REM, Blondie, Snoop Dogg get nods for Songwriters Hall

Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK (AP) – Bryan Adams, REM, Blondie, Snoop Dogg, Gloria Estefan, Heart and The Doobie Brothers are among the nominees for the 2023 Songwriters Hall of Fame, part of a dazzling list of talented acts who left their mark on country, pop, rap, Broadway, post-punk, Latin and New Jack Swing.

The ballot includes the musical theatre duo of Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty, who wrote Ragtime and Anastasia, as well as soul-jazz vocalist Sade, whose 1980s soft rock hits include Smooth Operator and The Sweetest Taboo.

Two veteran rock stars are also nominees: Patti Smith – whose songs include Because the Night and Dancing Barefoot – and Steve Winwood, whose hits include Higher Love and Roll With It. Vince Gill is once again a nominee, having first made the ballot in 2018.

Eligible voting members have until December 28 to turn in ballots with their choices of three nominees from the songwriter category and three from the performing-songwriter category. The Associated Press got an early copy of the list.

ABOVE & BELOW: Debbie Harry (centre) with Clem Burke and Rob Roth from the group Blondie; and rapper
Snoop Dogg. PHOTOS: AP

Jeff Lynne of ELO, who penned Mr Blue Sky and Evil Woman, faces off against the Losing My Religion REM quartet led by Michael Stipe, as well as sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart, who showed women could rock hard with songs like Barracuda and Crazy On You.

Debbie Harry, Chris Stein and Clem Burke are eligible for the hall as Blondie, who gave us the New Wave hits Call Me and Rapture, and Snoop Dogg would join such rappers as Missy Elliott and Jay-Z should he make the cut. Estefan is credited for popularising Latin rhythms with such crossover smashes as Rhythm Is Gonna Get You and Let’s Get Loud.

Two classic rock icons compete as Adams – with radio staples like Summer of ‘69 and Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman? – contends with The Doobie Brothers and their always-in-rotation Listen to the Music and Long Train Running.

Nominees who work behind the scenes include Glen Ballard, who helped write Alanis Morissette’s monster 1995 album Jagged Little Pill and was involved in the recording and writing of Michael Jackson’s albums Thriller, Bad and Dangerous.

Veteran songwriter Tom Snow, who worked with Olivia Newton-John, Barbra Streisand, Cher, The Pointer Sisters and co-wrote Let’s Hear It for the Boy from the movie Footloose, is also eligible. Footloose connects another nominee, Dean Pitchford, who collaborated on the score, which went to number one on the Billboard album charts, knocking off Thriller in 1984.

The nominee list includes Teddy Riley, the singer, songwriter, and producer credited with creating New Jack Swing and its top anthems like Bobby Brown’s My Prerogative and Keith Sweat’s I Want Her, and Liz Rose, who co-wrote many songs with Taylor Swift, including You Belong with Me, Teardrops on My Guitar and White Horse.

There’s also country songwriter Dean Dillon, who wrote songs with Toby Keith, George Strait and Lee Ann Womack; pop songwriter Franne Golde, behind such hits as Jody Watley’s Don’t You Want Me and Nightshift by the Commodores; and the duo of Bobby Hart and Tommy Boyce, who penned many of The Monkees’ hits.