Victims of the Interstate 35W bridge collapse are getting help from an unexpected source: rock 'n' roll road warriors.
"I tour the country for a living and go over bridges and overpasses
hundreds of times a day," Los Angeles-based retro-rock guitarist Deke
Dickerson said. "I've been over that very bridge dozens of times."
He's one of a whopping 57 rock, country, blues and world-music acts
to donate rare or unreleased tracks for a three-disc benefit CD,
"Musicians for Minneapolis," hitting stores statewide this month. Most
of the participants perform regularly in Minnesota, including Los
Lobos, Steve Vai, Dick Dale, Les Claypool, Beausoleil, Jim Lauderdale,
Sparklehorse and Lee Scratch Perry.
Los Lobos "considers the Twin Cities one of our absolute favorite places," keyboardist Steve Berlin writes in the box set.
The CDs were produced by Electro-Voice, a Burnsville-based company
that makes microphones and speaker equipment. "The day after the
tragedy, we got phone calls and e-mails from our artists across the
country asking if we were all safe," recalled James Edlund, the
company's artist relations manager. "Their next question was: 'How can
we help?'"
The disc also includes a few Minnesota artists who work with the
company, including the Vibro Champs, Willie Wisely and -- featured with
his old group the Stray Cats -- recent Minneapolis transplant Brian
Setzer.
For haste's sake, the artists were asked to donate a song they
already had in the can, but Coon Rapids-based country singer Rockie
Lynne said he "couldn't help" but write an original song about the
tragedy. It became the set's lead-off track, "The Chance to Say
Goodbye."
"Imagine going off to work and never coming home/ Kissing your
family, then leaving them alone through no fault of your own," sings
Lynne. He goes on to reference specific victims such as a delivery
truck driver and a mother with her son.
"Songwriting is like farming," Lynne said. "You can put in a lot of
hard work, but you can't make it rain. With this song, it rained right
away, probably because I was so saddened that a tragedy like that could
take place right where I live."
A $100,000 goal
"Musicians for Minneapolis" is already on sale at Twin Cities
independent record stores such as Cheapo Discs and the Electric Fetus,
as well as online retailer CDBaby.com.
Best Buy stores statewide and metro-area Target stores should get it
later this week. Many clubs and music stores also will carry it.
All proceeds will go to the Minnesota Helps -- Bridge Disaster Fund.
Electro-Voice hopes to sell out of the first pressing of 5,000 copies
-- and raise $100,000 -- in time for the Aug. 1 anniversary of the
collapse.
It's just the latest contribution from a musical community that has
staged a series of benefit concerts at Twin Cities clubs such as the
Fine Line, Famous Dave's Uptown and 7th Street Entry, on down to
coffee-shop gigs. Minneapolis hip-hop stars Atmosphere also pitched in
by adding a $1 online fee to tickets for their fall national tour.
"The arts community and individual artists have been very creative
in their efforts to help," said Christelle Langer, vice president of
communications for the Minneapolis Foundation, which administers the
Minnesota Helps fund. The new CD "is another great example of an
individual or, in this case, a company using whatever resources they
have at hand to help these families."
So far the fund has received $1.2 million and distributed about $468,000 to survivors and victims' families.
Many of these recipients are waiting for more help from the
Legislature. A House committee Thursday gave its approval to a proposal
modeled on the Sept. 11 victims fund created by Congress. A companion
bill in the Senate is expected soon.
The state set up an emergency fund for victims in November, but it
contains only $1 million to help cover lost wages, while the proposed
compensation fund would have $30 million to $60 million, according to
the House sponsor, Rep. Ryan Winkler, DFL-Golden Valley.
"Their needs probably aren't going to go away," said Lynne, who
performed at a benefit concert at Elko Speedway last year. "Hopefully,
these CDs are something that can be around for a while to help them
out."
Chris Riemenschneider • 612-673-4658