February 16 at 10:24 p.m.
Though he was born nearly a half century after Vincent Van Gogh died, and has achieved a level of fame and acclaim in his lifetime that The Starry Night painter only did posthumously, multimedia artist David Hockney (b. 1937) has always had an affinity for the works of Van Gogh. February 15 at 4:30 a.m.
The destruction of Pompeii by Mount Vesuvius is one of the most famous disasters in human history. One of the reasons that it has remained in the public mind for so long is that for two centuries archaeologists have carefully excavated the doomed city. The nature of the eruption and.
New Book Explores How the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Landed in Cleveland lmtonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lmtonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Rolling Stone New Book Explores How the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Landed in Cleveland
“So many people want to claim they were responsible for bringing the Hall to Cleveland, says writer Norm Nite, “and I knew the real people that were responsible”
By Mark Duncan/AP
On October 2nd, 1995, weeks after the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame opened its doors in Cleveland, Ohio,
Rolling Stone founder and then-Hall of Fame chairman Jann Wenner sent a letter to CBS disc jockey Norm N. Nite.
“With all the hoopla past us, I just want to take a moment to go on record and thank you for linking Cleveland to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation in the first place,” he wrote. “Without your being there and doing the right thing at the right time when nobody else saw it it may never have happened. So my hat is off to you, an unsung hero of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.”
Norm N. Nite’s ‘The House That Rock Built’ is the ultimate gift to Cleveland music fans
Updated Dec 10, 2020;
Posted Dec 10, 2020
Norm N. Nite s latest book The House That Rock Built tells the story of how the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame came to be in Cleveland.
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CLEVELAND, Ohio – As anyone who’s discussed music with someone outside of Northeast Ohio knows, one question seems to never go away: Why is the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland?
There are several worthy answers, from Leo Mintz selling rhythm and blues records at Record Rendezvous and disc jockey Alan Freed playing them on local airwaves to money, money and lots of money.