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Gene Simmons rips Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for embracing hip-hop



It’s more like the Hall of Hard Feelings for the Demon.

Gene Simmons is again sticking his tongue out at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame for allowing hip-hop artists to snag a spot in rock’s most exclusive club.

The 76-year-old KISS co-founder — who was inducted into the Cleveland shrine for rock with the band in 2014 — appeared on the “LegendsNLeaders” podcast last week, where he flipped the script on host Ben Weiss and asked which band shaped him most growing up.

Gene Simmons is reigniting his feud with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, slamming the organization for allowing hip-hop acts into rock’s most exclusive club. Getty Images

When the 25-year-old host revealed he gravitated toward more “hip-hop adjacent stuff” in his youth, Simmons blasted the genre and seethed that rap stars have scored spots in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

“It’s not my music,” said the rocker, whose on-stage persona is “The Demon.” “I don’t come from the ghetto. It doesn’t speak my language. And as I said in print many times, hip-hop does not belong in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, nor does opera or symphony orchestras.

“How come the New York Philharmonic doesn’t get into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?” he snarked.

Simmons doubled down, fuming that metal giants Iron Maiden still haven’t snagged a Hall of Fame nod while hip-hop pioneer Grandmaster Flash has been.

“Iron Maiden is not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame when they can sell out stadiums,” he said.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Museum building in Cleveland, Ohio. Getty Images

The “Rock and Roll All Nite” singer then rehashed his feud with Ice Cube over the rapper’s opinions on hip-hop.

“Ice Cube and I had a back and forth,” the KISS frontman said, adding that he thinks the “It Was a Good Day” rhymer is “a bright guy,” and has respect for what he’s done.

“He shot back that it’s the ‘spirit’ of rock and roll … I just want to know when Led Zeppelin’s going to be in the Hip-Hop Hall of Fame?

Inductee Gene Simmons of KISS speaks onstage at the 29th Annual Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony at Barclays Center of Brooklyn on April 10, 2014 in New York City. Getty Images

“Music has labels because it describes an approach. By and large, rap, hip-hop is a spoken-word art,” he continued. Then you put beats in back of it and somebody comes up with a musical phrase, but it’s verbal. There are some melodies, but by and large, it’s a verbal thing.”

The outspoken rocker has long blasted the Hall for embracing hip-hop — sparking a rift between the “Detroit Rock City” singer and rap heavyweights.

When gangster rap legends N.W.A. were inducted in 2016, MC Ren told Simmons, “hip-hop is here forever — get used to it” during the group’s acceptance speech.

Simmons performs with KISS at Staples Center on March 4, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images for ABA

It came as a direct clapback to a 2015 Rolling Stone interview in which Simmons said he was eagerly awaiting the “death of rap.”

The KISS bassist is not the only legendary rocker to have gripes about hip-hop.

Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards once sneered that it’s “so many words, so little said,” and claimed the genre caters to a “tone-deaf” audience in a 2015 interview with the New York Daily News.

“All they need is a drum beat and somebody yelling over it, and they’re happy. There’s an enormous market for people who can’t tell one note from another,” Richards said.

Psychedelic rock icon and Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia also said on the documentary “The History of Rock ‘N’ Roll” in February 1995 — months before his death — that “rap is not music.”

“It isn’t music, it’s talking. That’s what it says, rap. Rap means talking. It’s talking in meters. It’s got rhythm,” Garcia said, but noted that he has no problem with the genre as a whole.

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