An Appeal To Help Musicians After Sandy

jazdoc

Member Sponsor
Aug 7, 2010
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Just got this email and donated. This is a great organization inspired by Dizzy Gillespie...Please give if you can and support the musicians who bring so much to our lives.

Hello Wonderful People:

Hard to believe that only a week ago today we were dancing and sharing the most beautiful moments at our Loft Party, forgetting our worries and living “free.” I never would have imagined days later we would be working day and night to save so many of our musicians from so much devastation from a hurricane in NYC.

We hope this finds you and yours safe and well, we are sending you love. Please let me know you are okay.

We spent 7 years dealing with the aftermath of Katrina, building back the lives of over 1000 musicians and in the last few days, it was so poignant to be getting calls from New Orleans musicians worried about us!

It's so much worse than one might have imagined. Aside from the most obvious need of water, warmth, food and money, hundreds of musicians have lost gigs because of Sandy. Clubs are closed, and musicians haven't been able to travel out of town for work either. Lost gigs means no money for the rent. No money for the rent means the Jazz Foundation will be providing emergency assistance.

Donate here to help in their time of crisis: www.jazzfoundation.org/donate

Since we could no longer reach so many by phone, we spent the past days driving around with supplies, taking our database list and going from address to address; finding our way into buildings without lights by waiting around till a neighbor would let us in (since buzzers don't work) and there is no phone service and cell phone towers are down so we couldn't even separate and call each other. And what we found was almost always the same...

Most had no money because gigs have been canceled, ATM's are not in service and stores are closed, therefore, no food. Elevators are out of service and elder musicians have to walk up and down flights of stairs in the dark and traverse miles of the city just to get to an open grocery store or for the warmth of a hot meal. Three of the musicians we found had just gotten out of hospitals within the last few weeks and were home alone under these conditions.

Their spirits were Typical Musician: "It is what it is."

One musician we made our way to, who is in his 70's - all he had at home was some bread and a few cans of Pepsi. He told us he walked for miles from the lower east side to the 40s to find a warm piece of chicken but no luck. All he had at home was some bread and a few cans of Pepsi. He had just paid the rent and had no money and was waiting for a gig that was canceled the very same day. When we found our way into his building (we knew which apt he was in because we could hear him playing his horn) the tears in his eyes when he opened the door and saw that someone came looking for him was overwhelming. When he saw the four of us there with water and food he said, "Who are you? And, I love you." We told him we were from the Jazz Foundation and he invited us into his freezing one room apartment. When we pulled out thermal underwear and gloves, he got choked up and almost cried. I didn't hold back. I cried. I cried because I saw how he was living before the hurricane- just by looking around. I asked him how he gets by each month and if he was up-to-date with the rent. He said, "Rent I'm always good with, I'm never late." So I asked, Are you like every musician I know and living-low-on-the-food? With a mischievous grin he responded, pointing out how he has been maintaining his girlish figure, that he has, gotten accustomed to soup."

Now, we will be getting him a food card each month and some new clothes, as both were very much needed. He was so positive and had such a beautiful sense of humor. I knew from that moment on that we would be making sure he ate better every month.

I can't begin to tell you how beautiful it was when we just showed up and were able to give bags of groceries, fresh roasted chickens, thermal underwear and gloves to keep them warm since there is no heat and all of their homes were freezing and damp- to the bone. I've never seen such graciousness or gracefulness in such challenging circumstances. We laughed, we cried, we even got a few little mini-concerts. We didn't leave before getting the names of one or two other musicians in the neighborhood who we didn't know about, and then we'd find our way to them next. We got the chance to see the way many we had not known before are living. We met musicians with medical issues that we can now send to our amazing partners at Englewood Hospital who give our musicians nearly half a million dollars worth of free medical care and operations. It made us realize that there are so many who could have used assistance even before the hurricane. Everyone has become so used to being self-sufficient and living "without" for so many years that it doesn't even occur to them that there is help.

It was an avalanche of love and mutual communion that I will cherish for a lifetime. These are among the most wonderful people I have ever served in my 25 years as a non-profit warrior. From the famous bee bop giants to the avant garde pioneers, we covered so many genres and so many generations of musicians and all were brought to deep emotion when they opened the door and saw someone cared.

There are so many individual emergency needs, and our amazing staff of social workers and advocates are qualified to assess and address the less obvious needs of those we visit. Today we are going back downtown with more of everything. Last night I got a call from a younger jazz musician (only 57 years old) in Staten Island who had 6 feet of water in his house and he and his family now have to move . He said much of his music, and instruments have been destroyed. We will be helping him with one month’s rent and one month’s security.

We need the Jazz and blues-loving community to pull together on this one. Here's the part where you can help:

If you know a musician that you are worried about or needs help, please email me at wendy@jazzfoundation.org and cc:email]Alisa@jazzfoundation.org[/email] and we will try to get to them.

It is clear that the Jazz Foundation needs donations now more than ever. Please get the word out and pass this on to your music loving friends. We've already gotten donations from Germany and London.

They've always been there for us - lifting us up, getting us through the roller coaster ride of being human - and now in their moments of darkness, we can give something back.

www.jazzfoundation.org/donate

Bless you for being part of this beautiful family and for going to the website and donating to keep our musicians alive and well.

You are loved.

Yours in service,
Wendy... & The Band
 

Bill Hart

Well-Known Member
May 11, 2012
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Thanks for this Doc. FWIW, a bunch of local musicians (and we have some pretty serious players locally, including Bruce Katz, Rob Stoner, Tom Chapin, etc.) are doing a benefit tonight to raise money for the local village that got devastated. And some of these players themselves got totally hammered.
 

jazdoc

Member Sponsor
Aug 7, 2010
3,328
737
1,700
Bellevue
Thanks for this Doc. FWIW, a bunch of local musicians (and we have some pretty serious players locally, including Bruce Katz, Rob Stoner, Tom Chapin, etc.) are doing a benefit tonight to raise money for the local village that got devastated. And some of these players themselves got totally hammered.

That's terrific. Good luck.
 

Bill Hart

Well-Known Member
May 11, 2012
2,684
174
1,150
That's terrific. Good luck.

We didn't stay long. Venue was packed, and we gave up our seats. Jonathan Demme was first on the stage, a neighbor from the area, and he was funny, warm and charming, as usual. The first song was Proud Mary ('Rollin' on the River'), so apropos because the villages are on the Hudson River and that's what did the damage. Lot's of gifted musicians in the audience, waiting their turn to get up and play. And tons of townspeople, many of whom are living in hotels now,staying with friends or family, or ekking out an existence in a cold house without power, heat or lighting, preferring to stay, rather than abandon their homes. (The inspectors removed power meters from many houses and businesses because the water got to the electrical systems and they won't get power until those systems are ripped out, replaced and inspected. So, it's not just a question of turning the juice back on to the wires~ these folks are gonna be stuck for a while). They set up a buffet upstairs, free, in the restaurant, for folks who were hungry. What's interesting is the mix of people that are involved- you have folks who have lived on the river all their lives, one guy, now homeless, in his 90's (he wasn't there tonight) was born in the house he lives in, but he's unable to return given its condition. He is now living in an old bottling factory that a friend owns which is sort of an artist's loft. Others are 'urban professionals' with big careers who work in the city and commute, and a mix of artists of all kinds, painters, writers, poets, not wealthy folks by any means, and townspeople with regular jobs, at local companies, or small business owners, all willing to show up, contribute what they can in money, time and effort. This is what humankind is really about- not the cutting in gas lines, the looting, or all the other bad stuff you hear about. And it reemphasizes to me that the first responders and those that are there for the long haul to help are the locals, and the individual people, not the government agencies. Yes, the politicians did their tours, there were the helicopter fly-overs (whether FEMA or the governor, I don't know), but it almost doesn't matter. The insurers will adjust, the Army Corp of Engineers will figure out what has to be done with some of the sea walls and infrastructure--part of our road seems to be falling into the river now- but getting through the immediate crisis, and supporting people in the aftermath, as well as hauling away the debris of homes and lives, and helping to rebuild- regular people, not agencies. There were a huge number of bucket trucks pulling wire, one after another, I've never seen so many - crews from Georgia who came up to help.
 
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