Motive aside, celebrity does help in relief efforts
In other words, if Leonardo DiCaprio’s presence on “A Concert for Hurricane Relief” translates into several thousand dollars in donations, which can help house and feed a few families rendered homeless by Katrina, does it make a real difference if some viewers out there think he’s sincere and others don’t? If there is a celebrity whose work or love life makes your stomach turn, or a performer whose political leanings clash with yours, or even an artist whose star has faded and you don’t think he or she belongs in such a high-profile gathering, is any of that really an issue if people whose lives have been ripped apart by this hurricane can get help?
In fact, I wouldn’t mind seeing Crowe and his band, 30 Old Cans of Beans or whatever the heck its name is, taking up instruments and doing a few numbers for the cause.
This isn’t your typical celebrity fest, either. Sometimes a concert is the first and obvious reaction toward filling a charitable need. In this case, “A Concert for Hurricane Relief” has more organic roots. Besides the fact that native sons of the region will take part, it’s also fitting that a city like New Orleans, and its surrounding landscape, has long been a bubbling cauldron of spicy musical fare encompassing rhythm and blues, jazz, gospel, Latin, funk, zydeco, bluegrass, reggae, country and even hip-hop.
Lending a hand during hard times
That part of the South has produced more original American music than any other section of the country. To music lovers, New Orleans is like a favorite uncle. It’s important to pay him a little respect and lend a hand when he falls on hard times.
If there had been more time to organize, if the need weren’t so pressing, this could have been one of the greatest gatherings of musical talent ever put together, judging by the incredible number of splendid creative progeny the city has given birth to, as well as the thousands of artists it has had influence on. It still might be.
The Neville Brothers, Johnny Adams, Louis Armstrong, Dr. John, Fats Domino, Sonny Landreth and many others have helped give the Big Easy a place on the musical map larger and more prominent than any other. If you didn’t particularly like listening to music when you visited there, you did by the time you left. Even a tin ear could find aural rapture within its confines.
But when you see the aerial shots of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast now, the music stops playing. There is no brassy trumpet, no blues guitar, no whippoorwill voices, just the sounds of people coping with destruction and trying to survive.
I understand Russell Crowe’s comments, I really do. But there are times when you have to put those sentiments aside when something occurs that is a lot more important than whether or not you’re annoyed by a celebrity or two. “A Concert for Hurricane Relief” is one of those times.
Michael Ventre lives in Los Angeles and is a regular contributor to MSNBC.com.
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