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Music Saves Mountains: Concert Recap, Photos, and More

Rob Perks

Posted May 24, 2010 in Saving Wildlife and Wild Places, Solving Global Warming

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Was it all a dream?  That's what I keep wondering about NRDC's Music Saves Mountains benefit councert last week, the biggest gathering of singers and songwriters to raise awareness of -- and to fight against -- mountaintop removal coal mining.  Fortunately, I returned from Nashville with a souvenir Hatch show print that proves it actually took place -- not to mention the jaw-dropping press coverage detailing this special event, including: The TennesseanCMT, Music Row, Great American CountryGibson, The BootTera.com, and Broadway World.   And then there's the local TV news coverage -- take a look.

It's too bad the concert wasn't televized for all to see.  Here at NRDC we're still editing some footage that we'll make available soon on MusicSavesMountain.org.  However, in the age of flipcams, you can find plenty of raw footage on YouTube already -- just search for 'Music Saves Mountains' and you'll see gems like Dave Matthews singing the Tex Ritter song 'Rye Whiskey', in homage to Pete Seeger who famously performed it.

But we do have lots of great photos -- here are some images compiled into a slide show from the pre-show press conference, the concert and the after party.  Enjoy!

Right after the show I blogged my initial reaction.  But I've excerpted the story in Country Music Television, which captured the full flavor of the event.

"Having this show at the Ryman has special meaning," Emmylou Harris said as she summed up the feelings behind the Music Saves Mountains benefit concert held Wednesday night (May 19) at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. "If the Ryman is the mother church of country music, then the Appalachian Mountains are its sacred ground. We need your voices, because once they're gone, these mountains will never be back."

Harris, Kathy Mattea, Patty Loveless, Alison Krauss, Patty Griffin, Big Kenny, Dave Matthews and others all gathered to shine a light on a coal mining practice that is devastating communities and forests in the Appalachian region, the area that first gave rise to the traditions of country music.

Mountaintop removal coal mining is essentially strip mining on a massive scale that does exactly what its name implies. The peaks of mountains are blasted away to expose the coal below, and the waste is dumped into adjoining river valleys. Filling in these rivers has major effects downstream, polluting water supplies and endangering local residents, as well as wreaking havoc on the extremely diverse Appalachian ecosystem. To date, some 500 peaks have been leveled.

Needless to say, the performers at the Ryman felt very close to this cause. Most indentified themselves as "hillbillies" who grew up in the affected area.

Mattea, a West Virginia native, took the stage early and graced the sold-out crowd with her rich and expressive voice on "Red Winged Blackbird." She hardly needed a microphone at all. After bringing Harris back out and introducing Loveless, the three harmonized with conviction on Jean Ritchie's "Black Waters." When she reached the climatic verse, "But if I had 10 million thereabouts/I would buy Perry County and I'd run 'em all out!," the crowd let her know they were firmly behind her with a massive cheer.

...

Big Kenny, who first became aware of mountaintop removal after flying over a site on his way home to Culpeper, Va., lightened the mood a bit with his circus-showman personality, but the issue clearly affected him deeply. Offering his dual message of the need for safe food and clean water along with the transformative power of forgiveness, he said, "We don't want to think twice about what we're handing down to the next generation." His song, "Wake Up," included the lines "May the day never come/We should worry 'bout the things we could've done." Earlier in the day, he described visiting a family whose water ran black out of the tap as "utterly disheartening."

...

The second half of the show featured more stellar music, but was maybe less of a call to action and more of a thank you to those who paid handily for their tickets. Buddy Miller, who all evening had been leading the all-star band with Sam Bush, used his turn out front to perform Steve Earle's "The Mountain" and then gave the spotlight to Griffin. Singing "Move Up," a song from her latest album, Downtown Church, she had the crowd clapping in time. Another song, "Up to the Mountain (MLK Song)" from her Children Running Through album, found couples young and old cuddling up together in the Ryman's oak church pews.

At this point, it seemed like the audience had gotten as loud as it could. Then Griffin introduced Alison Krauss and the place simply erupted. The notoriously sheepish singer walked across the stage and let her music do the talking for her. Angelic is probably the best word to describe it. She offered "Jacob's Dream," a song about two boys lost in the woods, and "I Know Who Holds Tomorrow," with the audience alternating between dead silence during the song and deafening applause afterwards.

Now there was only one performer left, and all Emmylou Harris had to do was mention that the show sold out in 15 minutes for everybody to know that Dave Matthews was coming out. I felt a little naive for thinking the crowd couldn't get any louder than it did during the previous segment. Amid "Don't Drink the Water," a bit of "This Land Is Your Land," "You and Me," the Pete Seeger version of "Rye Whiskey" and "So Damn Lucky," Matthews declared, "I love this part of the world. It's a shame to let money ruin it ... so let's not."

...

The show closed with an amazing quartet rendition of John Prine's "Paradise," which pretty much outlines the entire argument against mountaintop removal mining. Harris, Krauss, Mattea and Loveless, a dream team of vocalists if there ever was one, made the song's chorus hit home harder than ever before. "And daddy won't you take me back to Muhlenberg County/Down by the Green River where paradise lay/Well, I'm sorry my son, but you're too late in asking/Mr. Peabody's coal train has hauled it away."

All of the proceeds of the event were donated to the fight against mountaintop removal coal mining in Appalachia, but the real cause behind the benefit was to create awareness of the problem.

"Like a lot of people, it was something that I wasn't aware of," said Harris, who has a long history of political activism. "The Appalachians have inspired countless country, folk, bluegrass, gospel and Americana songs. Now those sources of inspiration are being secretly destroyed. We're standing together with one voice to send the message that we will not sit idly by while our mountains are being blown apart."

All in all, this historic concert defies description.  For those of us lucky enough to bear witness, it was a moving event.  It's worth noting that Emmylou Harris has pledged to hold this concert with us every year until we win the campaign to save the Appalachians by stopping mountaintop removal.  As great as it would be to see this show again next year, NRDC will continue working to make sure that won't be necessary.

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Comments

JohnMay 25 2010 01:24 PM

It was striking that the local Fox TV news coverage never once mentioned the word "mining," and only mentioned the word "coal" 2 or 3 times (only once by their reporter). Without the video footage of the equipment and the blasting, uninitiated viewers might have been scratching their heads wondering what "mountaintop removal" is exactly.

Congratulations on what sounds like a terrific event.

JusticeMay 25 2010 05:06 PM

Please tell me they recorded this in HiDef and will be released on DVD!!

Wendy HiltsMay 26 2010 11:13 AM

My husband and I were fortunate enough to be going to Nashville for the first time when I found out about this concert / event. Needless to say, we bought seats. I have to say I was so moved by the music and performances that brought forth into the light this major issue. If just getting the information out and making people aware of the problem is all that gets done right now, that is a good thing. We know this will take a long time to get out where it needs to be BUT, it can be done.

Country Music Disc JockeyJun 2 2010 03:38 AM

I will not play a artist who is against Coal, or Strip Mining. Coal keeps the lights on. If they get rid of Coal and use another solution like gas and oil. The price will be higher, and people will go broke. Coal is were it's at. People who wants to get rid of coal is DUMB AND STUPID TREE HUGGERS. If any country music artists wants to be played on my radio shows, they better not campaign against Coal, or Mountaintop Removal, because i wil not play them stupid artists. Coal has been in my family all my life, and i will support Coal, and do what i can to keep the Coal going.

Country Music Disk JockeyJun 2 2010 03:46 AM

God put that Coal in the ground for us to use. All these Tree Huggers wants is to put the poor people out, they don't care about the men who works hard in the Coal Mines, or their families.

Like i said, if you are against Coal, or Mountaintop Removal. You are Dumb and Stupid.

All of you stupid tree huggers should be stuck in cold and have your sorry asses freezed off.

PhilJun 2 2010 12:29 PM

Country Music DJ - the artists that participated in this concert were very clear that they are not against coal mining. That in fact they support traditional coal mining. Mountaintop removal is just one form of mining that produces very little coal used in the US, and yet it costs miners' jobs, harms communities living nearby, and destroys mountains forever. God didn't make the mountains for out-of-state corporations to blow them up and make people suffer. That's a man-made problem. I don't recall anywhere in the Bible where God says "I made these mountains, now let the rich people have their way with them." In fact, if you want to bring scripture into this, I can show you several places where God charges us to take care of His creation.

Stop destroying the mountains. Protect traditional mining jobs. I assure you, the lights will stay on.

BradJun 2 2010 03:55 PM

As a native Appalachian, let me offer my heartfelt thanks to the performers who donated their time and energy to speak out against this travesty.

It isn't just about the environment. This is a human rights issue. We have a right to stay on our ancestral homelands. We have a right to clean air and water. We have a right to have access to our mountaintop cemetaries.

TeresaJun 2 2010 04:06 PM

Country Music DJ - Read your own words, "God put that Coal in the ground for us to use". Do you understand what IN THE GROUND means? The traditional form of mining is underground. That is a hard life and dangerous for the miners, but at least it doesn't destroy the mountain tops. Have YOU ever seen with your own eyes what mountaintop removal does and leaves behind? I lived with it in my backyard when I was in WV. Pictures cannot convey the devastation. Take a trip and go see what it's like.....then come back and tell us your thoughts. "Keep Traditional Mining Alive....Stop Mountaintop Removal"

Country Music Disc JockeyJun 3 2010 12:48 AM

I read my own words. God made the world, and he made Coal. I hope every tree hugger will suffer, and stay in the dark, and freeze their ass off when they can't afford to pay their electric bill because of the new electric sorce from gas and oil. Without Coal, The electricity bill will be higher. Like i said, i will not support, and play any country music artist who is against Mountaintop Removal or Coal. Them artist is not allowed to be played on my radio show. I am for the Coal, and if any of you sorry ass punks don't like it, you can kiss my ass. Pucker up butter cup.

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Switchboard is the staff blog of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the nation’s most effective environmental group. For more about our work, including in-depth policy documents, action alerts and ways you can contribute, visit NRDC.org.

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