a National Code of Conduct to establish minimum standards for psychologically safe work environments and the creation of industry-specific mental health literacy programs. There is also a push for redesigning work structures to include minimum fee standards and portable benefits to combat financial instability.

Ultimately, the report argues that the Canadian music industry has reached a “critical tipping point” where resilience alone is no longer enough. Sustainable change requires a cultural shift that revalues music not as a hobby, but as a legitimate and essential career deserving of the same health and safety standards as any other professional sector. The continued vitality of Canadian talent depends on building a support infrastructure that sustains both creative excellence and human well-being.

Read the full report here.

11 Songs That Turn Any Room Into a Dance Floor

Oh, you know the moment.

Someone hands over the aux cord. There’s a split second of hesitation. Then that bassline drops and suddenly the kitchen, the basement, the wedding hall, the backyard patio – all of it transforms. Great dance songs are social glue. They bypass conversation and go straight to instinct.

Here are 11 tracks that have the architectural power to turn any room into a dance floor.

“Billie Jean” – Michael Jackson
That bassline is practically a command. The second it starts, feet move on autopilot and the room collectively agrees to surrender.

“Uptown Funk” – Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars
A masterclass in groove engineering. Horn stabs, handclaps, swagger – it’s funk rebuilt for the modern era.

“I Wanna Dance with Somebody” – Whitney Houston
Pure joy pressed into vinyl. It doesn’t just invite dancing; it insists on it, arms-in-the-air style.

“Yeah!” – Usher featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris
Minimal beat, maximum reaction. When that synth line hits, the energy level spikes instantly.

“Don’t Stop Me Now” – Queen
Freddie Mercury understood acceleration. This song builds like a rocket and leaves gravity behind.

“September” – Earth, Wind & Fire
Those opening chords are a serotonin trigger. Intergenerational appeal? Absolutely. Resistance? Impossible.

“Hey Ya!” – Outkast
Three words: shake it. The rhythm is deceptively complex, but the effect is beautifully simple – jump.

“Shut Up and Dance” – Walk the Moon
Built like a neon-lit ’80s time machine. It grabs you by the collar and pulls you to the center of the room.

“Levitating” – Dua Lipa
Disco revival done right. It glides, it sparkles, and it quietly fills the floor before you even notice.

“Mr. Brightside” – The Killers
It starts with tension and ends in communal shouting. Not technically a dance track, but try standing still.

“Get Lucky” – Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams
Slinky guitar, tight rhythm section, zero wasted space. It doesn’t demand attention – it seduces the floor into motion.

Different genres. Different decades. Same result.

Insomniac Games Confirms September Release Date For Marvel’s Wolverine On PlayStation 5

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Insomniac Games has officially ended the speculation surrounding its next major superhero project. Marvel’s Wolverine is set to launch on Sept. 15, 2026, as a PlayStation 5 exclusive. The studio bypassed the traditional fanfare of a major showcase, opting instead for a direct social media confirmation that delivered the date with surgical precision. This release places the title in a prime position at the end of the summer season, offering a high-profile window for the Burbank-based developer to follow up on its successful Spider-Man franchise.

The game is a global thriller featuring the voice and performance of Liam McIntyre, who steps into the role of Logan. While the recent announcement was brief, the project has already generated massive momentum due to its mature tone and visceral combat. Early details confirm that the narrative will involve iconic characters such as Mystique and Omega Red. This production marks a significant departure from the lighter tone of previous Marvel titles, leaning into a more grounded and aggressive portrayal of the titular mutant.

Critically, the industry response to this scheduling move is one of intense interest and approval. Securing a mid-September date allows the title to command the full attention of the gaming public well before the crowded holiday season begins. The sheer technical ambition behind the game (leveraging the specialized hardware of the PlayStation 5) suggests a level of fidelity and speed that has become the hallmark of the studio. It is a high-stakes release that reinforces the strength of the ongoing partnership between Marvel and Sony.

Following this date reveal, more substantial updates are expected throughout the spring months. The studio has teased a deeper look at gameplay and environmental details to satisfy the growing demand for more footage. For now, the focus remains on the confirmed arrival of one of the most anticipated action titles in years. Fans can circle September 15 on the calendar as the day the claws finally come out for this current generation of consoles.

Hollywood Remembers Actress Lauren Chapin Following A Five-Year Cancer Battle

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Lauren Chapin, the Los Angeles-born actress who became a household fixture during the 1950s, has died at age 80. Her son, Matthew Chapin, confirmed her passing on Tuesday evening after a persistent five-year fight against cancer. She is remembered globally for her role as Kathy Anderson on the iconic series ‘Father Knows Best’. Throughout nearly 200 episodes, she portrayed the character nicknamed Kitten, earning five Junior Emmys for her contributions to the legendary sitcom.

The news of her death marks the end of a life defined by both early stardom and immense personal resilience. While she reached the heights of television success alongside Robert Young and Jane Wyatt, her private years involved overcoming significant trauma and health challenges. Chapin eventually transitioned into a career as a minister and talent manager, famously aiding a young Jennifer Love Hewitt. Her story remains a powerful example of finding peace after the spotlight of child stardom fades.

Industry peers describe her as a beautiful soul who faced her final years with remarkable strength and spirit. This loss resonates deeply with the generations who viewed her as the quintessential youngest daughter of the American screen. Her career began with a small part in the Judy Garland film ‘A Star Is Born’, which paved the way for her six-season run on television. Her work alongside siblings Elinor Donahue and Billy Gray remains a cornerstone of the medium’s golden age.

She leaves behind her son, Matthew, her daughter, Summer, and her brother, Michael. Her brother and fellow actor Billy Chapin preceded her in death in 2016. In recent years, she remained active in the nostalgia circuit and continued to share her story of survival and faith with fans. Her death concludes a lengthy and public journey that moved from the scripted perfection of 1950s suburbs to a life of genuine advocacy.

Metallica Confirms Shows At Las Vegas Sphere

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Metallica remains the undisputed heavyweight of global heavy metal, and their latest move proves it once again. The Bay Area-based legends just confirmed an eight-show residency at the Sphere in Las Vegas (the first of its kind for a metal act). This two-billion-dollar architectural marvel usually hosts pop-rock spectacles, but the fall schedule belongs to the thrash pioneers. The residency carries the title “Life Burns Faster” and marks a massive shift in how heavy music is presented on a grand scale.

The production spans four weekends in October, starting with opening dates on Oct. 1 and 3. In keeping with the successful M72 world tour format, the band plans to deliver two completely unique setlists for each weekend pairing. It is a bold, high-stakes commitment to variety and technical execution. This residency represents a total takeover of the most advanced concert space on the planet (a venue that demands the highest level of visual and sonic engineering).

Industry watchers describe this announcement as a landmark moment that validates metal as a premier stadium-tier attraction in the modern era. The scale of the Sphere (with its wraparound LED screens and immersive audio) provides the perfect canvas for the band to amplify their catalog. There is no room for small gestures in a room this size. This is a deliberate, massive expansion of the band’s live legacy that places them alongside the elite few who have conquered the Las Vegas strip.

General ticket sales begin March 6 at 10AM ET. Early access options (including travel and VIP packages) start as soon as Feb. 27 for those looking to secure a spot early. The schedule includes Oct. 1, 3, 15, 17, 22, 24, 29, and 31. Fans can register for the seated presale on March 3 to prepare for the high demand.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Unveils 2026 Nominees: See Who Gets In And Why

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The Rock Hall list is out and once again everybody is screaming.

Good.

That is the point.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is not a museum of polite agreement. It is a bar fight about legacy. And this year? The fight is stacked.

Let us go name by name. Because if you are going to argue, at least know the receipts.

Mariah Carey

Nineteen Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s.

Read that again.

Nineteen.

Only The Beatles have more. She is No. 5 on Billboard’s Greatest of All Time Hot 100 Artists list. That is not opinion. That is math.

But this is not just about chart dominance. Mariah bent the pop arc. She fused R&B phrasing with pop hooks and made melisma a mainstream weapon. She co-wrote her hits. She produced. She shaped the modern pop vocal template.

Without Mariah, there is no 2000s vocal Olympics. No gospel-infused pop dominance. No blueprint for artist-controlled holiday catalog supremacy.

You want influence? Ask every vocalist who came up after 1995.

Put her in.

Wu-Tang Clan

Enter the Wu-Tang 36 Chambers changed hip-hop’s business model.

Not just the sound. The business.

RZA’s production was raw, grimy, cinematic. But the real genius was the strategy. A group deal plus individual solo contracts. Decentralized dominance. Before tech bros made it sexy.

They turned Staten Island into mythology. They built a logo as powerful as any rock insignia. They influenced fashion, slang, branding and independent thinking.

You do not get modern collective movements in hip-hop without Wu-Tang.

Culture shifting. That is Hall material.

Oasis

Knebworth.

Two nights. 250,000 people. Two and a half million applications for tickets.

That is not nostalgia. That is scale.

Oasis dragged guitar music back to the center of the universe in the mid-90s. They turned working-class swagger into stadium theology. They made melody matter again.

Three nominations. Still not in.

If you can headline an era and still be debated 30 years later, you are not a footnote. You are foundational.

Iron Maiden

Heavy metal gods.

Forty-plus years of touring. Massive global sales. A DIY ethos that built one of the most loyal fanbases on earth.

They made intricate, literary, galloping metal an arena sport. They proved you could avoid pop radio and still fill stadiums worldwide.

Metal is rock. Iron Maiden is metal royalty.

The Hall cannot pretend that side of the genre does not exist.

Lauryn Hill

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill won Album of the Year.

It fused hip-hop, soul, reggae and vulnerability into a singular statement. It reframed what a female MC and singer could be in one body.

Yes, the solo catalog is compact. But impact is not measured in volume. It is measured in permanence.

Ask any neo-soul artist. Ask any conscious rapper. Ask any singer who wants authorship.

Her shadow is long.

Phil Collins

Already in with Genesis.

Seven solo Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s. A sound that dominated 80s radio. Drum production that defined an era.

You can roll your eyes at the ubiquity. But ubiquity is power. He bridged prog complexity and pop immediacy.

He is the rare artist who was both band anchor and solo juggernaut.

That is Hall of Fame math.

Shakira

Debuted in 1991. Broke globally in the late 90s.

She helped mainstream Latin pop into global English-language markets without losing her identity. She writes. She performs. She crosses borders.

Before streaming globalization, she was already doing it.

The Hall has to reflect international impact. Not just Anglo radio.

Sade

Understated.

Four decades of relevance. Multi-platinum albums. A sonic signature so distinct that you know it in seconds.

They made quiet storm feel like cathedral music. Sophisticated R&B that never chased trends and never needed to.

Longevity without noise. That is its own revolution.

Joy Division and New Order

Post-punk despair into dancefloor transcendence.

They pivoted tragedy into reinvention. From Joy Division’s stark minimalism to New Order’s synth-driven club dominance.

You do not get modern alternative dance culture without them. You do not get the bridge between rock bands and electronic evolution without them.

They mapped the future.

P!NK

Four Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s. Decades of arena touring. Made the music industry an absolute bonkers amount of money.

She turned pop performance into athletic theater. Real vocals, real risk, real spectacle.

And she built a career on resilience. Reinvention without abandoning identity.

That matters.

The Black Crowes

When grunge was rising and hair metal was collapsing, The Black Crowes kicked the door open with Southern swagger and blues grit.

Shake Your Money Maker went multi-platinum. Hard To Handle and She Talks to Angels became radio staples. But more importantly, they reintroduced authenticity into mainstream rock at a moment when it desperately needed dirt under its fingernails.

They were not retro cosplay. They were conviction. Every revivalist blues-rock band that followed owes them something.

That is historical impact.

Melissa Etheridge

Melissa Etheridge brought raw nerve endings to rock radio.

Her 1988 debut cracked open mainstream space for confessional songwriting delivered with power instead of fragility. Come To My Window and I’m the Only One dominated 90s radio and MTV rotation.

She won Grammys. She won an Academy Award. She became a visible LGBTQ rock star at a time when that visibility carried enormous weight.

Voice. Songs. Cultural courage.

That belongs in the Hall.

Billy Idol

Billy Idol understood something early. Image is amplification.

Coming out of UK punk with Generation X, he pivoted into MTV-era dominance without losing edge. Rebel Yell, White Wedding, Dancing With Myself. These were not niche hits. They were global.

He fused sneer and pop hooks into arena-sized anthems. He turned punk attitude into mainstream electricity.

You cannot tell the story of 80s rock without him.

INXS

Kick sold over 20 million copies worldwide.

Need You Tonight hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. They balanced dance grooves with rock muscle in a way that felt modern before modern was a marketing term.

Michael Hutchence was one of the last true rock frontmen with stadium magnetism. They were massive in the U.S., Australia, Europe. Not regional. Global.

That scale matters.

New Edition

Candy Girl dropped in 1983 and the blueprint was drawn.

Tight harmonies. Sharp choreography. R&B crossover appeal. New Edition built the architecture for the modern boy band economy.

From them came Bobby Brown. Bell Biv DeVoe. A direct line to 90s pop dominance and beyond.

When you influence both sound and business model, you are foundational.

Luther Vandross

Never Too Much was not just a hit. It was a massive change in shift.

Luther Vandross defined sophisticated R&B for decades. Multi-platinum albums. Multiple Grammy Awards. A voice that became the standard for romantic ballad delivery.

He arranged. He produced. He shaped vocal phrasing for generations of R&B singers.

When your tone alone becomes recognizable within two seconds, that is legacy.

Jeff Buckley

Grace arrived in 1994 and became scripture for musicians.

His version of Hallelujah redefined the song for an entire generation. His vocal range and emotional control influenced everyone from alt-rock singers to indie crooners.

One studio album. Endless influence. Every cool person you know has this record.

Impact is not measured by volume of catalog. It is measured by depth of reach.

So, there you go. The Rock Hall has a chance to do the best thing. Put them all in.

The Rock Hall conversation is always noisy.

Good.

Because if we are still arguing about these artists decades later, that means they mattered.

And that is the whole point.

The Hall is not about purity.

It is about impact.

Sales matter. Influence matters. Touring power matters. Cultural shift matters.

This ballot? It has all of it.

So argue. Lobby. Debate.

Just know that history is bigger than your playlist.

And that is why this list is worth the noise.