Vice President Al Gore, his wife, Tipper, and running mate Joseph Lieberman
The 6,000 donors were treated to a concert featuring performances by nine musical acts embracing the last 35 years in contemporary music. But it was telling that the majority of the artists and the audience came of age in the baby boomer generation's halcyon years the '60s and '70s. Even the show's younger performers, such as Lenny Kravitz and Sheryl Crow, are aligned musically with the traditions of that era rather than the current trends of dance, hip-hop and lite pop.
If '60s Was '90s
Psychologists say that we spend most of our adult life refighting the
unresolved battles of our childhood. So it is with this election. And
ergo the fund-raiser concerts. Unlike 1992 and 1996, when baby boomer
Clinton faced off against WWII veterans Bush Sr. and Dole, this
election pits two kids of the '60s generation against each other.
And their political differences are just a reflection of the cultural
civil war of that era.
For some the '60s and '70s were a time of great idealism as exemplified by the music of that era much of which was represented at the show. For others it was the start of the Great Decline in the social fabric.
Acts who broke through in the '80s and '90s opened the show. A newly blond Sheryl Crow strutted her stuff in Victorian hippie garb followed by Hendrix aficionado Lenny Kravitz (playing rather louder than the comfort zone for most middle-aged Democrats), a soberly besuited Jon Bon Jovi and a beaming k.d. lang. The performers each contributed one or two of their hits, an astute choice for a benefit crowd that nuzzles more contentedly on familiarity than new terrain. When the artist roster first reached back into the 1970s it yielded the laid-back Buffet, who revealed the "play one or two of your hits" strategy requested by the benefit organizers. "Fortunately, I've only had two hits," he quipped. He also scored by incorporating impressions of George Bush stumbling over the word du jour "subliminal."
You Better You Bette
The audience responded enthusiastically to all the performances, but
the appreciation became even more pronounced when a proudly svelte Bette
Midler took the stage and the audience by storm. In addition to
singing a hypnotic "The Rose" she brought on Spector chanteuse Darlene
Love to duet with her on "He's a Rebel" and deliver a powerhouse "River Deep
Mountain High." If anyone had given Midler the new party line on safe
humor, she had mislaid the instructions, and she interpolated her
singing with her trademark Sophie Tucker-esque one-liners. a cascade of
ribaldry uncontaminated by PC concerns. One sensed the audience
straining to gauge the reactions of the Gores and Liebermans to the
jokes, rather like the nervous glances young adults take at their
elderly parents when risqué material is unleashed in a family setting.
Déjà Vu
The final trio of acts were among the musical heavyweights of their
generation. First came the improbable survivors of the '60s Crosby,
Stills & Nash. The harmonies may occasionally strain but the commitment
and history of the three performers lent an air of Big Chill idealism
to the proceedings. "Marrakesh Express" and "Helplessly Hoping" (the
latter slyly dedicated to "Shrub" by Crosby) were the soundtrack to the
giddy optimism of the late '60s.
A trio of Eagles Don Henley, Glenn Frey and Timothy B. Schmit united to remind the audience how that '60s spirit became tempered by the sobering realities of the '70s and '80s, from "Desperado" and "Peaceful Easy Feeling" to Henley's post-nostalgic "Boys Of Summer."
The final performer was the ever-restless Paul Simon. He was in his polyrhythmic New York street-boy mode, placing percussive emphasis and new-agey world music arrangements on hits such as "Bridge Over Troubled Water" and "Graceland." Two musical highlights from the evening spotlighted the night's political purpose. The finale had Crosby, Stills & Nash leading all the performers (save Midler) chorusing on the presciently themed "Teach Your Children," a song that Graham Nash might have custom-composed for the Gore-Lieberman campaign (if he hadn't written it 32 years earlier.) The sentimental charm of the song seemed to capture the exuberant spirit of the audience.
Young Guns
But in an evening where musicians perform their own hits, the most
telling statements come from the songs specially chosen for the
occasion. Far and away the night's most unexpected choice (and most
successful) was the collaboration by Jon Bon Jovi, Sheryl Crow and Lenny
Kravitz. Bon Jovi, wryly acknowledging that Gore and Lieberman's
favorite band was more likely the Beatles than his own Bon Jovi,
announced their choice. The three teamed up on a powerful rendition of
John Lennon's 1968 political proclamation "Revolution." Not the genteel
doo-wop version from the White Album‚ but the full-blooded
primal-scream arrangement of the single. In its original (pre-Nike-jingle)
incarnation, the song had been a watershed, and defined which side of
the barricades one stood on. Though Crow and Kravitz were still in the
toddler and pre-embryonic stage respectively in 1968, they had absorbed
its relevance, and the searing energy of the performance and the
significance of the choice was not lost on the audience, which gave it
the first and biggest standing ovation of the night.
Wish Upon a Star
As befitted an evening of heavyweight entertainment industry support for
the Democrats, the musicians were introduced by a plethora of movie
stars. Some, such as Michael Douglas, Jessica Lange and Harrison Ford,
showed seasoned chops in blending introductions and political
endorsements. Lange spoke to the need of women to protect Roe v.
Wade; a downbeat Ford expressed his belief that Gore is committed to
campaign finance reform, and that the exorbitant sums both parties
raise could instead be channeled to the causes that really need and
deserve such money.
Some of the younger actors who were making their first forays into presidential politics were effusive yet almost charmingly unprepared for the task of public endorsements. Julia Roberts explained her support for Democrats over Republicans by way of her study of the definition of those two words in the dictionary. Her line that she found "Republican" right between "reptile" and "repugnant" was a an easy crowd-pleaser, but seemed oddly incongruous in the new Lieberman era. Salma Hayek was so enthused with saying "Al Gore rocks!" that she walked offstage forgetting to introduce the next act, and had to dash back to announce Jon Bon Jovi. Perhaps the most enthusiastically received line of the night came from the boyish Matt Damon who equated George Bush with Fredo from the "Godfather" movies. "And they wouldn't even let him run the family business...."
Blush vs. Gore
Bette Midler was not the only performer who seemed oblivious to the
codes of the New Model Democratic Army. Prior to introducing Midler,
actor-comedian John Leguizamo unleashed a volley of jokes about Jews and
Hispanics "licking Bush" that the audience sensed were causing great
discomfort in the front row, though his impression of Bush learning his
Spanish by instructing "the help" was on safer ground.
The evening started with a lengthy introduction by the three entertainment industry moguls who conceived and produced the event. Michael Douglas brought on what he called the "Three Divas" VH1 chief John Sykes, Rolling Stone publisher Jann Wenner and main instigator Harvey Weinstein, co-chairman of Miramax Films. The trio each spoke of their passionate commitment to the Democratic cause, before Weinstein brought on the Gores and Liebermans to start the evening.
Fusion Music
After the curtain went down three hours later, the Gore-Lieberman ticket
plus wives and Hillary Clinton trooped onstage to thank the
performers. Gore's final words summarized the mood. He exulted that he
was touched by having some of the finest performers of his generation
performing in honor of the ticket. The fusion between candidates,
performers and supporters was complete. The '60s generation is now in
sole charge. Now the electorate must decide which side was in the right
in that long-ago revolutionary war, and whether it wants to be led
by the people our parents warned us about or by people who agreed with
our parents. It's going to be like one of those deejay-fueled battle of
the bands. But with much higher stakes.
