'Dream On' Inducted Into Grammy Hall Of Fame

The Recording Academy has a Hall of Fame for songs and albums 25 years or older that illustrate historical significance. This year, Aerosmith's "Dream On" is among the tracks included in the 2018 class. The song is from the band's 1973 self-titled debut. It's also one of their most famous songs and a live show staple.
Other inductees in the class of 2018 include Whitney Houston's "I Will Always Love You"; Dr. Dre's 1992 debut The Chronic, Public Enemy's 1989 track "Fight The Power," Nirvana's Nevermind and David Bowie's "Space Oddity."
The official release from the Recording Academy continues:
Queen's fourth studio album, A Night At The Opera (1972), the Rolling Stones' chart-topping "Paint It Black" (1966), Johnny Cash's seminal Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison (1968), Linda Ronstadt's fifth studio album, Heart Like A Wheel (1974), Motown group the Four Tops' single "I Can't Help Myself" (1965), and Gladys Knight & The Pips' classic "I Heard It Through The Grapevine" (1967) each made the list.
Also earning a spot in the 2018 class is Jimi Hendrix's album Band Of Gypsys (1970), Sam Cooke's classic single "Bring It On Home To Me" (1962), Parliament's infectious track "Flash Light" (1978), Andy Williams' smooth interpretation of "Moon River" (1962), Billy Paul's ballad "Me And Mrs. Jones" (1972), and Leon Russell's iconic "A Song For You" (1970).
Representing jazz, the King Cole Trio's 1946 song "(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons," Billie Holiday's 1937 version of "My Man" and Louis Armstrong & His Hot Five's 1927 track "Savoy Blues" have been inducted.
The 60th GRAMMY Awards will take place at New York City's Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Jan. 28. The telecast will be broadcast live on CBS at 7:30–11 p.m. ET/4:30–8 p.m. PT.
All in all, I'd say this is an incredibly song class of inductees.
Reader Comments (11)
There are a lot of great releases on this list. Thanks for posting it Allyson. 👍
Everyone knows my snark re: these sorts of things. But I agree. This is a nicely varied list of inductees. Doesn't matter much. Good, nonetheless, to see such a varied and nuanced list.
[Sidebar: personally, I prefer Dolly's version of "IWALY" to the overwrought version that Whitney did . .. and I say that with part of my tongue stuck in my cheek, but not all of it. I guess I feel like feeling matters more than projection.]
And . . . still no love for Andy? Fletch? Anyone?
Still, there’s no denying Whitney killed it with her version. I speculate the oversinging is a natural byproduct of Clive Davis pushing her in the studio. It would have been interesting to see how her version would have turned out with the mobs in another producer’s hands.