The
Songwriters Hall of Fame is an arm of the
National Academy of
Popular Music. It was founded in 1969 by songwriter
Johnny Mercer and music publishers
Abe Olman and
Howie
Richmond. The goal is to create a museum but as of April, 2008,
the means do not yet exist and so instead it is an online virtual
museum, striving toward that goal.
It has an office in New York
City
, United
States
, and holds workshops, showcases, and provides
scholarships to promising artists to help develop new songwriting
talent.
New inductees are voted on annually. At each annual event, gifted
and promising songwriters are awarded a scholarship called the
Abe
Olman Publisher's Award for Excellence in Songwriting, named
for one of the founding members.
Alongside the induction of new songwriters are a variety of awards.
Currently, the awards are the "
Hal David
Starlight Award" (for young artists who have already made an
impression on the music industry), the "Johnny Mercer Award" (for
artists who are already on the Songwriters Hall of Fame and have a
number of outstanding works), the "
Sammy
Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award" (an award given to songwriters
who have done a lot to increase the success of songs), "Abe Olman
Publisher Award" (awarded to publishers who have had a lot of
"famous" pieces) and the "Towering Song/Towering Performance"
Awards.
To date
there have been 345 individuals inducted into the SHOF, with the
British
rock band
Queen and the American bands, Crosby, Stills & Nash and
Bon Jovi being the only bands (rather than
an individual) to ever be inducted into the hall of
fame.
References
- Official Songwriters' Hall of Fame Website (Accessed
11 April, 2008)
-
http://www.facebook.com/ext/share.php?sid=94561046545&h=ZHtgS&u=3b9Sn&ref=nf
See also
External links