Hubbry Logo
logo
MTV Icon
Community hub

MTV Icon

logo
0 subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

The MTV Icon series logo

MTV Icon (stylized as mtv:ICON) is a series of annual television specials produced by MTV between 2001 and 2004, each paying homage to a musical artist or band selected as a cultural icon, in a format similar to the network's annual Video Music Awards and Movie Awards events. A live audience of musicians, celebrities, and fans would view a biographical film depicting the career of that year's chosen icon, interspersed by celebrity introductions and live performances of popular artists playing cover versions of the icon's songs. The iconic artist would then accept an award and perform a live set of their own at the close of the show. The series celebrated Janet Jackson in 2001, Aerosmith in 2002, Metallica in 2003, and The Cure in 2004.

2001: Janet Jackson

[edit]
Janet Jackson was the first artist to be named an "MTV Icon".

American pop singer Janet Jackson was selected as MTV's inaugural Icon, in an event held in Los Angeles, California.[1] Performers at the ceremony included 'N Sync, Pink, Usher, Outkast, Destiny's Child, Macy Gray, Mýa and Buckcherry.[1] Celebrity presenters included Britney Spears, Jessica Simpson, Jennifer Lopez, Aaliyah, Christina Aguilera, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, and record producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.[1] Jackson herself concluded the event with a performance of her Billboard Hot 100 number-one single "All for You".[1] The event was the highest rated television show of the night among the female 12-24 demographic, ahead of all broadcast and cable programs.[2] MTV decided to develop the special as an annual franchise for other artists following the event's success.[2] The show was held at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City.

Performances
Performer(s) Song(s)
Outkast "Ms. Jackson"
Destiny's Child "Let's Wait Awhile"
Macy Gray "Love Will Never Do (Without You)"
'N Sync "That's the Way Love Goes"
Pink, Usher, and Mýa Dance medley of "Miss You Much", "Alright", "The Pleasure Principle", "If" and "Rhythm Nation"
Buckcherry "Nasty"
Janet Jackson "All for You/You Ain't Right"

2002: Aerosmith

[edit]
Aerosmith was chosen as the 2002 Icon.

In 2002 hard rock band Aerosmith was chosen as MTV's Icon.[3] MTV Entertainment President Brian Graden remarked that "Aerosmith is one of those very few bands whose influence pre-dates and spans the entire history of MTV. They have become a fixture at the network, and we are thrilled to be able to honor them in this fashion for their continuing contributions to music and music video."[3] The event began with the previous year's icon Janet Jackson delivering a testimonial about the band, and featured performances by The X-Ecutioners, Nelly, Ja Rule, DJ Clue, Sum 41, Pink, Shakira, Kid Rock, Train, and Papa Roach, concluding with a five-song set by Aerosmith themselves.[3] The show was held at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City.

Performances
Performer(s) Song(s)
The X-Ecutioners medley of "Sweet Emotion", "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)", "Love in an Elevator", and "Walk This Way"
Train "Dream On"
Papa Roach "Sweet Emotion"
Kid Rock medley of "Mama Kin" and "Last Child"
Nelly, Ja Rule, DJ Clue, and Sum 41 "Walk This Way"
Shakira "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)"
Pink "Janie's Got a Gun"
Aerosmith "Movin' Out", "Toys in the Attic", "Cryin'", "Girls of Summer", and "Train Kept A-Rollin'"

2003: Metallica

[edit]
Metallica's performance on MTV Icon was their first television appearance with new bassist Robert Trujillo (left).

Heavy metal band Metallica was selected as MTV's Icon for 2003, with the event held in Universal City, California.[4] It featured performances by Sum 41, Staind's Aaron Lewis and Mike Mushok, Avril Lavigne, Snoop Dogg, Korn, and Limp Bizkit, as well as celebrity appearances by Rob Zombie, Jillian Barberie, Travis Barker, Jolene Blalock, Iann Robinson, Jim Breuer, Shannon Elizabeth, Lisa Marie Presley, Chester Bennington, Wes Scantlin and Sean Penn.[4] The special concluded with Metallica performing a medley of songs from their early albums, spanning 1983 to 1991, followed by their most recent single, "Frantic". It was their first television appearance with bassist Robert Trujillo, who had joined the band just a few months prior.[4] MTV set up a website to promote the special, featuring testimonials by celebrities and musicians including Kelly Osbourne, Godsmack's Sully Erna, Ja Rule, and Linkin Park's Bennington and Dave "Phoenix" Farrell.[5]

Performances
Performer(s) Song(s)
Sum 41 medley of "For Whom the Bell Tolls", "Enter Sandman", and "Master of Puppets"
Aaron Lewis and Mike Mushok "Nothing Else Matters"
Avril Lavigne "Fuel"
Snoop Dogg "Sad but True"
Jim Breuer "If You're Happy and You Know It (In the Style of Metallica)"
Korn "One"
Limp Bizkit "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)"
Metallica medley of "Hit the Lights", "Enter Sandman", "Blackened", "Creeping Death", and "Battery"; "Frantic"

2004: The Cure

[edit]
The Cure were the fourth and final act to be named an MTV Icon.

The 2004 MTV Icon special was held at the Old Billingsgate Market in London to a crowd of over 1,000 and named post-punk/gothic rock band The Cure as the icon of the year.[6] Marilyn Manson hosted the event, which featured Blink-182, AFI, Razorlight, and Deftones performing cover versions of Cure songs.[6] Cure frontman Robert Smith joined Blink-182 onstage to perform "All of This", a song he had sung on for their untitled 2003 album.[6] During set changes the audience were shown many of the band's music videos from throughout their career.[6] The Cure themselves closed the show by performing a number of songs including "Friday I'm in Love".[6] Their performances of "Taking Off", and "10:15 Saturday Night" were selected to be shown in the final broadcast, representing bookends of their career ("Taking Off" being their most recent single while "10:15 Saturday Night" was the first track on their 1979 debut album). Tim Weber of BBC News remarked of the performance that "from the first riff it was obvious that they have managed to haul their music firmly into the 21st century. The Cure may still be the masters of mourning, but their performance had an edge and drive that would do any nu metal band proud. Even old favourites like 'Friday I'm in Love' were—almost—purged of the popcorn sound of the New Wave 1980s."[6] MTV Icon: The Cure premiered October 31, 2004, on MTV2.[6]

Performances
Performer(s) Song(s)
Blink-182 "A Letter to Elise", "All of This" (with Robert Smith)
AFI "Just Like Heaven"
Razorlight "Boys Don't Cry"
Deftones "If Only Tonight We Could Sleep"
The Cure "Friday I'm in Love", "Taking Off", and "10:15 Saturday Night"

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
MTV Icon was a series of annual television specials produced by MTV from 2001 to 2004, in which prominent music artists and bands were honored as "icons" through live tribute performances by contemporary musicians, celebrity testimonials, and career retrospectives.[1][2] The inaugural event in 2001 celebrated Janet Jackson, featuring covers of her hits by artists such as Destiny's Child, OutKast, Pink, Mya, and Usher, along with a performance by Jackson herself promoting her album All for You.[2] In 2002, Aerosmith received the tribute, with performers including Pink, Shakira, Ja Rule, and Jackson, highlighting the band's rock legacy during a taped special at Sony Pictures Studios.[3][4] The 2003 installment focused on Metallica, where a diverse lineup including Snoop Dogg, Avril Lavigne, Limp Bizkit, Korn, and Sum 41 delivered covers of the band's songs, with the event airing as a 90-minute broadcast on May 6.[1] The series concluded in 2004 with The Cure as honorees, taped live in London on September 17 with tributes from Blink-182, AFI, Razorlight, and Deftones, emphasizing the band's influence on alternative rock.[5][6] These specials, often held without a physical award, served as high-profile celebrations of musical achievements, blending humor, roasts, and heartfelt acknowledgments to showcase the evolving impact of the icons on popular culture.[2][1]

Overview

Definition and Purpose

MTV Icon (stylized as mtv:ICON) was a series of annual television specials produced by MTV from 2001 to 2004.[7] Each special centered on a dedicated homage to one musical artist or band, presented as a standalone event distinct from MTV's regular programming.[7] The core purpose of MTV Icon was to recognize recipients as cultural icons for their enduring influence on music, music videos, and broader pop culture.[8] By selecting artists with significant legacies, the series aimed to celebrate their contributions through structured tributes that underscored their role in shaping the industry.[1] A key objective was to bridge generational divides, achieved by enlisting contemporary performers to deliver covers and tributes that illuminated the honoree's career milestones and ongoing relevance.[8] This approach highlighted how established icons continued to inspire newer generations of musicians.[1] In contrast to MTV's Video Music Awards (VMAs), which primarily honor recent video achievements and contemporary hits, MTV Icon focused exclusively on lifetime accomplishments and cultural impact. This emphasis positioned the series as a platform for retrospective appreciation rather than yearly accolades.[7]

Selection Process

The selection of honorees for the MTV Icon award was an internal process managed by MTV executives, with Brian Graden, president of MTV Entertainment, leading the decision-making to recognize artists whose careers exemplified enduring impact on music, visual innovation, and the network's programming history during the music video era. Key criteria included an artist's longevity, commercial achievements such as album sales and video output, and cultural influence that transcended genres and appealed to multiple generations, often prioritizing those who had helped define MTV's identity since its launch in 1981.[9][10] There was no public voting or fan involvement; instead, choices were made strategically to celebrate pivotal figures in MTV's narrative, ensuring a mix of styles to reflect the channel's broad reach. For instance, Janet Jackson was named the inaugural honoree in 2001 for her groundbreaking dance-pop innovations and role in integrating rhythmic and visual elements into MTV's early programming. Van Toffler stated, "With MTV turning 20 this year, it is both the perfect time for us to honor an artist who has influenced the music industry and pop culture with our inaugural mtvICON," adding that "Janet Jackson is the perfect choice for this honor. Her influence on music and pop culture is undeniable."[9][11] Similarly, Aerosmith's selection in 2002 highlighted their rock endurance, with nearly three decades of output and 32 music videos that had become staples on the network. Graden described them as "one of those very few bands whose influence pre-dates MTV and continues to resonate throughout popular culture," underscoring their fit based on historical relevance and sustained popularity. This approach continued for later honorees, focusing on internal evaluations of an artist's alignment with MTV's legacy rather than current chart performance alone.[12][13]

Event Format

Performances and Tributes

The MTV Icon specials centered on musical tributes as their core feature, with established and emerging artists delivering covers of the honoree's signature songs through solo renditions, medleys, or collaborative sets designed to highlight the recipient's enduring influence on music and culture.[14] These performances often incorporated innovative arrangements, such as multi-artist collaborations and genre-crossing reinterpretations—for instance, rap-infused takes on rock anthems—to blend contemporary styles with classic material.[15] Production elements emphasized MTV's signature visual flair, including live band accompaniments for dynamic energy and interwoven video montages showcasing career-defining clips to contextualize the live acts. In tributes for dance-oriented honorees like Janet Jackson, intricate choreography recreated iconic dance sequences from music videos.[2] Typically concluding the event, the honoree would take the stage for one or two performances, blending classic hits with occasional new material to cap the tribute in a celebratory finale, often extending into extended medleys that reinforced their iconic status.[2] This structure, captured live-to-tape for broadcast, allowed for high-production polish while maintaining the spontaneity of live music, fostering a sense of communal appreciation among performers and audience alike.[14]

Roast and Presentations

Roast segments, featured in select MTV Icon events such as those in 2001 and 2003, included light-hearted comedic elements designed to poke fun at the honoree's career milestones and quirks through monologues, skits, and celebrity-hosted banter, often comprising a small but memorable portion of the tribute. In the inaugural 2001 special honoring Janet Jackson, comedian Jamie Foxx delivered an off-color, timely routine that highlighted humorous anecdotes from her career, contributing to the event's 10% allocation for celebrity roast content amid the predominantly reverential tributes.[2][16] Similarly, the 2003 Metallica tribute included a parody sketch by comedian Jim Breuer, who impersonated band members James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich in a satirical take on their on-stage personas and interpersonal dynamics, adding levity to the proceedings.[17] Presentations formed a core ceremonial component, with A-list celebrities from music, film, and television sharing personal anecdotes, introducing archival video clips of the honoree's work, and emphasizing their cultural influence to bridge generational appeal. For the 2002 Aerosmith event, actress Mila Kunis and Alicia Silverstone, both stars in the band's music videos, provided testimonials reflecting on their collaborations, while singer Janet Jackson, the prior year's honoree, offered insights into Aerosmith's enduring legacy.[18] In Jackson's own special, presenters such as Stevie Wonder, Shaquille O'Neal, and Busta Rhymes recounted formative encounters and career intersections, often weaving in video montages to illustrate pivotal moments like her breakthrough albums and choreography innovations.[16] These segments maintained a professional yet engaging tone, tailored to MTV's youthful demographic. The award handover culminated the non-musical elements, where the honoree accepted the MTV Icon designation onstage amid applause, typically delivering a reflective speech on their artistic journey and gratitude toward fans and collaborators. Across the series, this moment blended reverence with the event's playful vibe, as seen in Aerosmith's light-hearted acceptance quip from guitarist Joe Perry about longevity leading to recognition, underscoring the specials' aim to humanize icons while celebrating their impact.[18] This structure ensured a dynamic mix of humor and homage, differentiating the roasts and presentations from the tribute's performative aspects.

Honorees

2001: Janet Jackson

The inaugural MTV Icon event honored Janet Jackson as the first recipient, recognizing her profound influence on pop music and MTV's evolution through innovative music videos. Held on March 10, 2001, at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, Los Angeles, California, the ceremony marked the launch of the annual tribute series.[2][19] Tribute performances featured a lineup of contemporary artists reinterpreting Jackson's hits, blending live renditions with video montages of her career highlights. 'N Sync, joined by the dance group Poppin', delivered a medley of "That's the Way Love Goes" and "Together Again," capturing the upbeat rhythm of her 1990s singles. Pink, Usher, and Mýa presented a high-energy dance tribute to "Rhythm Nation," emphasizing Jackson's choreography legacy through synchronized moves and projections of her original video. Outkast performed "Escapade," infusing the track with their hip-hop flair, while Destiny's Child, alongside Macy Gray, covered "Runaway," highlighting Jackson's emotional ballads. Buckcherry closed the tributes with a rock-inflected take on "Any Time, Any Place," showcasing the versatility of her R&B catalog.[2][14][20] Jackson herself took the stage for a centerpiece performance of "All For You," the title track from her forthcoming album, dressed in a white ensemble that evoked her iconic video aesthetics and flanked by dancers in matching outfits. The set underscored her ongoing relevance, as the single would soon top charts and propel the album's success.[14][19][2] The event included presentations and a light-hearted roast segment, with celebrities such as Christina Aguilera, Jamie Foxx, Shaquille O'Neal, Stevie Wonder, Tyrese, Busta Rhymes, Aaliyah, and Jackie Jackson participating. Foxx's comedic routine, in particular, playfully targeted Jackson's dance prowess and her ties to the Jackson family legacy, adding humor to the 90% tribute-focused format. Family members, including brother Jermaine, were present to celebrate her achievements as a representative of their musical dynasty.[2][14] Broadcast on MTV on March 13, 2001, the two-hour special reached a wide audience and spotlighted Jackson's pivotal role in revolutionizing pop music and video culture on the network.[2][21]

2002: Aerosmith

The 2002 MTV Icon special honored Aerosmith, recognizing the band's enduring influence in hard rock and their pivotal role in MTV's early video era. The event was taped on April 14, 2002, at Sony Pictures Studios in Culver City, California, and broadcast on MTV on April 17, 2002.[12][22] Selected for their rock legacy, Aerosmith's tribute highlighted their longevity since the 1970s and successful comeback in the late 1980s after personal and professional struggles.[3][23] Tribute performances featured a mix of contemporary artists covering Aerosmith classics, emphasizing the band's crossover appeal in rock and hip-hop. Kid Rock delivered energetic renditions of "Mama Kin" and "Last Child," showcasing Aerosmith's raw blues-rock roots.[22] Sum 41 joined Ja Rule and Nelly for a high-energy take on "Walk This Way," recreating the spirit of the 1986 collaboration that bridged rap and rock.[3] Michelle Branch performed a heartfelt acoustic version of "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing," the band's 1998 power ballad from the Armageddon soundtrack.[24] A video montage recapped Run-DMC's iconic 1986 "Walk This Way" with Aerosmith, underscoring the track's groundbreaking impact on music fusion.[25] Members of Metallica made an impromptu appearance, offering testimonials on Aerosmith's influence on heavy music.[23] Aerosmith closed the show with a medley of hits, including "Sweet Emotion" and "Dream On," blending their 1970s staples with later anthems to affirm their hard rock endurance.[22] Presenters Jennifer Aniston and Teresa Barrick introduced segments, while the roast segments playfully highlighted the band's post-1980s revival through sobriety, hits like "Dude (Looks Like a Lady," and sustained MTV visibility.[24][25] The special celebrated Aerosmith's resilience, from their gritty origins to their role in revitalizing rock on MTV.[3]

2003: Metallica

The MTV Icon tribute to Metallica took place on May 3, 2003, at Universal Studios Hollywood in Universal City, California, honoring the band's pioneering role in thrash metal and their monumental influence on heavy music.[26][27] Selected for their groundbreaking innovations in the genre—blending aggressive speed, complex song structures, and socially charged lyrics—Metallica had sold over 85 million albums worldwide by this point, ranking as the fifth top-selling artist in the SoundScan era.[27] The event showcased a diverse lineup of contemporary artists crossing over into metal territory, emphasizing the band's broad appeal beyond traditional heavy metal audiences. Tribute performances highlighted Metallica's catalog with high-energy covers from nu-metal and alternative acts. Sum 41 opened with a medley of "For Whom the Bell Tolls," "Enter Sandman," and "Master of Puppets," blending punk speed with thrash riffs.[28] Staind's Aaron Lewis and Mike Mushok delivered an acoustic rendition of "Nothing Else Matters," stripping the ballad to its emotional core.[29] Avril Lavigne brought pop-punk flair to "Fuel," while Snoop Dogg infused hip-hop rhythm into "Sad but True."[28] Korn tackled "One" with their industrial edge, and Limp Bizkit closed the tributes with a chaotic take on "Welcome Home (Sanitarium)."[28][15] Comedian Jim Breuer provided comic relief through a roast segment, parodying the band's intense persona and history of lineup changes with impressions of James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich in a twisted "If You're Happy and You Know It" skit that poked fun at their on-stage ferocity.[28][17] Lisa Marie Presley also presented an award, adding a celebrity touch. Metallica capped the night with their first TV appearance featuring new bassist Robert Trujillo, performing a medley of "Hit the Lights," "Enter Sandman," "Blackened," "Creeping Death," and "Battery," followed by "Frantic" from their upcoming album St. Anger.[26][27] The special aired on MTV on May 6, 2003, weaving in a documentary segment on the band's two-decade career, from early thrash breakthroughs to mainstream dominance, underscoring their evolution and cultural footprint.[30][27]

2004: The Cure

The MTV Icon tribute to The Cure took place on September 17, 2004, at Old Billingsgate Market in London, England, marking the first such event held outside the United States.[31][5] This international setting highlighted the band's British roots and their global influence in post-punk and gothic rock, drawing a crowd of over 1,000 attendees.[31] The event was selected to honor The Cure's pioneering contributions to alternative rock, particularly their evolution from post-punk origins in the late 1970s to defining the goth aesthetic in the 1980s.[5] Tribute performances featured contemporary artists covering key tracks from The Cure's catalog, emphasizing the band's enduring impact on alternative and rock genres. AFI delivered a punk-infused rendition of "Just Like Heaven," Razorlight performed an energetic take on "Boys Don't Cry," and Deftones offered a brooding cover of "If Only Tonight We Could Sleep."[32] Blink-182 also contributed with "A Letter to Elise," joined briefly by The Cure's frontman Robert Smith for "All of This," blending pop-punk energy with the honoree's signature melancholy.[32] These selections underscored The Cure's versatility, from upbeat new wave hits to atmospheric ballads that shaped MTV's alternative programming era. The Cure themselves performed a concise set including "Taking Off," "10:15 Saturday Night," and "Friday I'm in Love," closing the evening with a nod to their early DIY ethos and mainstream breakthroughs.[33] The event was hosted by Marilyn Manson, whose gothic persona complemented the tribute's theme, while presenters such as Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and The Cure guitarist Perry Bamonte participated in a lighthearted roast segment.[34] This portion humorously targeted the band's 1980s new wave phase and Robert Smith's iconic smeared-makeup image, celebrating their cultural quirks without overshadowing their musical legacy.[31] The special aired on October 31, 2004.[31] encapsulating The Cure's role in bridging post-punk experimentation with MTV's rise as a platform for alternative music in the 1980s and 1990s.

Discontinuation and Legacy

Reasons for Ending

The MTV Icon series ended after its 2004 edition honoring The Cure, as the network pivoted toward reality programming that offered higher returns on investment compared to elaborate music tribute specials. By the early 2000s, MTV had begun emphasizing unscripted content, with the 2002 premiere of The Osbournes marking a turning point; the show averaged approximately 5.3 million viewers in its first season, significantly boosting ad revenue and signaling a profitable departure from music-focused fare.[35] This shift was driven by executive decisions under Brian Graden, who became president of programming for MTV in 2000, prioritizing low-cost, high-engagement reality formats like Punk'd and Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica over celebrity-heavy productions. Reality shows were significantly cheaper to produce than elaborate live tribute events involving A-list performers and elaborate staging, allowing MTV to reallocate funds amid tightening budgets post-2004. Internal changes at MTV further contributed to the discontinuation, including Graden's expanded role in overseeing VH1 and other properties, which diluted focus on niche music honors without a designated successor award announced. The absence of renewal for Icon aligned with no broader replacement for artist tribute specials, as MTV streamlined its slate to favor evergreen reality series that sustained viewership among 18-34-year-olds. Concurrently, broader industry disruptions from digital music platforms eroded the relevance of traditional video-centric tributes; the launch of Apple's iTunes Store in 2003 accelerated a 600% surge in U.S. digital downloads from 20 million in 2003 to 140 million in 2004, diminishing the promotional power of TV specials as artists turned to online streaming for exposure.[36] These factors collectively led to the quiet phasing out of MTV Icon, with no official explanation issued by the network.

Cultural Impact

The MTV Icon series significantly elevated the profiles of its honorees by providing high-profile tributes that amplified their commercial and artistic legacies during key career moments. For instance, the 2001 special honoring Janet Jackson served as a major promotional platform for her album All for You, whetting audience appetites for the accompanying tour and reinforcing her status as a pop innovator through performances and commentary from collaborators like Jimmy Jam.[2] Similarly, the 2002 and 2003 events for Aerosmith and Metallica positioned these veteran rock acts as enduring icons, drawing widespread media attention and tributes from peers that underscored their influence across decades in the music industry.[1] A core element of the series' cultural resonance was its showcasing of intergenerational appeal, where emerging artists paid homage to established figures, bridging generational divides and highlighting MTV's role in music discovery. In Jackson's tribute, younger stars like Pink, Mya, Usher, Destiny's Child, and *NSYNC recreated her iconic choreography and videos—such as a medley of "Miss You Much," "Alright," and "Rhythm Nation"—exposing her trailblazing work to new audiences and inspiring acts like *NSYNC to elevate their own performances.[20][37] This format preserved the channel's legacy of connecting eras, with similar cross-generational nods in the Aerosmith and Metallica specials featuring rising bands like Sum 41 and Staind covering classics.[1] The series contributed to MTV's tradition of lifetime achievement honors, influencing subsequent awards that celebrate artistic legacies, such as the Video Vanguard Award at the VMAs and the inaugural 2025 Latin Icon Award presented to Ricky Martin.[38] Viewed retrospectively as a pinnacle of MTV's music-focused programming amid its shift toward reality TV, Icon clips continue to garner views on YouTube, fueling nostalgia for the network's golden era of artist tributes.[39]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.