Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 2, 2021, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE C2
C2 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2021 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COMARTS ● LIFE I MUSIC
The toll that can take on a racialized
individual is significant. “There’s a
sense of just being drained, emotional-
ly exhausted, this reluctance to engage
or a kind of hard shell or defensiveness
that comes up,” Williams says. “I mean,
all of those are the effects of disorien-
tation and the recovery — it takes time
to recover from playing a role.”
Williams sees our present moment,
where anyone with a social media
account can hide behind a computer
and say whatever they want online, as a
double-edged sword. “It kind of loosens
people up to say what they actually
think and feel. Polite social conventions
restrained us from actually speaking
our minds in person. And so, although
Twitter’s often a very unhealthy place
to be, it’s where we can see the actual
heart of people. This is where we see
what people wish they could say in
person, what they wish they could do
if consequences were removed. And
so it’s giving us a sense of just the true
ugliness of the world. And the flipside
is that we also see the courage and
the beauty of other people pushing
back. We see the best and the worst of
people.”
Understanding that much of his
readership will never have experi-
enced having been racialized, Williams
hopes his personal experiences laid
out in Disorientation offer a better
understanding of how taxing it can be,
and will spur readers to learn more. “I
think so many people come to this con-
versation feeling deficient, and feeling
like they don’t know quite what to do or
where to start. But see, you’ve made a
right step, just by being interested.”
ben.sigurdson@freepress.mb.ca
COLOUR ● FROM C1
CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Williams in Toronto after winning the 2019 Scotiabank Giller Prize for his novel Reproduction
Eclectic, electric
induction ceremony
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame welcomes The Go Go’s, Carole King,
Jay-Z, the Foo Fighters, Tina Turner and Todd Rundgren
C LEVELAND — Jay-Z’s added another title to a resumé that includes rapper, songwriter,
Grammy winner, billionaire busi-
ness mogul and global icon — hall of
famer.
The self-proclaimed “greatest rapper
alive” was inducted Saturday night as
part of an eclectic 2021 Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame class that included Foo
Fighters, Carole King, Tina Turner,
The Go-Gos and Todd Rundgren.
Once a drug dealer on the tough
streets of Brooklyn, New York, Jay-Z
rose through the rap world with hard,
straight-forward songs that often por-
trayed the struggles of Black people in
America.
His catalogue includes songs like
Hard Knock Life, 99 Problems and
Empire State of Mind as well as 14 No.
1 albums.
Following a video introduction that
included former U.S. president Barack
Obama, LeBron James and David
Letterman, Jay-Z was inducted by
comedian Dave Chappelle, who praised
him for being an inspiration.
“He rhymed a recipe for survival,”
Chappelle said. “He embodies what the
potential of our lives can be and what
success can be.”
Paul McCartney welcomed Foo
Fighters, who have carried the mantle
as one of rock’s top arena acts. Initially,
the band was little more than a side
project for frontman Dave Grohl, who
was previously inducted as Nirvana’s
drummer.
McCartney described the parallels
between he and Grohl as both were
part of massively popular bands who
broke up.
“Do you think this guy is stalking
me?” McCartney joked.
Foo Fighters and McCartney closed
the show with the Beatles’ Get Back.
Rapper LL Cool J was enshrined for
musical excellence along with key-
boardist Billy Preston and guitarist
Randy Rhoads.
Electronic pioneers Kraftwerk, sing-
er-poet Gil Scott-Heron and Delta blues
legend Charley Patton were inducted as
early influencers and Sussex Records
founder Clarence Avant received the
Ahmet Ertegun Award.
Cool J recruited some of his heavy-
weight musical friends to usher him
into rock immortality. One of hip hop’s
first superstars was joined on stage by
Eminem and Jennifer Lopez for a pow-
erful career-spanning performance.
With New York street style and
swagger, Cool J remains a relevant
artist more than 40 years after he first
spit lyrics.
“What does LL really stand for?”
asked rapper/producer Dr. Dre in his
induction speech. “Ladies love? Living
large? Licking lips? I’m here because I
think it stands for living legend.”
Cool J then did a medley of his hits,
including Rock The Bells accompa-
nied by a bearded Eminem before
he was joined by J-Lo for All I Have.
Cool J wrapped up his blistering set
with one of his biggest hits, Mama
Said Knock You Out.
Superstar Taylor Swift opened the
show with one of King’s best-known
songs, Will You Love Me Tomorrow,
which appeared on Tapestry her sem-
inal 1971 album — a soundtrack for a
generation.
Swift gave a moving, heartfelt induc-
tion speech for one of her musical idols.
“I can’t remember a time when I
didn’t know Carole King’s music,”
Swift said, saying her parents taught
her several important lessons as a child
with one of the most important being
“that Carole King is the greatest song-
writer of all time.”
King thanked Swift “for carrying the
torch forward.” She noted other female
singers and songwriters have said they
stand on her shoulders.
“Let it not be forgotten,” King said.
“They also stand on the shoulders of
the first woman inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame. May she rest in
power, Miss Aretha Franklin.”
King then introduced Jennifer
Hudson, who performed a stunning,
rafter-shaking performance of (You
Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman
before King sang You Got A Friend.
The 81-year-old Turner, who found
her greatest success when she left
abusive husband Ike Turner, lives in
Switzerland and did not attend the
ceremony.
“If they’re still giving me awards at
81,” Turner said in a video message. “I
must have done something right.”
Keith Urban and H.E.R. performed
It’s Only Love a duet Turner did with
Bryan Adams before Mickey Guyton
took on her most iconic song, What’s
Love Got To Do With It. Then Christina
Aguilera belted out River Deep, Moun-
tain High.
Considered the greatest female
group in rock history, The Go-Go’s
emerged from Los Angeles’ punk
scene in the 1980s. The quintet broke
rules and smashed gender ceilings in a
male-dominated industry with hits like
We Got The Beat, My Lips Are Sealed
and Head Over Heels.
“They’ve been in my personal hall of
fame since I was six years old,” said ac-
tress Drew Barrymore, who mimicked
the cover of the band’s debut album,
Beauty and the Beat, during her induc-
tion speech by wrapping her body and
hair in bath towels and applying face
cream.
“Now,” she said. “My childhood fan-
tasy is fulfilled.”
Best known for soft ballads like
Hello It’s Me and Love Is The Answer,
Rundgren also had a long path to in-
duction. He’s been outspoken about the
hall’s selection process and skipped the
ceremony in protest.
“Ever defiant,” Patti Smith said in a
video presenting Rundgren.
This year’s ceremony was held for
the first time at Rocket Mortgage
FieldHouse, the 20,000-seat home of
the NBA’s Cleveland Cavaliers and
a venue familiar to Jay-Z and Foo
Fighters, who have played shows in the
arena before.
It was a return to normalcy for the
event, which was forced to go virtual in
2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Artists are not eligible for induction
until 25 years after release of their
first recording. There are lively de-
bates every year over omissions, and as
Public Enemy’s Chuck D noted during
a plaque induction ceremony on Friday
at the hall, patience is sometimes an-
other requirement for entrance.
“It ain’t no overnight thing,” he said.
“You can’t stumble into this place.”
That was certainly the case for King,
who had been eligible for enshrinement
as a solo artist since 1986. She went in
previously as a songwriter with Gerry
Goffin, her late husband, in 1990.
The ceremony will be shown on HBO
on Nov. 20.
— The Associated Press
TOM WITHERS
DAVID RICHARD / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Carole King speaks after being inducted in the performer category during the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction ceremony, Saturday in Cleveland.
DAVID RICHARD / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tina Turner speaks on screen during the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction ceremony after
being inducted in the performer category.
DAVID RICHARD / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LL Cool J performs during the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame ceremony after being receiving
the Musical Excellence Award.
C_02_Nov-02-21_FP_01.indd 2 2021-11-01 5:00 PM
;