Yauch becomes third big name to miss Hall of Fame ceremony
The Beastie Boys were forced to scrap a planned performance at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Cleveland, Ohio on Saturday night (14Apr12) when rapper Adam 'Mca' Yauch pulled out of the event.
The trio was saluted by rap heavyweights Chuck D and LL Cool J but only Mike Diamond and Adam Horovitz were on hand to accept the accolade.
Hours before the ceremony the group's publicist released a
statement which read: "Beastie Boys regret that Adam 'MCA' Yauch
will be unable to join Mike 'Mike D' Diamond and Adam 'Adrock'
Horovitz at the band's induction into the Rock n Roll Hall of
Fame.
"Mike, Adam and Adam are truly grateful for the honor but with only
two of the three Beastie Boys attending, they will unfortunately
not be able to perform at the ceremony."
Taking to the stage without his bandmate, Horovitz - alongside
Diamond and longtime DJ sidekick Mixmaster Mike - read out a
statement from Yauch, who thanked the Beastie Boys' fans, writing,
"This induction is as much ours as it is yours."
No reason was given for Yauch's no-show, but the Beastie Boys star
has been battling cancer in a salivary gland since the summer of
2009.
He wasn't the only major no-show at the Hall of Fame celebrations -
Rod Stewart pulled out of a planned reunion with his old band The
Faces, who were among the inductees, because of illness. He was
replaced onstage by former Simply Red star Mick Hucknall, who flew
in from England at short notice to perform.
Guns N' Roses frontman Axl Rose declined his induction honor as a
member of the band and announced he would not be attending the
ceremony earlier this week (beg09Apr12) - and his decision
infuriated the crowd, who booed the star when his name was
mentioned.
Green Day rocker Billie Joe Armstrong asked the audience "who was
missing" as members of Guns N' Roses were up on stage accepting
their award, and added: "Most singers are crazy. I can vouch for
that."
He also praised Rose, declaring, "He is one of the best frontmen to
ever touch a microphone. Sometimes you have to look back at
chapters of your life to move forward."
The evening was also bittersweet for family members, friends and
fans of late singer/songwriter Laura Nyro, songwriter/publisher Don
Kirschner and dead bluesman Freddie King.
Sara Bareilles performed as part of a tribute to the former after
Bette Midler inducted Nyro, and her son Gil Bianchini accepted the
accolade on his mother's behalf, and ZZ Top stars Dusty Hill and
Billy Gibbons welcomed King to the Hall of Fame and handed his
trophy to his daughter Wanda. Carole King inducted her friend
Kirshner, who died last year (11), and Darlene Love performed
King's song Will You Love Me Tomorrow as a tribute.
Other inductees were folk legend Donovan, the Red Hot Chili Peppers
and producers Cosimo Matassa, Glyn Johns and Tom Dowd.