As of the of 2025, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Is Missing These Artists

Now that the Class of 2025 has been inducted, we can take a little break before the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame announces the nominees for the Class of 2026. And everyone who knows an inkling about music probably can name one to five artists who have yet to be inducted.

Over the years, I have written until I finally threw up about how much the Hall missed out over the years in making it the all-inclusive institution that the music it celebrates truly is. I still believe the classes should be bigger. And those who get in should have at least 60% of the fan votes. But, again, I am a very small fish in a big ocean. In the big scheme of things, at least the current leaders of the Hall are recognizing the problems and are attempting to rectify them. Unfortunately, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame will NEVER be as inclusive as, let’s say, Goldmine magazine’s imaginary Hall of Fame is. Their’s is based upon an artist having multiple Top 40 hits on Billboard‘s Hot 100 singles chart and Top 200 album chart.

Not to mention the daily argument that rock & roll fans have over the definition of rock & roll. Is it limited the artists played on classic rock and alternative rock radio stations, primarily the music of the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties? Or is the music more inclusive due to the multitude of mutations and influences of various narrow forms have on each other? Me? I think by now we all know that I am in the all inclusive camp. My personal collection is full of all kinds of music, though I will admit that I am lacking many records from the Fifties and Sixties. However, I DO own some jazz, country, hip hop, R&B, soul, punk, new wave, pop, etc., besides rock music. I can spot influences within music even though I have absolutely no clue as to how the artist can make his or her instrument make those sounds.

Since the induction, I have been researching many of my favorite Rock Hall websites that keep track of those artists still sitting outside looking in to the Hall. My two favorites are Future Legends of Rock and Not in the Hall of Fame/music. Those two are very thorough with their information and are much better than I am with keeping abreast of Hall news. Not in the Hall has a committee that ranks artists according to many different parameters to determine who deserves induction the most. Their rankings are pretty bang-on. On the other hand, Future Legends is stuffed full of information. They have a voting section for you to vote for your favorite artists for induction. Once you do, you can discover information about the artist along with the predicted percentage of their eventual induction. Additionally, the site has information concerning who is eligible for induction and other Hall news.

So, whenever I get the urge to venture back into this whole Hall of Fame subject, the first place I always go to are those two sites. They are the best.

I have spent the weekend compiling, editing and re-editing a list of 300 artists who all deserve induction into the Hall of Fame. As far as I am concerned, these are all artist who should be in the Hall as a performer, influence, contributor or for musical excellence. I had at one time 364 names, but I had to remove relatively obscure favorites like The Style Council or Dexys Midnight Runners or New Radicals. As much as I love these artists, I cannot in good faith put them ahead of more deserving artists. Still, they all have a home in MY Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

I have identified 300 artists who are all eligible for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2026. Eventually, I will narrow down this huge list of deserving artists down to who I believe are the 50 artists who are most important in the annals of rock & roll in a future blog, including the 15 whom I believe will be nominated and the seven I think will be inducted as performers. But that is in the near future.

Right now, let’s just consider the artists who should be considered for induction. I think you will find this initial list fairly comprehensive. One could make arguments for some of these artists not to be included, while some of you might identify artists who you feel justified in having on a list such as this. That’s what makes this musical art form so compelling to a large majority of three generations, Baby Boomers, Gen X and Millennials. I’m still not sure of rock’s importance in the lives of Gen Z. My list is in alphabetical order.

  1. Bryan Adams
  2. Ryan Adams
  3. Christina Aguilera
  4. Alice in Chains
  5. Alicia Keys
  6. America
  7. Tori Amos
  8. Anthrax
  9. Fiona Apple
  10. Arrested Development
  11. Ashford & Simpson
  12. The B-52’s
  13. Bachman-Turner Overdrive
  14. Backstreet Boys
  15. Bad Brains
  16. Bad Religion
  17. Badfinger
  18. Erykah Badu
  19. Anita Baker
  20. Afrika Bambaataa
  21. The Bangles
  22. Bauhaus
  23. Beck
  24. Big Star
  25. Björk
  26. The Black Crowes
  27. Black Flag
  28. Blink-182
  29. Blood, Sweat & Tears
  30. Kurtis Blow
  31. Blue Cheer
  32. Blue Öyster Cult
  33. Blur
  34. Bone Thugz-N-Harmony
  35. Boogie Down Productions
  36. Boston
  37. Boyz II Men
  38. The Breeders
  39. Garth Brooks
  40. Jeff Buckley
  41. Tim Buckley
  42. Johnny Burnette & the Rock N Roll Trio
  43. Buzzcocks
  44. Glen Campbell
  45. Can
  46. Captain Beefheart
  47. Mariah Carey
  48. The Carpenters
  49. Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
  50. Tracy Chapman
  51. The Chemical Brothers
  52. Chic
  53. The Chicks
  54. Patsy Cline
  55. Cocteau Twins
  56. Coldplay
  57. Ornette Coleman
  58. Phil Collins
  59. John Coltrane
  60. The Commodores
  61. The Cranberries
  62. Jim Croce
  63. The Crystals
  64. The Cult
  65. Culture Club
  66. Cypress Hill
  67. D’Angelo
  68. Daft Punk
  69. Dick Dale
  70. The Damned
  71. De La Soul
  72. Dead Kennedys
  73. Derek & the Dominos
  74. Rick Derringer
  75. Destiny’s Child
  76. Devo
  77. Dinosaur Jr.
  78. Dio
  79. DMX
  80. Dr. Dre
  81. Drive-By Truckers
  82. Echo & the Bunnymen
  83. Emerson, Lake & Palmer
  84. En Vogue
  85. Brian Eno
  86. Eric B. & Rakim
  87. Gloria Estefan
  88. Faith No More
  89. Marianne Faithfull
  90. The Fall
  91. Fanny
  92. The Fifth Dimension
  93. Ella Fitzgerald
  94. Roberta Flack
  95. The Flaming Lips
  96. The Flying Burrito Brothers
  97. Fugazi
  98. Fugees
  99. The Funk Brothers
  100. Rory Gallagher
  101. Gang of Four
  102. Garbage
  103. Gloria Gaynor
  104. Gorillaz
  105. Grand Funk Railroad
  106. The Grass Roots
  107. The Guess Who
  108. Merle Haggard
  109. Herbie Hancock
  110. Emmylou Harris
  111. PJ Harvey
  112. Donny Hathaway
  113. Lauryn Hill
  114. Hole
  115. The Human League
  116. Humble Pie
  117. Hüsker Dü
  118. Ice Cube
  119. Billy Idol
  120. INXS
  121. Iron Butterfly
  122. Iron Maiden
  123. The J. Geils Band
  124. Joe Jackson
  125. The Jam
  126. Rick James
  127. Tommy James & the Shondells
  128. Jan & Dean
  129. Jane’s Addiction
  130. Jellyfish
  131. Waylon Jennings
  132. The Jesus and Mary Chain
  133. Jethro Tull
  134. Jewel
  135. George Jones
  136. Grace Jones
  137. Norah Jones
  138. Rickie Lee Jones
  139. Joy Division/New Order
  140. KC & the Sunshine Band
  141. Ben E. King
  142. King Crimson
  143. Korn
  144. Lenny Kravitz
  145. Kris Kristofferson
  146. Fela Kuti
  147. LaBelle
  148. Huey Lewis & the News
  149. Lil Wayne
  150. Limp Bizkit
  151. Linkin Park
  152. Little Feat
  153. Living Colour
  154. Los Lobos
  155. Love
  156. Loretta Lynne
  157. Marilyn Manson
  158. The Marvelettes
  159. John Mayer
  160. MC Hammer
  161. Meat Loaf
  162. Megadeth
  163. Natalie Merchant
  164. The Meters
  165. Midnight Oil
  166. Ministry
  167. Kylie Minogue
  168. Minutemen
  169. The Misfits
  170. Moby
  171. The Modern Lovers
  172. Modest Mouse
  173. The Monkees
  174. Alanis Morissette
  175. Giorgio Moroder
  176. Mötley Crüe
  177. Mötorhead
  178. Mott the Hoople
  179. Muse
  180. My Bloody Valentine
  181. My Morning Jacket
  182. Nas
  183. Neu!
  184. The Neville Brothers
  185. New Edition
  186. New York Dolls
  187. Olivia Newton-John
  188. Harry Nilsson
  189. No Doubt
  190. *NSYNC
  191. Ted Nugent
  192. Gary Numan
  193. Oasis
  194. Sinead O’Connor
  195. Odetta
  196. The Offspring
  197. P!nk
  198. Pantera
  199. Gram Parsons
  200. Pavement
  201. Pet Shop Boys
  202. Peter, Paul & Mary
  203. Liz Phair
  204. Phish
  205. Pixies
  206. The Pogues
  207. The Pointer Sisters
  208. Poison
  209. Iggy Pop
  210. John Prine
  211. Procol Harum
  212. The Prodigy
  213. The Psychedelic Furs
  214. Public Image Ltd.
  215. Suzi Quatro
  216. Queen Latifah
  217. Queens of the Stone Age
  218. Rancid
  219. The Raspberries
  220. REO Speedwagon
  221. The Replacements
  222. Paul Revere & the Raiders
  223. Cliff Richard & the Shadows
  224. Robyn
  225. The Roots
  226. Diana Ross
  227. Rufus
  228. The Runaways
  229. Ry Cooder
  230. Sade
  231. Joe Satriani
  232. Boz Scaggs
  233. Screamin’ Jay Hawkins
  234. Neil Sedaka
  235. Selena
  236. Shakira
  237. The Shangri-La’s
  238. Simple Minds
  239. Siouxsie & the Banshees
  240. Slade
  241. Slayer
  242. Sleater-Kinney
  243. Slipknot
  244. The Smashing Pumpkins
  245. Elliott Smith
  246. The Smiths
  247. Snoop Dogg
  248. Sonic Youth
  249. The Sonics
  250. Sparks
  251. Britney Spears
  252. The Specials
  253. Spice Girls
  254. Squeeze
  255. Billy Squier
  256. Steppenwold
  257. Sufjan Stevens
  258. Sting
  259. Stone Roses
  260. Stone Temple Pilots
  261. Stray Cats
  262. The Strokes
  263. Styx
  264. Sublime
  265. Suede
  266. Sugarcubes
  267. Suicide
  268. Sun Ra
  269. Supertramp
  270. The Sweet
  271. System of a Down
  272. Talk Talk
  273. Tangerine Dream
  274. Tears for Fears
  275. Television
  276. Thin Lizzy
  277. Three Dog Night
  278. TLC
  279. Tool
  280. Peter Tosh
  281. Toots & the Maytals
  282. The Turtles
  283. Shania Twain
  284. Luther Vandross
  285. Suzanne Vega
  286. Violent Femmes
  287. Joe Walsh
  288. War
  289. Weezer
  290. Paul Weller
  291. Mary Wells
  292. Barry White
  293. Wilco
  294. Lucinda Williams
  295. Steve Winwood
  296. Wu-Tang Clan
  297. X
  298. XTC
  299. “Weird Al” Yankovic
  300. Yeah Yeah Yeahs

My rankings and predictions are coming soon.

Introducing Tamar Berk & Her Brilliant’OCD’

On September 5, 2025, a relatively unknown artist from San Diego released her fifth solo album of the current decade. The artist is not another glammed-up chanteuse entering her twenties with sexuality to spare. Au contraire! This the work of a seasoned veteran of the indie scene who self-releases her albums on a website geared to help this types of artists get their work out to the public known as Bandcamp. The artist’s name is Tamar Berk, and she’s not an overnight sensation. 

Tamar has been banging around in indie bands, initially in the great Chicago indie scene of the Nineties, with the likes of bigger name acts such as Liz Phair, Smashing Pumpkins, Urge Overkill and Material Issue in a power pop band called Starball. For whatever the reason, Starball never broke through commercially. After that struggle, Tamar with her husband moved to another indie-oriented city, Portland, Oregon, to become a teacher during the day in order to make ends meet while playing in bands at night to keep reaching for that elusive musical validation. Eventually, the couple and their daughter packed up for a move to San Diego where Tamar eventually gave up the education world in order to put serious work into her solo career. Like many people in her situation, she found that the world had changed after the pandemic with the time being ripe to dive into her music.

Berk kicked off her solo career during the post-pandemic year of 2021 with the release of her debut album entitled The Restless Dream of Youth. This was a confident and assertive debut. But, since Tamar Berk lacked any kind of distribution or label deal, her music was not reaching the masses. However, a word-of-mouth campaign organically organized.

In 2022, as I was reading about newer power pop artists, I came across this new female artist named Tamar Berk. The blog writer wrote a small blurb about this new album she had released called Start at the End. So, I immediately went to Bandcamp to listen to her music. While listening to this album, I discovered that this was Tamar’s second solo album and was written in an effort to come out the emotions surrounding her father’s recent unexpected death in which she covered in rawness on her sophomore effort. After losing my own mother a short four years earlier, I could relate to the darker lyrics that still screamed about some hope in the aftermath of a loss of a parent. Plus, I enjoyed her celebration of the sounds of the Seventies and Eighties in her songs. Immediately, I order that album since I enjoyed so much.

Apparently, shortly after the release of her second solo album, she had to deal with the death of her father. So as a form of therapy, Tamar put all the lyrical darkness into her third album called Tiny Injuries. This time a couple of blogs plugged her effort on this emotional album that is dark lyrically but set to music melodies that seem to be searching for hope. It is that very dichotomy in which great pop/rock music can spawn.

Then came the Tamar Berk album that changed everything for me. And this was in 2024, when Ms. Berk released Good Times for a Change. All of a sudden, with the past placed in the past, Tamar had begun to take her talent to a whole new level. The musicality of her and the team increased. She was rocking in a rock niche that was equally grounded in the past with Fleetwood Mac, ELO and The Beatles while nodding to former peers like Liz Phair and Material Issue and still appealing to possible fans of current artists such as HAIM. The shame, in my mind, was that few people were listening to this wonderful talent’s music. However, each and every time a person to whom I suggested Tamar Berk’s music, those people became fans as well.

When you look back at her beginnings, you get the sense that Tamar Berk deserves musical recognition. Not everybody can “act” like she’s reading music while taking piano lessons as a youngster only to be learning to play by ear. Yet, her ear for melody was melded by her ballet background listening to classical music during training sessions, and afterwards as well, and loving those classic Disney soundtracks of the pre-Nineties comeback.

When I asked her about the first album she ever bought with her own money as a youth, she enthusiastically stated the album was Totally Hot, the 1978 album by Olivia Newton John, one that I actually had owned back in the day but probably sold for beer money in college – not my first mistake! Actually, from the sounds of things from our interview, Tamar is very much a product of the MTV years, as she listed Madonna, Tears for Fears, Suzanne Vega, Sinéad O’Connor and The Beatles, with large doses of the classic Disney soundtracks along with Bach and Mozart.

When it came to making the switching from playing to actually writing music, Tamar replied, “I remember writing a little classical piece inspired by Mozart when I was very young, and I was always making up songs in my head. But when I bought my first guitar in high school in high school, that’s when I started writing full songs. They probably sounded a bit like Edie Brickell back then.”

Berk has been playing piano since she was five, but she has learned to play a multitude of instruments in addition to piano and guitar, keyboard/synthesizer, bass guitar and even a little drums. “Basically whatever I need to bring a song to life. I love the freedom of being able to shape the sound myself from start to finish.” After getting the song structure down, Tamar then trusts her coterie of musicians to finally bring the songs to life.

All of this led up to our recent conversation that Tamar and I had about her excellent new album entitled OCD, with which she is afflicted. This is easily her finest album to date. She seems to have gained more confidence in her vision for her music. If you listen to her catalog chronologically, you will her the music become stronger and the production sounding more and more polished without losing her indie rock appeal and power pop veneer. According to Berk, most of her previous albums relied on previously written sketches of songs. But this release Tamar claims is nearly freshly written songs that she persevered to make sound as close to what she heard in her head.

I specifically spoke to Tamar about a group of the songs that makeup the backbone of OCD. 

To begin, Tamar claims that naming the album took a bit of time. But once she was assured by her friends that OCD was not the obvious and pretentious title she thought it might be, the album was set. For the first time, Berk predominantly wrote a whole new set of songs, which was different than in her past. “So, if I look at the [track] list for this album (OCD)…has probably the most number of new songs than my other albums.” According to Tamar, she was working toward a current indie sound that still hearkens back to the sounds of the Seventies and Eighties. The songs on her latest album “are the ones that pull real emotion…that’s what I’m really attracted to.”

From start to finish, this is easily Tamar Berk’s finest album to date. Hell, one might even say she is the Leslie Jones of the indie rock scene. By that I mean, she is finally blossoming into an artist at an age when most rockers are resting on their laurels. It seems that she is beginning to find the peak of her artistry. In response, Berk said, “For the most part I’ve heard the same story you just told me that this [album] has legs and people are listening to this one over and over and over. That is the most important thing because you know most like people have all my albums, but it’s the going back and revisiting it. That feels like has sort of emotional connection.”

Two the strongest songs are kick off Side 2. The flip side begins with a great song tale of paranoia and insecurity entitled “I Had a Dream I Was Lost in an Auditorium.” What I thought might be a Spinal Tap-like moment of hilarity is instead one in which Berk is expressing her vulnerabilities of going on stage. “One of the things is that always worry about is that I’m gonna forget lyrics.”

The other is the great “Indiesleaze 2005.” This song was originally written in 2005 as a stab at the sound of the day back then. But, the song was abandoned for nearly 20 years before she and her drummer/co-producer Matt Walker decided to deconstruct the song and bring this monster sound that combines many eras of rock music.

Other songs on this album that stick to you like rubber cement are “You Ruined This City for Me,” which Berk says is based on a true story, “OCD, where Tamar uses her mental health issues as an anthem and the very poignant “Ghost Stories,” the album’s closer. “You Ruined This City for Me” has a near-Lindsey Buckingham sound to it. If Tamar were wanting to break into the mainstream, I really hear “OCD” being covered by current rock darlings HAIM. But, nothing in Tamar Berk’s catalog is as hauntingly beautiful as “Ghost Stories.”And they say heartbreak lies/in the stories we tell of our lives/and the things said or never mentioned.” Beautiful lyrics that an criminally unsigned artist says about life that is a philosophical truth.

So, late-Boomers and Gen X-ers who are hunting or hoping for some new music that evokes both the sounds of our youth and the voices of our lives, check out Tamar Berk’s whole catalog. But, this album is the place to start. Please check out her catalog at tamarberk.bandcamp.com/music or on your favorite streaming platform.