Sheryl Crow proved that she was more than “Strong Enough” to hang with the heavyweights of the pop world with her Grammy-winning debut, 1993’s “Tuesday Night Music Club.’Now the 61-year-old singer is joining music’s most exclusive club in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame when the induction ceremony takes place Friday night at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center (with the festivities streaming live on Disney+ at 8 p.m.
ET). But while it has most certainly made Crow happy to be a part of the class of 2023 — where she’ll be enshrined in the Performer Category alongside Kate Bush, Missy Elliott, Willie Nelson, Rage Against the Machine, the Spinners and the late George Michael — she has some thoughts about who is overdue for the elite recognition.One, ’70s rock sensation Peter Frampton, is especially close to her heart. “My first concert when I was 13 was Peter Frampton, and, you know, it’s like, ‘Dude, you need to be in the rock hall,’ ” Crow told The Post. “It’s like one of those things where I go, ‘Oh, why am I getting in and he’s not in yet?’ ”The “All I Wanna Do” diva is also giving her “plug” to another female rocker.“I would say I would like to do a lot of work for Melissa Etheridge [to get inducted],” says Crow, “because I think not only does she have a lot of hits that still stand the test of time, but she also opened the doors for a lot of not just women, but people in general.
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