Pearl Jam, Journey and Joan Baez were among the 2017 class of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees honoured in a megawatt ceremony at the Barclays Centre in Brooklyn on Friday night. The other new initiates were Nile Rodgers, Tupac Shakur and Electric Light Orchestra, which kicked off the evening with their version of Roll Over Beethoven, an homage to the father of rock and roll, Chuck Berry, who died last month.
Leading up to the show, rumours swirled that former Journey singer Steve Perry would perform with the band for the first time in more than 20 years. He did not. But Perry did join his former bandmates onstage to accept the award, recalling that before he joined the group, he'd watch them with awe during performances in Los Angeles. "These guys have the most amazing musical ability," he said. "I've never seen a band like that in my life."
Bob Dylan appeared on video to pay tribute to a fellow folk singer. "Joan Baez, she was staggering," he said. Not surprisingly. Baez took her moment on stage to send a political message. "We the people are the only ones who can create change," she said. "I'm ready. I hope you are too."
Baez later brought Mary Chapin Carpenter and the Indigo Girls on stage to join her in singing The Night they Drove Old Dixie Down.
In the induction speech honouring Yes, Rush singer Geddy Lee said that seeing the band perform live in 1972, "changed the way I played and listened to music forever". He then joined Yes for a set that included Roundabout and Owner of a Lonely Heart.