Entertainment

Janet Jackson, Def Leppard, The Cure join Rock Hall of Fame

Janet Jackson joins her brother Michael and the Jackson 5 as members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, earning induction on Thursday along with Stevie Nicks and the top fan vote-getter, Def Leppard.

Radiohead, Roxy Music, The Zombies also new inductees

Janet Jackson will join Def Leppard, Stevie Nicks, Radiohead, the Cure, Roxy Music and the Zombies as the newest members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. (Amy Harris/Invision/Associated Press)

Janet Jackson joins her brother Michael and the Jackson 5 as members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, earning induction on Thursday along with Stevie Nicks and the top fan vote-getter, Def Leppard.

Radiohead, the Cure, Roxy Music and the Zombies will also be ushered in next spring at the 34th induction ceremony. It will be held March 29 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.

"Thank you Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. I am truly honoured and I am happy to be in there with my brothers," Jackson said on Thursday.

Jackson's induction comes after her third time as nominee and many saw it as overdue, given her prowess as a hitmaker with All For YouThat's the Way Love GoesNastyTogether Again and What Have You Done For Me Lately.

Her career has suffered from the fallout after the infamous 2004 Super Bowl appearance where her bare breast was briefly exposed. Jackson became eligible for the rock hall in 2007 and wasn't nominated until 2016.

The Roots' Questlove, in a social media post earlier this year, said her exclusion had been "highly criminal." He cited the influence of her 1986 album Control, which he said set off the New Jack Swing trend.

"This was no one's kid sister," he wrote.

It will be Nicks' second induction into the rock hall, since she's already there as a member of Fleetwood Mac.

She launched a solo career in 1981 with her duet with the late Tom Petty, Stop Draggin' My Heart Around. Other hits followed, including Edge of SeventeenStand Back and I Will Run to You.

The solo induction for Stevie Nicks, seen here performing in September, is her second. She was previously inducted as a member of Fleetwood Mac. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images for iHeartMedia)

Fan favourite

Def Leppard earned more than half a million votes from fans, which are incorporated into more than 1,000 ballots from artists, historians, industry professionals and past winners in deciding who gets honoured. The British heavy metal band with a pop sheen were huge sellers in the 1980s on the back of songs like Photograph and Pour Some Sugar on Me.

British heavy metal band Def Leppard, seen performing in 2016, earned more than half a million votes from fans, which join more than 1,000 ballots from industry professionals and past winners in deciding who gets honoured. (Jeremy Long/Lebanon Daily News/Associated Press)

Frontman Joe Elliott said he was initially ambivalent toward the honour until Jon Bon Jovi suggested it would change his life.

"When I look at the list of who's in, it's just obvious you'd want to be in that club, isn't it?" he told Billboard earlier this year.

"When you think that every band that means anything in the world, starting from the Beatles and the Stones and any artist that influenced them — your Chuck Berrys, your Little Richards, etc., etc. — then of course you want to be in. Why wouldn't you?"

Will Radiohead show?

Def Leppard, Nicks and Roxy Music were voted in during their first years as nominees. Other 2019 nominees who didn't make the cut included LL Cool J, Devo, Rage Against the Machine, MC5, John Prine, Todd Rundgren and Kraftwerk.

Thom Yorke of Radiohead performs in St. Gallen, Switzerland. There's some question about whether the British band will shrug its collective shoulder at its induction. (Gian Ehrenzeller/Keystone/Associated Press)

There's some question about whether Radiohead will shrug its collective shoulder as a nominee. The English band seemed like generic grunge rockers on their initial hit Creep, but with the album OK Computer and beyond have become consistent sonic pioneers. Among its rock hall class, Radiohead has the most impact on the current music scene.

In an interview with Rolling Stone earlier this year, Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood said "I don't care" when asked about the rock hall. Bandmate Ed O'Brien said, "culturally, I don't understand it. I think it might be a quintessentially American thing."

The Cure and frontman Robert Smith resist their initial label as goth rockers, champions of fans who like black makeup, black clothes and darkly romantic songs. They have a durable catalog of hits, including Friday I'm in LoveBoys Don't CryPictures of You and Let's Go to Bed.

Robert Smith of The Cure, seen here performing at New York's Madison Square Garden in 2016, has created a durable catalog of hits, including Friday I'm in Love, Boys Don't Cry and Pictures of You. (Neilson Barnard/Getty Images)

Roxy Music came out of the 1970s progressive rock scene and had hits with Love is the Drug and More Than This. Dapper member Bryan Ferry had a successful solo career and Brian Eno has been an influential producer.

The heyday of British rockers the Zombies' career was the 1960s, with big sellers She's Not There and Time of the Season.

The hall will announce ticket sales for March's ceremony next month. HBO and SiriusXM will carry the event.