YEAR
2009
INDUCTED BY
Roseanne Cash
CATEGORY
Early Influences
One of the first women to break into rock and roll’s boys club.
Wanda Jackson is a rockabilly, rock and roll and country artist who sings with wild, reckless abandon. At Elvis Presley’s behest, she crossed over from country to rock, making such riotous hits as “Let’s Have a Party.”
HALL OF FAME
ESSAY
By Holly George-Warren
In 1958, when a gutsy, guitar-playing gal from Oklahoma belted out this mandate for new music, she was the rare woman among the rockabilly cats mixing up rhythm & blues and country & western, creating primal rock roll in the process.
Wanda Jackson wasn’t afraid to step outside the prim confines of a woman’s place in pop – sonically, lyrically, and aesthetically. She snarled, using a “nasty” voice to sing sassy lyrics, when “girl singers” were supposed to sound pretty and look pretty.
Instead of going the cowgirl, country lass, or prom queen route, the gorgeous brunette dressed in befringed cocktail dresses that shimmied and shook as she cut the rug onstage.