Rock Hall of Fame Beats Country to Inducting Gram Parsons

Well it finally happened. Something that many fans of Gram Parsons and his legacy with The Byrds, The Flying Burrito Brothers, the International Submarine Band, and of course his solo work and mentorship of Emmylou Harris have been strongly advocating for is finally unfolding. Gram Parson will be inducted into the Hall of Fame.
But no, it will not be in the Country Music Hall of Fame where much of that advocacy work has been directed over the years. Instead, Gram Parsons will be going into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, which announced its newest inductees on Monday evening (4-13). Gram Parsons was only 26 when he died in 1973. November 5th, 2026 will mark his 80th birthday.
In true Gram Parsons fashion, you might have missed that Gram Parsons was one of the new Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees, because in many of the news stories and headlines about it, he wasn’t even mentioned. Phil Collins, Billy Idol, Iron Maiden, Joy Division/New Order, Oasis, Sade, Luther Vandross, and Wu-Tang Clan where the top-line names everyone was touting with only a few even paying attention to Gram.
Gram Parsons is being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame via their “Early Influence” category—the same category that got “Father of Bluegrass” Bill Monroe, and Hank Williams inducted in previous years. Gram goes in with Cuban singer Celia Cruz, Queen Latifa, MC Lyte, and Nigerian singer Fela Kuti. Country artists Emmylou Harris and Steve Earle both wrote letters of recommendation to the Rock Hall to consider Gram for induction.
Gram Parsons could have been inducted with his fellow members of The Byrds when they went into the Rock Hall in 1991. But since he was officially considered a hired hand in the band as opposed to a permanent member—despite his wildly influential role in the band’s landmark country record Sweetheart of the Rodeo—they excluded him from the induction. Now the overlooking of Gram and his musical legacy is made right.
But is it in the the wrong institution? When taking stock of the Gram Parson’s legacy, it’s pretty clear his primary influence was in country. Though he’s commonly described as a country rock guy, this is more of a misnomer due to proximity to the country rock scene as opposed to his true “early influence” on the music, which is why Gram is being recognized. Few if anyone can say they were more responsible for helping to sway West Coast music in the direction of respecting, honoring, and performing country music than Gram Parsons.
Sure, there were others, most notable fellow Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead. But in his time, the work of Garcia was mostly compartmentalized around the Bay Area scene and post-psychedelia. You can give Gram credit as a country rock pioneer too. But with the way Gram compelled the Byrds to record in Nashville and play the Grand Ole Opry, this is what truly broke down barriers and opened doors, while the music itself was decidedly country, despite the “country rock” moniker regularly assigned to it.
Granted, when Sweetheart of the Rodeo was first released in 1968, it was renounced by critics, and became a commercial flop. It was too ahead of its time—two years before the Grateful Dead’s country shift. The Byrds were also booed (or “tweeted,” since many made bird sounds) when they debuted at the Grand Ole Opry. But time has proven they were pioneers, and legends. That is why the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is making the wrong shown to Gram Parsons right.

Over the last few years, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has gone down the slippery slope of starting to induct country stars, and not just as early influences. Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson are now Rock and Roll Hall of Famers, while folks like Phil Collins and Billy Idol had to wait in line, and The Black Crowes and so many more are still on the outside looking in.
The biggest difference between the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Country Music Hall of Fame is the amount of inductees each year, and the permissiveness of the institutions. It might not be possible for the two Halls of Fame to be more polar opposite. Where the Country Music Hall of Fame only allows three inductees each year, the Rock Hall just allowed eight in via their primary category, and 13 total with their Early Influence inductees.
Just as a strong case can be made that the Country Music Hall of Fame is being way too austere in their inductions—leaving worthy names out, including performers who pass away before being able to enjoy their induction—a strong case can be made that the Rock Hall is being too permissive, diluting the importance of the honor, while also leaving the definition of “rock” more ambiguous, or simply meaning “popular music.”
But what is hard to argue against is the induction of Gram Parsons, in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, or its country counterpart. Granted, one of the reasons Gram seems to always been named, but never to be a front-runner for the Country Hall of Fame is that so many other worthy names continue to be dumped into the Veteran’s Era category from the Modern Era category that are probably more worthy or high profile than Gram. In an ideal world, Gram and others would have been inducted a decade ago, but the Country Hall backlog keeps a whole host of worthy names out.
Could we continue to see a scenario where Country Music Hall of Fame hopefuls get inducted into the Rock Hall first, especially now that the Rock Hall has opened up the doors to more and more country performers? We definitely could. A few years ago, John Prine was considered for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, though he didn’t get in. He could in the future though, while his prospects for the Country Hall feel bleak under the current system.
Dwight Yoakam continues to be systemically snubbed by the Country Music Hall of Fame. With his California legacy and cowpunk roots, could we envision as scenario where he gets inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame first? That’s not completely out of the realm of possibility. In fact, the Rock Hall might be where Dwight Yoakam fans should start training their advocacy.
But if Dwight and John Prine went into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame first, it would send a bad message. The fact that Gram Parsons is being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a wrong being done right. But it also illustrates how the insular and restrictive nature of the Country Music Hall of Fame is putting it on the outside looking into cultural relevancy.
Nobody’s asking for the Country Hall to throw the barn doors wide like the Rock Hall. But adopting something like the Rock Hall’s “Early Influence” category would allow worthy names like Gram Parsons and others to finally get in, alleviate pressure on the other categories, and give more fans an opportunity to celebrate like Gram Parsons fans are today, and to preserve the legacies of critically important and influential artists.
As Waylon Jennings who skipped his Country Hall of Fame induction once said, “We need a change.”
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April 14, 2026 @ 10:52 am
Does anyone really give a monkeys about any of these halls of fame 🤔
April 14, 2026 @ 11:27 am
Well, I’m sure people have varying degrees of how many monkeys they invest in the doings of halls of fame. But as someone who advocates for the legacies of past greats, I definitely think they’re important for codifying and preserving these legacies, especially someone like Gram Parsons who passed away so young. Dolly Parton and Willie Nelson don’t have to worry about going forgotten. As an “Early Influence,” Gram doesn’t have the chart hits to keep his legacy top of mind. All the more reason to induct him.
April 14, 2026 @ 3:43 pm
No Gram Parsons, no Eagles. He belongs in every Hall.of Fame.
April 14, 2026 @ 6:51 pm
People don’t realize how incredibly influential Gram was. He studied and appreciated the roots of country music, then created country rock as a genre that captivated the youth of a generation. Adding pedal steel, promoting the career of Emmy Lou Harris, being in the Byrds and Flying Burrito Brothers- he really made an impact on a new kind of sound that is still popular. His tragic life and death was too short for all the other innovations he could have otherwise made. Critics, learn more about this outrageous talent before you dismiss his contributions to historical, major shifts in the musical landscape that he made possible.
April 15, 2026 @ 6:52 am
There’s just one thing that I’m not sure anyone has noticed.
Gram is being inducted as an “Early Influence”. But almost everyone inducted in that category had careers that began well before rock and roll was even a thing, including country legends Hank Williams and JImmie Rodgers, but whose music styles, even if their themselves didn’t live into the rock and roll era, helped rock and roll come to existence when it did in the 1950’s.
Gram, on the other hand, had that short time between 1967 and his death in 1973; and what he was doing was already being done in Southern California by others.
This isn’t to say he shouldn’t be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame at all, because he definitely ought to be–but among the regular inductees, and not as an “Early Influence”.
Re. Gram’s promoting Emmylou Harris’ career–the other thing he did with respect to Emmy was to get her together with Linda Ronstadt, thus forming undoubtedly one of the all-time great mutual admiration societies of American pop music.
April 15, 2026 @ 7:29 am
Gram would likely never make it in under his own volition. I’m definitely no expert on the Rock Hall process, but my guess is the folks advocating for his inclusion saw the Early Influence avenue as the one that would be successful, and it was.
People saying that “early influence” shouldn’t regard artists from the 60-70s, but “early” is a relative term on a sliding scale. Early in hip-hop, Queen Latifa was definitely an influence. Gram Parsons is considered a father of country rock. A pioneer of it. So he was an early influence of that vein of music. Hank Williams, Bob Wills, Billy Monroe, they were inducted decades ago. Now decades have passed, and this has exposed how other “early” artists have influenced the music in ways that have born fruit decades later.
April 14, 2026 @ 6:45 pm
To answer your question: yes. Plenty of us do. Don’t let the fact that you don’t care about them ruin it for the rest of us
April 15, 2026 @ 6:22 am
Norrie asked a question. That hardly “ruins it” for me, even though I am interested in both those HOF’s. Sorry your experience is lessened from his inquiry.
April 15, 2026 @ 11:08 am
“Does anyone care about (fill int he blank)?” is not a question. It is in the form of a question, but everyone reading it understands that there is an implied “you really shouldn’t care about …”
April 14, 2026 @ 11:26 am
When I was at the Country Hall of Fame in Nashville last summer, there was a whole section about the West Coast scene, its history and influence, including Gram and the Burritos. Someone there just needs to join up the dots.
April 14, 2026 @ 7:47 pm
The acm awards were started as a west coast organization in I believe 1964. So the west coast folks could be recognized and get awards. That’s also the time when Nashville wasn’t the only city for country music there were 5. Fm radio was just starting in 1962. Nashville was also a dry town until 1967.
April 14, 2026 @ 9:09 pm
As someone who hung around the west coast country scene starting in the early 70s I think Nashville has always tried to downplay its influence, from Buck in Bakersfield to Dwight in LA. I spent many nights at the Palomino in North Hollywood seeing acts like Hoyt Axton, Linda Ronstadt and Rick Nelson in the 70s to Rose Maddox, Lucinda Williams, Rosie Flores, Jim Lauderdale, Dale Watson, Buddy Miller and more at the Barn Dance in the 90s. Gram’s influence has permeated the west coast country scene since before he died but Nashville has done its best to ignore him and other acts based elsewhere. Hell, they’d ignore Texas if they could.
April 15, 2026 @ 1:05 pm
You see Kris and Rita and Marty Mull at The Troubadour? When I googled who Marty Mull was from that song I was pretty surprised the guy it ended up being. Music wise that seems like a great time and place.
April 15, 2026 @ 8:53 pm
If it was the show when Rita was pregnant, yes. It was definitely a great time and place and I’m very happy to have had the opportunity to have lived here back then. Between the Palomino, the Troubadour and the Whiskey, there was a show worth seeing practically every night.
April 14, 2026 @ 11:33 am
The R&R Hall of Fame is so watered down that it is meaningless. It was cool at first, but they’ve let too many in too fast.
That being said, I’m glad they still remember Gram. I doubt most people, including those in the music industry today, even know who he was.
April 14, 2026 @ 11:57 am
Donna Summer beat Rush into the R&R HoF, and now Wu Tang Clan will beat The Guess Who. Give me a break.
For as egregious as the Country HoF’s backlog is, for anybody who hasn’t been inducted, there are a dozen names for whom an equal case could be made who have also been snubbed. The R&R HoF, on the other hand, is just a giant mess of undeserving inductees and undeserved snubs, and has been for decades now.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:08 pm
It’s funny how both sports and music have halls of fame with the opposite problem. You’ve got the Pro Football HoF that is too restrictive (still can’t believe Belichick didn’t get in year 1) but the Basketball HoF is a watered down joke.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:26 pm
I think the Baseball HOF is a better example as “too restrictive”. There have been entire years that have gone by where nobody gets into the Baseball hall unless it is via the Veterans Committee.
The Football HOF usually inducts a full class every year. Belichick should have gotten in, but it turns out being a dick to everyone you meet in your professional life has consequences. Who knew!?
April 14, 2026 @ 1:25 pm
Belichick is still coaching for crisssakes. He took the job at North Carolina because he didn’t land a HC job in the NFL. But there’s still a lot of speculation that he would leave UNC if he gets an offer from an NFL team. (And considereing how he did at UNC last year, they probably wouldn’t be all that broken up if he leaves.)
It’s very likely that some voters passed over Belichick because they don’t believe he’s actually retired. Just because he was deemed retired by the NFL and placed on the HoF ballot does not mean that every voter has to go along with that.
The only thing more ridiculous than this endless carping because someone failed to get in on the first ballot is what happened with Ichriro Suzuki in the Baseball hall. He got in on the first ballot with something like 398 out of 400 votes and there were people who were upset and demanding an investigation over why the vote was not unanimous.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:56 pm
Rush got hosed because Jann Wenner didn’t care for prog rock. He kept The Monkees out even though they were huge and still have a real fan base.
The Rock Hall has become too diffuse and ultimately made themselves less relevant as a result.
April 15, 2026 @ 8:48 am
Michael Nesmith was more well known and was doing country rock in 1966. The same year Parsons and International Submarine Band released their album (1966 ) Some tracks on that album sound quite similar to Nesmith’s Monkee sound.
April 15, 2026 @ 9:24 am
I’ve always thought that “What Am I Doin’ Hangin’ ‘Round”, co-written by Michael Martin Murphey, is a country song.
April 15, 2026 @ 9:47 am
This is neither here nor there, but, MMM, is a cool show at his 3M Ranch in New Mexico.
April 15, 2026 @ 9:50 am
So did I. I had that Monkees album when I was in high school and it was my favorite cut.. I had grown up on country and rock pretty equally so I loved country rock from the beginning.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:06 pm
The rock hall is a mess. I know everything traces back to Rocket 88, but including hip hop is odd even though it’s a branch on the same tree as rock. Pick a lane.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:30 pm
I feel so strongly that hip-hop should open its own hall of fame that I hope to write an article about it soon as a country music writer. Hip-hop is a massive genre with huge superstars and important influences. It gets lost in the Rock Hall process, while also being accused of being marginalized. I get the pop intersection with rock, but hip-hop should stand on its own feet. Jay-Z and Beyonce are both worth over a billion dollars. Buy an old building in a blighted part of Brooklyn, build a shrine to hip-hop, and start preserving that legacy as opposed to kneeling at the alter of Jann Wenner.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:51 pm
Jay-Z and Beyonce are both worth over a billion dollars. Buy an old building in a blighted part of Brooklyn, build a shrine to hip-hop, and start preserving that legacy as opposed to kneeling at the alter of Jann Wenner.
That’s an idea! Unfortunately, I don’t think either of them have that kind of depth. Jay calls himself “Che Guevara with bling.” He worships money and fame and I don’t think he’s the type of person who could care about creativity and art to do something honoring something but himself. She is an empty skirt/dress/bodysuit or whatever her handlers dress her up in that particular day.
April 14, 2026 @ 8:51 pm
Or Snoop could buy a building in Inglewood or South LA and invite more of the rap pioneers to join in.
April 15, 2026 @ 6:43 am
But does he care anymore? I think he loves money and what he’s become in the mainstream. Actually, he’s done more with mainstreaming weed into American culture than doing anything musical.
Post-Beatles, Ringo became known as a celebrity more than as a musician until he made the effort to get back to music. He’s still touring today.
I don’t think Snoop cares about music much. He won’t do a Marty Stuart and open a museum, collect memorabilia and network with like-minded people. I don’t think he a passion for much expect money and weed.
April 15, 2026 @ 6:50 am
They could actually revisit hip hop history and set up an east coast/west coast thing with dueling halls of fame
April 15, 2026 @ 7:43 am
I can’t wait for your “Rap needs a separate, but equal Hall of Fame” article
JOKING
April 15, 2026 @ 11:39 am
Damn, you really zinged ‘em with that one sport
April 14, 2026 @ 12:07 pm
I’d rather see Justin Earl Towns than Wu Clan Tang in the Rock Hall of Fame.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:30 pm
Justin Townes Earle – you’re a real fan…
April 14, 2026 @ 12:31 pm
I think rock n roll hall of fame is just the music hall of fame is fine imo. Gram parsons was also on Rolling Stones top 100 artists all time list. He is one of my favorite artists ever so I’m thrilled for him to get any recognition. Hickory wind and return of the grievous angel are all time great country songs.
April 14, 2026 @ 12:37 pm
I was stunned at this induction. Not because Gram wasn’t a big deal, but because I didn’t really envision these people doing that kind of esoteric dive into the background of this story.
I also didn’t think there was the kind of respect for country music itself. Personalities like Willie and Dolly are the outliers who people who “don’t like country” could embrace and not look like some square-assed hick. Perhaps Emmylou and Steve Earle had some influence in the process.
April 14, 2026 @ 8:54 pm
I think you underestimate the influence Gram had on current performers and not just the west coast country cats.
April 15, 2026 @ 6:34 am
What I was skeptical about was the powers that be in the Hall digging into the story.
Unfortunately, they’ve been “inclusive” as a virtue signal and a talented guy like Gram who had a short shelf life and happens to have been a white guy doesn’t fit that profile.
Lauryn Hill had one huge album each as a solo act and with The Fugees. Not enough in my opinion. Shakira’s nomination was silly, and I think she’s not much of a singer. Jeff Buckley had one album out before his death and one posthumous album. Again, why?
MC Lyte as an early influence? Queen Latifah fits that category better. Plus she’s become a popular actress and a shrewd careerist even if it means portraying a 50-year-old woman beating the crap out of men as “The Equalizer”.
I’m glad Gram got recognized; I’m just surprised.
April 15, 2026 @ 7:24 am
This happened because The Rolling Stones, and along with Emmylou Harris, Steve Earle, Elvis Costello, and others wrote letters of recommendation to whoever the powers that be are these days now, and made a convincing argument. Good on all of them for stepping up and righting awrong that was done when Gram was initially left off during The Byrds induction.
April 15, 2026 @ 7:36 am
The Stones and the other Elvis would have some influence. Good on them, indeed.
April 14, 2026 @ 1:29 pm
Doug Sahm next.
April 14, 2026 @ 2:49 pm
I’m not sure how anyone post-1956 is an “early influence” on rock, but I’ll take it. Meanwhile the genre he influenced most thinks he’s no Kenny Chesney…
April 14, 2026 @ 3:05 pm
Country Hall 1st and more appropriate? Yes, for sure…but I’m glad for any honors Gram gets…I worked backwards to him when I learned that Uncle Tupelo, The Jayhawks, Son Volt, Wilco, Whiskeytown and on and on all revere GP and point to him as a great inspiration and influence. Some of these and others making “Return of the Grievous Angel-A tribute to Gram Parsons” is one of the best CDs I have. Whiskeytown’s “A song for you” on youtube? As good as it gets.
April 14, 2026 @ 9:31 pm
Are you me?
I wasn’t there, but with the benefit of hindsight Gram wasn’t making Country Rock or whatever he was labeled as at the time. It was just country…and way, way ahead of its time.
April 14, 2026 @ 4:22 pm
Gram was a Byrd and should have been included. The same thing happened to Fleetwood Mac’s Bob Welch, despite his involvement on five albums.
April 15, 2026 @ 4:11 am
Totally agree. Bob Welch’s presence between the Peter Green and the Lindsey/Stevie periods was critical. Hypnotized is one of my favorite Fleetwood Mac songs.
April 14, 2026 @ 5:21 pm
I’m just happy to see him get his due. It’s unfortunate it’s not with the CMHOF, yet, but at least now he won’t be lost to the sands of time.
“Return of the Grievous Angel” should have seen airplay back in the day.
April 14, 2026 @ 5:55 pm
Gram Parsons once said himself that The Grand Old Opry looks down on performers with long hair and that they are not country singers but they are rock singers and that it took people like Willy Nelson to open doors for other country singers.
April 14, 2026 @ 6:51 pm
It’s a shame so many people have forgotten Gram Parsons,who should have been in the Country Music Hall Of Fame long ago.Hopefully,the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame will see that he’s been honoured by Country music and induct him.
April 14, 2026 @ 8:36 pm
Gram Parsons was never even a minor rock star OR country star. I think inducting him into one of those Halls is pretty damn generous. Putting him in both might be a tad much.
Johnny Ray, Neil Sedaka, Barbra Steisand, Jim Croce, Jethro Tull, and Joe Jackson are not in the Rock Hall. I’d say they were more influential on Rock than Dolly Parton was and had a lot more success than Gram Parsons did
April 14, 2026 @ 9:39 pm
Luckoldson, you love to discount artist’s legacies, even in their obituaries, and boil it down to numbers.
I wrote dedicated articles criticizing the Rock Hall for inducting Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton. They don’t belong in there, and you can make the case they took those slots from deserved folks like Jim Croce and Jethro Tull.
Gram Parsons did not. He went in as an ‘Early Influence,’ which means he didn’t take his slot from anyone. And as someone who probably should have been inducted with the (mostly) rock band The Byrds, I take no issue with the Rock Hall inducting him here. He was a founding father of country rock, though I would contend he was more country than anything. But I’m not going to criticize this decision here. Gram Parsons was wildly influential. Just as The Rolling Stones.
April 14, 2026 @ 9:41 pm
Gram was overlooked, as many geniuses ahead of their time are. I think you are vastly underrating Gram’s legacy nowadays.
Frankly, a couple people on your list I’ve never heard of. The others I haven’t heard anyone talk about for years.
Meanwhile, Gram is like a God among the artists I listen to.
April 14, 2026 @ 9:03 pm
“Basically, you wouldn’t have Waylon Jennings, you wouldn’t have had all of that outlaw movement without Gram Parsons.”
– Keith Richards, “Life”
And you wonder why Gram’s not in the CMHoF?
April 15, 2026 @ 8:01 am
I’m curious what our Waylon fans on here think of Keith Richards’ statement.
April 15, 2026 @ 10:01 am
No one is a bigger Waylon fan than me and I don’t disagree. What made Waylon great and unique was having a mixed bag of influences and that he never stopped listening to new music. Also, you can see a progression in his music happening over the decade 1968-1978, the period when Gram’s music was being released.
The person who could answer this question once and for all is Shooter, who is definitely a Gram fan and may have discussed him with Waylon while he was still around.
April 14, 2026 @ 10:22 pm
According to USA TODAY:
“The newest entrants, …are:
Phil Collins
Billy Idol
Iron Maiden
Joy Division/New Order
Oasis
Sade
Luther Vandross
Wu-Tang Clan
Those who didn’t make the cut are The Black Crowes, Jeff Buckley, Mariah Carey, Melissa Etheridge, Lauryn Hill, INXS, Pink, Shakira and fan vote winner New Edition.
In addition to the performer inductees, Celia Cruz, Fela Kuti, Queen Latifah, MC Lyte and Gram Parsons will be honored with the Early Influence Award. Linda Creed, Arif Mardin, Jimmy Miller and Rick Rubin will receive the Musical Excellence Award. The annual Ahmet Ertegun Award will remember Ed Sullivan.”
Just wondering: Does receiving “the Early Influence Award” constitute being “inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.” Sounds to me like they have several types of honors, but there are only 8 “inductees”–and Parsons (and Queen Latifah) are not two.
I don’t know who else has gotten the Early Influence Award, but I’d nominate Johann Sebastian Bach, the Pied Piper of Hamlin (highly influential!), King David (noted harpist) and the Sirens (definitely influential) for future honors in this category.
April 15, 2026 @ 12:54 am
Some say J.S. was just a one hit wonder, supplying the melody for The Toys’ “Lover’s Concerto,” but he also charted via Jethro Tull’s instrumental “Bouree,” and inspired Procol Harum’s “Whiter Shade Of Pale.”
Are ? and The Mysterians in any halls of fame? I ask you!
April 15, 2026 @ 5:55 am
Hmmm, definitely Luther Vandross and Sade.
Hearing Sade transports me back to Cedar Hill Island, in the Upper Peninsula, listening to her from fake boulder speakers out on the deck of dear friends, summer home.
Great voice, but, do not consider her R & R.
Same with Luther Vandross. Great voice. But, R & R?
No way. Completely Soul.
April 15, 2026 @ 7:40 am
RRHOF has always been more than rock music. Sam Cooke was in the first class of inductees. This isn’t a case of mission creep.
April 14, 2026 @ 11:24 pm
Didn’t Jann Wenner start the RR HOF?
Enough said. What a POS that guy is.
April 15, 2026 @ 12:07 am
Having been to the rock n roll hall of fame as recently as… last week, I can tell you that The Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame increasingly sees itself as the “All Music” Hall of Fame than they do Rock music. This is no doubt driven by its benefactors compared to anything else, but its why they have entire spreads on Hank Williams and Boggie Smalls and Post Malone and hardly any mentions on things like post punk and new metal. For better or worse when it comes to the inductees, the hall, through its early pioneers category and others, takes an “everything is related to rock and roll and their for qualifies” approach…
April 15, 2026 @ 8:34 am
Agree the Rock Hall isn’t a Hall for Rock and Roll anymore. I suspect that because the Rock and Roll crowd is aging, they dont want to be known as a museum for blue hairs. So they’ve morphed substantially. Is it still worth a visit? Im an Ohio guy and have been there many times in the past and always enjoyed seeing the artifacts, for example Duane Allmans Les Paul, ZZ Tops Eliminator car, Johnny Cashs tour bus, the Les Paul Mary Ford exhibit and so on. But, they should change the name to The Music Hall of Fame or The Pop Music Hall of Fame.
As for Gram, I enjoy his music as much as anyone. But to me he’s a strange anomaly, not really a true Rock and Roll guy, and completely ignored by Country music while alive.
Influential? Sure. But that came after his death. The true Byrds fans at the time despised the SweetHeart album and the Country world couldn’t get over the hair and counterculture association. Obviously views on him softened over the years.
Finally, I agree with Kyle that with any Hall of Fame, picks are controversial. The popular fan take that a HOF is illegitimate because of who is or isn’t in there is ridiculous. I dont like everyone in the Rock Hall but I’ve enjoyed visiting. Ditto with CMHOF. If you like museums, and seeing cool artifacts, you will find something of value at either institution.
April 15, 2026 @ 3:04 am
Gram Parsons is the Velvet Underground of country music.
Seminal and wildly influential but way ahead of his time.
April 15, 2026 @ 9:31 am
He was a drugged out trust fund baby who had enormous talent, but squandered it it all. He doesn’t deserve JACK.
Please Country Hall of Fame do not ever think about putting him in.
April 15, 2026 @ 10:16 am
This is such a tired argument. Whether he was on drugs or was from a rich family has nothing to do with his music, or the influence he had on the music of others. He was inducted as an “Early Influence” artist, meaning that is why he was being honored. You see the same arguments made against Townes Van Zandt, Colter Wall, and others.
If it wasn’t for Gram Parsons, The Eagles might have never existed, and The Rolling Stones would have never recorded “Sticky Fingers.” THAT’S influence.
April 15, 2026 @ 10:51 am
I think we could have an entire thread on whether the Eagles might never have existed had it not been for Gram Parsons. So far we’ve heard that there’d be no country rock or outlaw country (the Keith Richards quote) without Gram Parsons. Wow! What an influence indeed!
April 15, 2026 @ 12:21 pm
I’m not sure how much I would tie the rise of Waylon Jennings to Gram Parsons. His primary influences from the rock world were Buddy Holly, who he played bass for, and Little Richard, who he lost his job as a DJ playing too much. Yea, similar to Gram, it was Waylon’s rock approach to country that preceded his rise. And I’m not saying Gram didn’t have something to do with that. But I wouldn’t call Waylon a Gram Parson influenced artist.
Interestingly, there was a period where Merle Haggard and Gram were talking, and perhaps were going to collaborate in some capacity. It never happened, in part due to scheduling issues. But to me, that’s a much more interesting and fruitful relationship to explore.
April 15, 2026 @ 5:29 pm
I didn’t know about the connection to Hag. That’s a great “What if”. I can absolutely see those two hitting it off.
April 15, 2026 @ 7:25 pm
There was a whole thing about it in the recent Haggard biography by Marc Eliot. I’ll try to write a feature on it when I have some time.
April 15, 2026 @ 4:15 pm
Without Parsons, no the Eagles?
He should be in the Hall of Shame.
April 15, 2026 @ 5:59 pm
Isn’t it a little too early for Colter Wall to be in this conversaiton?
April 15, 2026 @ 7:24 pm
Well, I’m not including him in the conversation because he’s a hall of famer. I’m including him because he gets shit for his dad being the now former Premier of Saskatchewan, which for some means his music sucks no matter what he does, even though it really has nothing to do with anything.
And by the way, if you go read my feature on digging into Gram Parson’s death and why he was buried in New Orleans, he lived far from a silver spoon life.
https://savingcountrymusic.com/paying-a-visit-to-the-grave-of-gram-parsons/
“Gram Parsons critics love to point out how he came from affluence, but that tells an incomplete story. Just like Gram, both of his parents were raging alcoholics. Gram’s father committed suicide when he was growing up. His mother died due to complications from alcoholism on the day he graduated high school in Florida in 1965.”
April 15, 2026 @ 2:47 pm
He will be in before a host of country legends.
He shouldn’t be but I know this game goes.
April 15, 2026 @ 11:05 am
I am still waiting for Three Dog Night to get into the RHOF. They didn’t compose their hits, but neither did many of the Motown acts that got in. All of it is based on the biases of the nominators. Three Dog Night had numerous hits in the top 10 and 20, but they became tainted as an AM radio band.
Any Hall of Fame has inexplicable omissions, I think. I like everyone that I like anyway!
LOL. I like some hit makers and some peripheral figures. I hope the artists know that all of them have devoted fans that want them to be honored, but don’t care if they aren’t.
April 15, 2026 @ 11:56 am
The Monkees and Paul Revere and the Raiders should get in before Three Dog Night. I suspect all three are considered disposable pop acts not deserving of any HOF although they certainly did a good job of entertaining a generation. Sadly, all three are down to 1-2 founding members, all of them over 80.
April 15, 2026 @ 12:17 pm
When Lee Hazelwood gets in to the Country Music Hall of Fame, we will have ascended to a higher plane.
April 15, 2026 @ 2:49 pm
Good for Gram’s fans. Enjoy it. I would say Gram but the druggie isn’t around.
He still has no business making the Country Music HOF.
But I expect he will be inducted in 2026 before Johnny Horton and other legends.
April 15, 2026 @ 2:55 pm
Strictly from a field measurement standpoint, I don’t expect Gram Parsons to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame next year (2026 has already been picked), and I don’t expect him to go in before Johnny Horton. Horton has been rumored to be on the final ballot many times over the last ten years. From my knowledge, Gram Parsons never has. Horton would have to go in first to free up a slot, and at the same time, names keep getting dumped from Modern to Veterans, taking up those slots. Under the current system, I’d say it’s hard to envision Gram Parsons getting in at all.
April 15, 2026 @ 6:04 pm
Gram Parsons converted people all over the world to country music. He’s an apostle. CMHoF should have an apostles’ category to honor people like him.