one of her fellow female inductees in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2023.“My family used to tell me that Chaka Khan was my cousin when I was little,” she says, “so for a long time, I would be like, ‘Why she not at the family reunion?’ They told me Chaka Khan was my cousin and the Jacksons, and they would have their pictures in picture frames.
So I would walk around the house thinking that they were my family. Come to find out Chaka Khan is nowhere near kin to me!”But the “Work It” rapper will be forever connected to the “Ain’t Nobody” singer when the two icons are enshrined in music immortality at the rock-hall induction ceremony on Nov.
3. They are part of a strong female contingent this year, which also includes “If It Makes You Happy” rocker Sheryl Crow and “Running Up That Hill” chanteuse Kate Bush. “The biggest thing for all of us is that we are alive and we’re here to receive this,” she says. “This is a high honor.”When Elliott finishes her performance on that stage at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, she will be deserving of a mic drop after making history as the first female hip-hop artist to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.
The rapper, singer, songwriter and producer credits some key women in the music business for championing her — and her groundbreaking vision — in the traditionally male-dominated world of hip-hop.“I owe so much to Sylvia Rhone,” she says of the “label mom” who, as head of Elektra Records, helped launch Elliott’s career in the late ’90s. “She never asked me to change anything about the way I looked, the way I sounded.
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