When I saw the pictures of New Orleans, my first thought was that this is the home of American music. Dixieland, ragtime, jazz, rhythm and blues, funk, even rock and roll, all started there. The music community in N'awlins is organic, delicate, and precious. It can't be rebuilt; if the people who make it up scatter, it will be gone.
Since Wednesday, I've been looking for a fund to help New Orleans musicians, who are the heart and soul of that great city. I've looked through the Musicians Unions (no help), the House of Blues, and numerous other music-oriented charities.
Finally, I found that the Preservation Hall (the organization that best knows every 80-year old jazz and bluesman in the city) has started a fund to help support the New Orleans musicians and entertainers.
http://www.preservationhall.com/2.0/donate.php I'd mentioned to some of you that this was my constructive way of dealing with this crisis. Several of you indicated your support.
I'm a crappy fundraiser. But I am going to ask you to dig deep and give big to help preserve the New Orleans music community - because without that being preserved, NOLA can never be rebuilt.
http://www.preservationhall.com/2.0/donate.php I'm a criminal defense lawyer. Criminal defense lawyers know where the turning point issues are: the often forgotten little corners of reality that can change the whole picture. This is such an issue; without its music community, there is no difference between New Orleans and anyplace else. I've never been a good fundraiser, and I'm not going to continually spam all of you: this is my one and only begging letter for this cause to any of you. Look at this as an opportunity; this community will be ignored by every major disaster relief group. But it is absolutely vital to rebuilding N'awlins.
http://www.preservationhall.com/2.0/donate.php These people will need new homes, new instruments, and some help while they work odd jobs waiting for their community to be able to re-unite. Please give what you can. These folks deserve it.
Clay S. Conrad
Men had better be without education than be educated by their rulers.
--Thomas Hodgskin, 1823