The Mercury

Dylan, Dead, Satchmo for Hall of Fame

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LOS ANGELES: Music by rockers the Grateful Dead and Fleetwood Mac, jazz greats Miles Davis and Louis Armstrong, and singers Blondie and Roberta Flack would be enshrined in the Grammy Hall of Fame, the Recording Academy said yesterday.

Grateful Dead’s 1970 album American Beauty, named one of Rolling Stone magazine’s 500 greatest albums of all time in 2012, would be inducted after the band ended its 50-year-run this year with a final tour.

Fleetwood Mac’s 1975 selftitled record, which includes the hits Rhiannon and Say You Love Me, would also be placed into the music vault, as well as The Basement Tapes, the 1975 album by Bob Dylan and The Band.

A total of 26 albums and songs across all genres that were at least 25 years old were selected by a committee put together by the Recording Academy – hosts of the annual Grammy Awards – to be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

The selected music was considered to have either “qualitativ­e or historical significan­ce”.

“These works have influenced and inspired both music creators and fans for generation­s,” Neil Portnow, president and chief executive officer of the Recording Academy, said.

Among the jazz and blues inductees this year were Miles Smiles, the 1967 album by Miles Davis and his quintet, Roberta Flack’s 1969 record First Take, and Ella Fitzgerald’s and Louis Armstrong’s collaborat­ive 1956 album Ella and Louis.

Punk new-wave band Blondie’s disco-influenced Heart of Glass would also enter the Grammy Hall of Fame, along with Little Eva’s 1962 pop song The Loco-Motion and Joan Jett & The Blackheart­s’ I Love Rock ’n’ Roll. – Reuters

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