1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:03,133 --> 00:00:04,482 [bear roaring] 3 00:00:06,745 --> 00:00:08,008 [dramatic music] 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:08,138 --> 00:00:10,271 Read my lips, we're going to cut spending. 6 00:00:10,401 --> 00:00:12,969 There is a problem, we're broke. 7 00:00:13,100 --> 00:00:16,103 We're broke, we're broke, we're broke. 8 00:00:17,017 --> 00:00:21,847 My, my very first thoughts as a child, uh, came from music. 9 00:00:21,978 --> 00:00:26,330 Music has always been part of my family life. 10 00:00:31,727 --> 00:00:33,772 I paint every day, and I sing every day. 11 00:00:33,903 --> 00:00:36,601 Music is a huge part of my life. 12 00:00:36,732 --> 00:00:38,821 I cannot imagine a world without music. 13 00:00:38,951 --> 00:00:40,953 One of the most fun I ever had in school 14 00:00:41,084 --> 00:00:43,739 was the day we got up in front of the, uh, auditorium. 15 00:00:43,869 --> 00:00:46,524 When it comes to cutting funding for the arts in school, 16 00:00:46,655 --> 00:00:49,701 I think that's a terrible, uh, way to go. 17 00:00:49,832 --> 00:00:52,443 Imagining a life in school with no music. 18 00:00:52,574 --> 00:00:55,011 Couldn't imagine a world without music. 19 00:00:55,142 --> 00:00:58,232 You know, I think it's the most powerful form of, of magic really. 20 00:00:58,362 --> 00:01:02,018 As a result of having to cut back in the short term, 21 00:01:02,149 --> 00:01:06,196 we have cut the arts from public schools. 22 00:01:06,327 --> 00:01:09,939 It's shocking to me that certain high schools don't have any arts programs. 23 00:01:10,070 --> 00:01:12,681 Yeah, it's lack, definitely lacking and it's scary. 24 00:01:12,811 --> 00:01:15,162 [upbeat music] 25 00:01:58,205 --> 00:01:59,641 [gentle music] 26 00:02:05,864 --> 00:02:08,258 Music definitely kept me off the streets. 27 00:02:10,347 --> 00:02:13,655 I have few memories of going outside as a kid, 28 00:02:14,046 --> 00:02:16,266 because there was so much gang activity 29 00:02:16,701 --> 00:02:19,487 and the fear of mixing in with the wrong crowd of people 30 00:02:19,617 --> 00:02:21,837 that didn't have my best interest. 31 00:02:23,143 --> 00:02:27,016 Looking back, I can see that the world around me was a war zone. 32 00:02:27,147 --> 00:02:31,542 Not necessarily a war zone for in the physical, but in the mental. 33 00:02:34,066 --> 00:02:39,942 In the midst of all of this, I was fortunate to be introduced to the flute. 34 00:02:40,725 --> 00:02:42,423 [upbeat flute music] 35 00:02:49,734 --> 00:02:54,086 Music, like, definitely kept me from wanting to spend my time 36 00:02:54,217 --> 00:02:56,306 doing other things with other people 37 00:02:56,437 --> 00:03:01,659 that weren't constructive or, or beneficial for me. 38 00:03:02,921 --> 00:03:04,923 We are engaged in an interesting project 39 00:03:05,054 --> 00:03:10,102 that has to do with studying and really investigating 40 00:03:10,233 --> 00:03:14,498 the effects of music training in the developing brain. 41 00:03:15,020 --> 00:03:18,328 If you start learning music 42 00:03:18,459 --> 00:03:22,376 and, actually, just even listening to music very early in life, 43 00:03:22,506 --> 00:03:24,421 that is going to have a positive effect. 44 00:03:24,552 --> 00:03:26,075 [upbeat music] 45 00:03:31,602 --> 00:03:34,214 The fundamental things that we're seeing is that 46 00:03:34,692 --> 00:03:40,481 the ma-- the maturation of the brain, in the sections of the brain 47 00:03:40,611 --> 00:03:44,920 that are associated with auditory processes or the processes of sounds. 48 00:03:45,442 --> 00:03:47,357 What happens is that it's accelerated, 49 00:03:47,879 --> 00:03:50,882 so these children have, 50 00:03:51,013 --> 00:03:55,235 for example, electrons holographic curves, the electric potentials 51 00:03:55,365 --> 00:03:59,978 that are generated by sounds are proximating 52 00:04:00,109 --> 00:04:02,242 the curves that you see in adults. 53 00:04:02,764 --> 00:04:07,029 And quite different from the kids that are not having music teaching. 54 00:04:07,159 --> 00:04:08,857 [upbeat music] 55 00:04:14,558 --> 00:04:17,257 I was nine years old, and I was in Atlantic City, 56 00:04:17,387 --> 00:04:21,261 I stood next to Gene Krupa, who was in the very back ballroom. 57 00:04:21,391 --> 00:04:23,915 And there was a rope and I was just watching him 58 00:04:24,046 --> 00:04:28,180 and he kept looking over at me and realizing that I was just into the music. 59 00:04:28,311 --> 00:04:30,966 [upbeat music] 60 00:04:31,096 --> 00:04:33,229 Anyone who knows about aphasia, 61 00:04:33,360 --> 00:04:37,625 and how, um, a left-handed severe stroke and a right hander 62 00:04:37,755 --> 00:04:41,977 will often effect speech perception or speech production. 63 00:04:42,369 --> 00:04:45,285 It, it immediately begs the question, 64 00:04:45,415 --> 00:04:47,896 well, what happens with music perception? 65 00:04:48,026 --> 00:04:53,293 I think that young people are naturally interested in music, 66 00:04:53,684 --> 00:04:57,732 and learning about how the brain works through music 67 00:04:57,862 --> 00:05:00,343 and your own experiences with music, 68 00:05:00,822 --> 00:05:04,173 facilitates the teaching of neuroscience to young people. 69 00:05:04,304 --> 00:05:05,783 [jazz music] 70 00:05:10,614 --> 00:05:13,225 Yeah, music is such an amazing outlet. 71 00:05:13,356 --> 00:05:16,707 For myself, I feel like if I'm in a bad mood 72 00:05:16,838 --> 00:05:19,275 or I'm cranky or something doesn't feel quite right, 73 00:05:19,406 --> 00:05:22,626 I'm anxious, I'm like how long has it been since I've sang. 74 00:05:23,192 --> 00:05:26,326 Because getting on a stage or even being in the comfort 75 00:05:26,456 --> 00:05:28,415 of my own home or with a small crowd, 76 00:05:28,545 --> 00:05:31,635 when I'm singing and projecting that out, 77 00:05:31,766 --> 00:05:36,031 I'm getting out emotions, I'm relieving stress instantly. 78 00:05:36,423 --> 00:05:40,644 All of these interventions that we are having as children, 79 00:05:40,775 --> 00:05:45,083 will have a beneficial impact in the structure of the brain, 80 00:05:45,214 --> 00:05:47,608 and in the way that brain is going to be prepared 81 00:05:47,738 --> 00:05:51,525 to deal with many other things, uh, in, in, in society 82 00:05:51,655 --> 00:05:54,397 in terms of the careers of this, uh, children. 83 00:05:55,659 --> 00:05:57,705 [light music] 84 00:05:59,446 --> 00:06:04,668 The universe is the transformation of vibrations 85 00:06:04,799 --> 00:06:07,279 into matter, right matter is emotion. 86 00:06:07,802 --> 00:06:11,632 That's what art is. Whether it be a dance piece or whether it be 87 00:06:11,762 --> 00:06:15,679 a great melody or that lyric that you connect to, 88 00:06:15,810 --> 00:06:19,204 that you identify with, that brings you back in time to that special place. 89 00:06:19,683 --> 00:06:21,729 It's a connective tissue to our spirit. 90 00:06:22,294 --> 00:06:24,688 It's what connects us to rhythm of the planet. 91 00:06:24,819 --> 00:06:27,256 That's how we're all unified, is really through art. 92 00:06:27,387 --> 00:06:28,823 [upbeat music] 93 00:06:34,045 --> 00:06:36,657 [Martin] Music connects us cathartically to our emotions. 94 00:06:36,787 --> 00:06:40,138 It's a constant healer, it's the common thread. 95 00:06:41,139 --> 00:06:43,881 It's the international language that doesn't have to be explained. 96 00:06:44,491 --> 00:06:45,927 And if you could bottle that, 97 00:06:47,145 --> 00:06:50,235 there would probably be no war. 98 00:06:50,366 --> 00:06:55,415 There's so much we don't know and music is all in that. 99 00:06:56,241 --> 00:06:59,375 Because what did they say in The Bible? 100 00:06:59,767 --> 00:07:06,382 "In the beginning was the word and the word was God, and the word was with God." 101 00:07:06,513 --> 00:07:08,471 What does that mean, what is the word? 102 00:07:08,602 --> 00:07:10,952 Well, according to some people, the word is that first sound. 103 00:07:11,082 --> 00:07:12,823 [inhaling] Ohm. 104 00:07:14,303 --> 00:07:20,135 The "ohm", the frequency, everything starts from one and zero. 105 00:07:20,265 --> 00:07:22,311 There's a science to harmonics. 106 00:07:22,746 --> 00:07:28,535 And it translates into society, because I want to live in harmony. 107 00:07:29,013 --> 00:07:30,624 [humming] 108 00:07:36,368 --> 00:07:37,674 Singing in church was, you know, 109 00:07:37,805 --> 00:07:39,589 when you, when you sing in the choir, 110 00:07:39,720 --> 00:07:42,113 there is a performance element of it. 111 00:07:42,549 --> 00:07:48,555 But singing for God is, is, is a beautiful experience. 112 00:07:48,685 --> 00:07:50,557 [Keith David humming] 113 00:08:05,702 --> 00:08:07,748 [upbeat jazz music] 114 00:08:18,541 --> 00:08:21,936 [Tony Bennett] Well, jazz is music that was invented in America. 115 00:08:22,893 --> 00:08:25,940 Down South, by African Americans. 116 00:08:27,289 --> 00:08:31,772 And it's their music and I just fell in love with it. 117 00:08:34,644 --> 00:08:39,083 From, uh, New Orleans, Louisiana all that, here comes Wynton. 118 00:08:39,214 --> 00:08:41,521 [upbeat orchestral music] 119 00:08:41,651 --> 00:08:44,001 [laughing] Here comes Wynton Marsalis. 120 00:08:49,659 --> 00:08:53,228 The difference between Wynton and everybody else for me, 121 00:08:53,620 --> 00:08:57,058 is that he's been charged with 122 00:08:57,972 --> 00:09:00,844 carrying this load called jazz. 123 00:09:00,975 --> 00:09:02,542 [jazz music] 124 00:09:05,632 --> 00:09:08,548 [Tony Bennett] Because it allows you to improvise, 125 00:09:09,549 --> 00:09:12,421 and never... [stuttering] sing the same thing twice. 126 00:09:13,640 --> 00:09:20,168 You, you just sing for whatever the moment is and react to that, 127 00:09:20,647 --> 00:09:24,651 to communicate exactly how you feel at that moment. 128 00:09:25,869 --> 00:09:28,959 And it's a wonderful art form that I love very much. 129 00:09:30,657 --> 00:09:32,093 [audience clapping] 130 00:09:32,223 --> 00:09:34,486 [Whoopi Goldberg] What I do, when I do my shows, 131 00:09:34,617 --> 00:09:37,402 when I'm talking about different things is, it's all jazz, 132 00:09:37,533 --> 00:09:39,796 because it's where it goes, it's how it flows. 133 00:09:39,927 --> 00:09:44,018 It's, it's the rhythm and the rhyme of stuff, 134 00:09:44,148 --> 00:09:48,109 you know, that you have in your everyday life. It's the walk that you do. 135 00:09:48,239 --> 00:09:52,287 It's all of that. So we're all really musically inclined. 136 00:09:52,417 --> 00:09:55,290 And it's also for us as Americans, 137 00:09:55,420 --> 00:09:59,642 that's really our first form of music 138 00:09:59,773 --> 00:10:03,124 that is particularly American. 139 00:10:03,864 --> 00:10:06,475 You know, that is, that was born here. 140 00:10:06,606 --> 00:10:08,912 That didn't come from anywhere else, that's ours. 141 00:10:09,043 --> 00:10:10,610 [upbeat jazz music] 142 00:10:20,141 --> 00:10:22,230 [audience cheering and clapping] 143 00:10:23,666 --> 00:10:25,929 [dramatic music] 144 00:10:29,498 --> 00:10:31,500 [Myka Miller] I would say that Harmony Project 145 00:10:31,979 --> 00:10:36,984 was really founded because there is a lack of music education in the schools. 146 00:10:37,114 --> 00:10:38,507 I can't say there's none, but 147 00:10:38,638 --> 00:10:42,685 68% of public elementary schools in Los Angeles 148 00:10:42,816 --> 00:10:46,602 do not receive music education. That's a lot of kids. 149 00:10:46,733 --> 00:10:51,259 It's the arts. Whether it's music or painting or any kind of artistry. 150 00:10:51,389 --> 00:10:54,349 Poetry, that teaches a child how to express 151 00:10:54,479 --> 00:10:56,394 what's going on within him or herself. 152 00:10:56,525 --> 00:10:59,093 So, if you cut funding for those programs, 153 00:10:59,484 --> 00:11:03,619 you, you cut the access that kid have to express. 154 00:11:04,011 --> 00:11:06,013 Because sometimes, especially young kids, 155 00:11:06,143 --> 00:11:08,102 they don't have the vocabulary to express, 156 00:11:08,493 --> 00:11:10,060 but you put a crayon in their hand 157 00:11:10,191 --> 00:11:12,715 or you give them an instrument and they'll figure it out. 158 00:11:13,194 --> 00:11:15,196 And that's a great tool for them for healing. 159 00:11:15,326 --> 00:11:17,415 -One and two. -[upbeat music] 160 00:11:17,546 --> 00:11:19,374 [Daniel Egwurube] I, immediately, when my teacher 161 00:11:19,504 --> 00:11:21,593 in the first lesson, I remember he played 162 00:11:22,116 --> 00:11:24,379 a flute excerpt from Peter and the Wolf. 163 00:11:24,509 --> 00:11:26,511 And it's, it's a fantastic except. 164 00:11:26,903 --> 00:11:29,950 And right then and there I fell in love with the flute. 165 00:11:30,080 --> 00:11:32,779 He sounded incredible and I was like I wanted to be that, 166 00:11:32,909 --> 00:11:36,130 I wanted to work hard at this and become just as good as he was. 167 00:11:36,260 --> 00:11:39,481 I'm a hundred thousand years old and I still remember Peter and the Wolf. 168 00:11:39,611 --> 00:11:41,483 [car humming] 169 00:11:41,613 --> 00:11:47,184 In Nigeria, you have to have parents that have already made it. 170 00:11:48,925 --> 00:11:50,405 If you don't have parents or somebody 171 00:11:50,535 --> 00:11:53,800 that you depend on that is doing well, 172 00:11:53,930 --> 00:11:57,717 then, uh, you just have to grow up, 173 00:11:58,065 --> 00:12:00,720 you know, with your own struggles. 174 00:12:00,850 --> 00:12:02,591 [solemn music] 175 00:12:02,722 --> 00:12:04,549 [Daniel Egwurube] I was born in Nigeria. 176 00:12:04,680 --> 00:12:07,596 I remember the friends I had in Nigeria. 177 00:12:07,727 --> 00:12:10,904 I remember the, the difference in culture. 178 00:12:11,382 --> 00:12:15,082 And, uh, when I came here, it was, everything just seemed so 179 00:12:15,212 --> 00:12:19,826 non, non-family-like, non neighbor-like. 180 00:12:20,304 --> 00:12:22,219 Everyone kept to their selves a lot more. 181 00:12:22,350 --> 00:12:25,962 My, my dad thought there was, there was a lot more opportunity here, 182 00:12:26,093 --> 00:12:28,704 and a lot more things you could do, 183 00:12:28,835 --> 00:12:32,490 you could make something of yourself here in America. 184 00:12:32,969 --> 00:12:35,015 One again, one and two. 185 00:12:35,145 --> 00:12:36,756 [upbeat orchestral music] 186 00:12:40,281 --> 00:12:41,717 My teacher, my current teacher today, 187 00:12:41,848 --> 00:12:44,807 when I was 10 years old, Amy, 188 00:12:45,677 --> 00:12:48,419 one of the first things I thought about when-- 189 00:12:48,550 --> 00:12:53,076 uh, after a few lessons with her, I was like, "No one can be this happy." 190 00:12:53,207 --> 00:12:57,385 She had, she brought such an energy to the classroom always 191 00:12:57,515 --> 00:12:59,343 and I'm like, "She can't keep this up." 192 00:12:59,474 --> 00:13:01,476 [everyone laughing] 193 00:13:01,606 --> 00:13:05,785 [Amy Tatum] I met Daniel, I guess it would have been about nine years ago. 194 00:13:05,915 --> 00:13:09,266 He started the program at Expo, and he wasn't in my class at the beginning, 195 00:13:09,397 --> 00:13:12,966 he was in another class, but I, I heard him play a jury. 196 00:13:13,488 --> 00:13:15,446 It might have been his first jury ever. 197 00:13:15,577 --> 00:13:18,362 [Daniel Egwurube] But the thing about is, I found out, it just, 198 00:13:18,493 --> 00:13:21,670 she had such a passion for teaching us. 199 00:13:22,018 --> 00:13:24,804 And she enjoyed it so much and she brought a light 200 00:13:24,934 --> 00:13:27,937 to the classroom every single day without failure. 201 00:13:28,068 --> 00:13:30,157 [orchestral music] 202 00:13:32,768 --> 00:13:34,901 [Amy Tatum] The Harmony Project does so much for these kids. 203 00:13:35,031 --> 00:13:36,946 On the most basic level it gives them 204 00:13:37,077 --> 00:13:39,166 something to do after school. You know, and it gives them 205 00:13:39,296 --> 00:13:40,950 a community to belong to. 206 00:13:41,081 --> 00:13:44,171 A community of peers and adults, um, 207 00:13:44,301 --> 00:13:46,956 who all respect each other and are coming together to create something. 208 00:13:47,087 --> 00:13:48,610 Which is kind of powerful. 209 00:13:48,740 --> 00:13:50,525 [dramatic music] 210 00:13:52,440 --> 00:13:55,051 You know, so a lot of our kids are going to college, 211 00:13:55,182 --> 00:13:59,316 and they're finding out about college because they play music. 212 00:13:59,447 --> 00:14:02,624 You know, they're finding out about all these other opportunities because of music. 213 00:14:02,754 --> 00:14:05,975 It's not that they're going to be the next Yo-Yo Ma, 214 00:14:06,106 --> 00:14:08,848 but that music has opened doors for them 215 00:14:08,978 --> 00:14:11,024 that they would not otherwise have open. 216 00:14:50,280 --> 00:14:51,586 [upbeat music] 217 00:15:06,079 --> 00:15:07,776 [train humming] 218 00:15:09,212 --> 00:15:12,346 [Daniel Egwurube] Music for me is a, is a sense of power. 219 00:15:13,260 --> 00:15:17,003 Because the way I look at it, when I have my instrument, 220 00:15:17,133 --> 00:15:20,658 I have-- I make my own world where I'm in control. 221 00:15:20,789 --> 00:15:23,923 I can practice, I can know more about this world, 222 00:15:24,053 --> 00:15:27,578 I can be able to manipulate it to what I want to do. 223 00:15:27,709 --> 00:15:32,366 And being able to manipulate an inanimate object 224 00:15:32,496 --> 00:15:35,847 to do something so beautiful is so empowering. 225 00:15:35,978 --> 00:15:39,068 And I feel like that's what more people need in the world today, 226 00:15:39,199 --> 00:15:41,636 to be more powerful, and feel more powerful. 227 00:15:50,514 --> 00:15:52,734 I listened to a lot of classical music, 228 00:15:52,864 --> 00:15:56,868 a lot of jazz, modern jazz, 40's jazz 229 00:15:57,217 --> 00:16:01,961 from Wynton to Miles, from Beethoven to Philip Glass. 230 00:16:02,091 --> 00:16:03,614 [orchestral music] 231 00:16:10,578 --> 00:16:12,841 It's really sad they're cutting funding because 232 00:16:12,972 --> 00:16:15,452 when I was a kid, that's where I went, you know, 233 00:16:15,583 --> 00:16:18,629 during lunch time, recess time, was the music room. 234 00:16:18,760 --> 00:16:22,590 You know, that was my, my place where I just, I felt free. 235 00:16:22,720 --> 00:16:26,072 I felt like my, you know, artsy kind of friends would hang out there. 236 00:16:26,202 --> 00:16:29,901 Whether it be actors or dancers or you know musicians themselves. 237 00:16:30,032 --> 00:16:31,860 We'd all just hang out and create, you know, 238 00:16:31,991 --> 00:16:34,776 then go back to the boring school work... [laughing] so. 239 00:16:34,906 --> 00:16:36,517 [light music] 240 00:16:39,172 --> 00:16:41,826 [Myka Miller] The Harmony Project is an after school music program. 241 00:16:41,957 --> 00:16:43,698 It's not really about the music, 242 00:16:43,828 --> 00:16:45,700 it's about youth development, empowering children. 243 00:16:45,830 --> 00:16:48,529 We say it's a music program, I think music is the empathist, 244 00:16:48,659 --> 00:16:52,968 but really it's about, you know, all the non-musical things that children experience. 245 00:16:53,490 --> 00:16:55,318 [dramatic orchestral music] 246 00:16:58,452 --> 00:17:01,498 Harmony Project was founded in 2001 with 36 students. 247 00:17:02,282 --> 00:17:05,807 Fast forward to today, we have 2,053 students. 248 00:17:06,460 --> 00:17:09,941 It's crazy. The demand in Los Angeles is just so big. 249 00:17:10,812 --> 00:17:12,814 So we get very little government money 250 00:17:12,944 --> 00:17:15,947 and what we do get is primarily arts funding. 251 00:17:16,078 --> 00:17:18,559 Um, I've been trying to like kind of breakthrough 252 00:17:18,689 --> 00:17:22,650 to, to show that this is really youth development and not arts, because I think arts 253 00:17:22,780 --> 00:17:24,739 are kind of like this afterthought. 254 00:17:24,869 --> 00:17:27,002 [dramatic orchestral music] 255 00:17:27,263 --> 00:17:28,743 It's really, you know there's a lot 256 00:17:28,873 --> 00:17:31,180 of private money that is picking up the slack. 257 00:17:31,311 --> 00:17:34,009 But if we don't continue to advocate, 258 00:17:34,575 --> 00:17:36,272 you know, it's going to be just a thing where 259 00:17:36,403 --> 00:17:38,231 all those people, they're handling it. 260 00:17:38,361 --> 00:17:39,884 And I think it has to be something that we're 261 00:17:40,015 --> 00:17:41,799 constantly pushing and constantly fighting 262 00:17:41,930 --> 00:17:43,888 because what would a world be like 263 00:17:44,019 --> 00:17:46,543 without art. You know, I mean, I can't imagine school-- 264 00:17:46,674 --> 00:17:48,502 I can't even imagine growing up without music. 265 00:17:48,632 --> 00:17:50,243 You know, for me that's impossible. 266 00:17:50,373 --> 00:17:53,072 And so my thing is that a lot of families 267 00:17:53,202 --> 00:17:56,640 that can afford it, or, you kwow, school districts that can afford it, 268 00:17:56,771 --> 00:18:01,210 they, they're kind of working out deals and, um, you know, parents are paying for it. 269 00:18:01,341 --> 00:18:02,864 It's a pay to play kind of thing. 270 00:18:02,994 --> 00:18:05,562 Don't judge what the music is, is telling you to play. 271 00:18:06,172 --> 00:18:10,393 It's like a feeling of we're here, like resolution. 272 00:18:10,524 --> 00:18:13,744 [Myka Miller] What I really worry about is these really low income neighborhoods 273 00:18:13,875 --> 00:18:16,007 where they don't have that wherewithal 274 00:18:16,138 --> 00:18:18,880 and you know, obviously the schools are already struggling. 275 00:18:19,010 --> 00:18:21,187 And so arts is going to be pushed back. 276 00:18:23,058 --> 00:18:24,755 Yeah. It angers me. 277 00:18:25,539 --> 00:18:28,237 Those particular areas have been cut. 278 00:18:28,368 --> 00:18:31,197 Not really realizing the importance of music. 279 00:18:31,327 --> 00:18:33,590 [jazz music] 280 00:18:39,074 --> 00:18:42,295 [Myka Miller] And a lot of these kids just need opportunities, you know. 281 00:18:42,425 --> 00:18:44,471 They just need doors to be opened for them. 282 00:18:44,601 --> 00:18:48,388 You know, when I was a kid, uh, I, uh, we at least had 283 00:18:48,518 --> 00:18:50,041 band at my school. 284 00:18:50,172 --> 00:18:53,306 You know, I ended up, uh, I think I played the bass drum. 285 00:18:53,436 --> 00:18:54,698 That was my big thing. [chuckling] 286 00:18:54,829 --> 00:18:56,657 I wanted to be a trumpet player, 287 00:18:56,787 --> 00:18:59,050 because I wanted to play "Reveille" in the morning, you know. 288 00:18:59,181 --> 00:19:01,879 [scatting "Reveille"] 289 00:19:02,010 --> 00:19:03,751 [upbeat rock music] 290 00:19:16,633 --> 00:19:19,723 I'm starting a new charity, and it's called The Music Path. 291 00:19:20,246 --> 00:19:25,251 And, uh, we're starting in Glendale at some of the high schools there. 292 00:19:25,381 --> 00:19:29,864 And we're, we're getting, uh, we're te-- teaching teachers 293 00:19:29,994 --> 00:19:34,564 how to teach kids to play in a group together. 294 00:19:34,695 --> 00:19:37,741 Like a rock and roll or whatever kind of music they want. 295 00:19:37,872 --> 00:19:39,961 [upbeat jazz music] 296 00:19:41,658 --> 00:19:44,313 We are going to provide reading, writing, and arithmetic 297 00:19:44,444 --> 00:19:47,186 come hell or high water. No matter what happens. 298 00:19:48,187 --> 00:19:50,711 Why do we not have the same attitude 299 00:19:50,841 --> 00:19:52,582 and commitment to the arts? 300 00:19:52,713 --> 00:19:55,498 It is horrible, and they don't have access 301 00:19:55,629 --> 00:19:58,501 to a vehicle that's going to bring them some joy, 302 00:19:59,241 --> 00:20:03,811 you know, and, and maybe be a ticket to a, a life that they 303 00:20:03,941 --> 00:20:05,291 would be passionate about. 304 00:20:05,421 --> 00:20:07,249 [upbeat music] 305 00:20:07,380 --> 00:20:10,209 There's a lot of kids that are going to turn into the next, 306 00:20:10,644 --> 00:20:12,733 like, that have the potential to be the next 307 00:20:12,863 --> 00:20:16,563 whoever that's going to bring a lot of joy to a lot of other people. 308 00:20:16,693 --> 00:20:18,217 [upbeat rock music] 309 00:20:35,582 --> 00:20:38,324 Well, we have a foundation called Keeping The Blues Alive. 310 00:20:38,454 --> 00:20:42,545 And it's designed to give out money to schools. 311 00:20:42,893 --> 00:20:46,636 And whether it be guitar strings, instruments, 312 00:20:46,767 --> 00:20:49,291 you name it, and the thing about it is, 313 00:20:49,422 --> 00:20:52,947 we give a kid a guitar or a piano or a music book. 314 00:20:53,339 --> 00:20:56,820 Um, it changes their life or it could potentially change their life. 315 00:20:56,951 --> 00:21:02,435 I mean, they, they could get so deep into it that they can't live without playing the piano, 316 00:21:02,565 --> 00:21:04,350 and they go out and make a living playing the piano. 317 00:21:05,699 --> 00:21:07,788 When you play a piece of music that you feel 318 00:21:07,918 --> 00:21:11,879 so strongly about and connect with, and you can communicate that, 319 00:21:14,490 --> 00:21:16,710 it helped me become a better communicator. 320 00:21:16,840 --> 00:21:18,755 [upbeat flute music] 321 00:21:25,632 --> 00:21:27,503 I usually practice in the bathroom, 322 00:21:27,634 --> 00:21:30,027 because I feel like I can hear myself more, 323 00:21:30,158 --> 00:21:31,507 the acoustics are better. 324 00:21:31,942 --> 00:21:35,250 And it sounds like you're playing in an opera house 325 00:21:35,381 --> 00:21:36,860 because it kind of echos a little. 326 00:21:36,991 --> 00:21:39,863 So, even though you might not sound that great, 327 00:21:39,994 --> 00:21:42,431 if you just play out you, you can feel really good 328 00:21:42,562 --> 00:21:44,738 about yourself because you feel huge. 329 00:21:44,868 --> 00:21:46,696 [upbeat flute music] 330 00:21:47,567 --> 00:21:50,918 I don't remember a moment in life without music. 331 00:21:51,048 --> 00:21:56,445 I usually, 95% of the time I have the Frank Sinatra station on. 332 00:21:57,185 --> 00:22:00,623 Uh, I love Sinatra, I loved him, I did a film with him, 333 00:22:00,754 --> 00:22:03,322 and I knew him, we were good friends for a while. 334 00:22:03,452 --> 00:22:06,194 I loved him, I knew, I was confident he loved me. 335 00:22:06,325 --> 00:22:11,112 And I listen to him, and I love the music of my generation, 336 00:22:11,417 --> 00:22:15,334 uh, which is to say the 40's and 50's, 60's. 337 00:22:15,464 --> 00:22:17,248 [jazz music] 338 00:22:20,251 --> 00:22:23,516 My first memories of music were, uh, The Beatles 339 00:22:23,646 --> 00:22:24,952 and Ray Charles on the radio. 340 00:22:25,082 --> 00:22:27,302 I would listen to music constantly. 341 00:22:27,433 --> 00:22:30,349 I went in and bought Meet the Beatleswith pennies. 342 00:22:30,479 --> 00:22:34,614 I think it was $1.99 on an LP, but I used all pennies at the Woolworth's. 343 00:22:34,744 --> 00:22:38,226 You know, a couple of dozen songs that will bring a tear to my eye. 344 00:22:38,357 --> 00:22:42,578 I remember I flew in the, in World War II, 345 00:22:42,709 --> 00:22:45,625 I flew a lot of missions over Germany. 346 00:22:45,755 --> 00:22:47,670 I was a radio operator at Gunner, 347 00:22:47,801 --> 00:22:49,672 but I remember on the way over, 348 00:22:50,456 --> 00:22:54,285 we stopped in Gander, uh, the Gander Islands, 349 00:22:54,895 --> 00:23:01,597 and I had the 12, uh, midnight to 2:00 a.m. shift 350 00:23:01,728 --> 00:23:06,907 guarding the plane and the, my instruction is to march from wing to wing, 351 00:23:07,037 --> 00:23:09,866 from wing to wing for two hours. 352 00:23:09,997 --> 00:23:14,480 Anyway, so I'm doing that and I'm singing at the top of my voice. 353 00:23:15,089 --> 00:23:17,352 And I remember particularly singing. 354 00:23:17,483 --> 00:23:19,398 ♪ We'll meet again 355 00:23:19,876 --> 00:23:22,183 ♪ Don't know where Don't know when ♪ 356 00:23:22,575 --> 00:23:25,273 ♪ But I know we'll meet again 357 00:23:25,404 --> 00:23:27,318 ♪ Some sunny day 358 00:23:27,449 --> 00:23:30,321 ♪ We'll meet again 359 00:23:30,452 --> 00:23:34,108 ♪ Don't know where Don't know when ♪ 360 00:23:34,238 --> 00:23:39,505 ♪ But I know we'll meet again Some sunny day ♪ 361 00:23:41,985 --> 00:23:46,773 I had tears pouring down... [laughing] my face singing those songs. 362 00:23:47,643 --> 00:23:51,865 Uh, as sad as can be and as happy as could be at the same time. 363 00:23:51,995 --> 00:23:54,476 ♪ Far away 364 00:23:55,129 --> 00:23:57,610 ♪ And won't you please Say hello ♪ 365 00:23:57,740 --> 00:23:59,873 ♪ To the folks that I know 366 00:24:00,003 --> 00:24:02,702 ♪ Tell them I won't be long 367 00:24:03,224 --> 00:24:04,486 ♪ They'll be happy to know 368 00:24:04,617 --> 00:24:06,967 When I was maybe 11 years old, 369 00:24:07,097 --> 00:24:10,318 I was in the street, we were playing stick ball. 370 00:24:10,971 --> 00:24:13,887 I remember the names of the kids I was playing with. My mother leans out, 371 00:24:14,017 --> 00:24:17,456 we're in the fourth floor, tenement building, my mother leans out the window 372 00:24:18,108 --> 00:24:20,197 and says, "Norman, Norman, Norman!" 373 00:24:20,328 --> 00:24:21,242 [lady] Norman! 374 00:24:22,678 --> 00:24:25,115 "We're having dinner early tonight because Kate Smith 375 00:24:25,246 --> 00:24:27,901 -is singing the musicals round and round." -[clicking] 376 00:24:28,031 --> 00:24:30,599 [announcer] And now we take great pleasure in presenting to you, 377 00:24:31,078 --> 00:24:34,473 the star of our program, Ms. Kate Smith. 378 00:24:34,951 --> 00:24:36,475 [audience clapping] 379 00:24:37,563 --> 00:24:38,520 ♪ You 380 00:24:40,130 --> 00:24:42,481 ♪ Something to me 381 00:24:42,611 --> 00:24:46,659 ♪ Something that Simply mystifies me ♪ 382 00:24:46,789 --> 00:24:50,445 When I was about 14, I started writing music. So I wrote like 60 songs. 383 00:24:50,837 --> 00:24:55,145 I filed myself with... [laughs] the Library of Congress. 384 00:24:55,276 --> 00:24:56,973 One of them was called "When I Was a Boy." 385 00:24:58,975 --> 00:25:01,500 And it was about a guy that goes to war, and, uh, you know, it was in the 60s. 386 00:25:01,630 --> 00:25:05,678 Now, I write comedy music and, um, I'm very happy 387 00:25:05,808 --> 00:25:11,074 with how I've evolved to that way and found a niche for what I do. 388 00:25:11,771 --> 00:25:16,297 Uh, a niche is a small knish that you give to your niece. 389 00:25:16,427 --> 00:25:20,780 Music is one of the most important things that gets us through life. 390 00:25:20,910 --> 00:25:24,566 It really, you know, does soothe the savage beast. 391 00:25:24,697 --> 00:25:26,437 [upbeat music] 392 00:25:34,533 --> 00:25:37,361 ♪ This kind of temptation 393 00:25:39,189 --> 00:25:43,063 ♪ Swore I wouldn't give in 394 00:25:43,193 --> 00:25:46,675 ♪ Because once you Felt your heartbreak ♪ 395 00:25:46,806 --> 00:25:49,069 ♪ You find yourself saying 396 00:25:49,199 --> 00:25:52,507 ♪ You're never going to Fall again ♪ 397 00:25:53,552 --> 00:25:56,990 ♪ So, go on your comical lie 398 00:25:57,120 --> 00:25:59,558 ♪ I don't need to be wrong 399 00:25:59,688 --> 00:26:03,039 ♪ If you want to Make me believe ♪ 400 00:26:03,170 --> 00:26:05,564 [Justin] My, my first music teacher in school 401 00:26:05,694 --> 00:26:08,349 was elementary school, and his name was Mr. Gaines. 402 00:26:08,479 --> 00:26:11,221 And he's actually the only teacher's name 403 00:26:11,352 --> 00:26:15,138 that I can recall from elementary school, which is horrible. 404 00:26:15,269 --> 00:26:18,272 But, it's just that he had a pretty profound impact on me 405 00:26:18,402 --> 00:26:20,883 and, um, you know, I remember him so fondly, 406 00:26:21,014 --> 00:26:22,798 because he would let me stay after school 407 00:26:22,929 --> 00:26:24,278 or after class, you know, 408 00:26:24,408 --> 00:26:26,149 if I didn't want to go to math or something. 409 00:26:26,280 --> 00:26:28,108 -[both laughing] -[upbeat guitar strumming] 410 00:26:37,683 --> 00:26:39,989 [?÷} I was able to actually have a lot of music and arts 411 00:26:40,120 --> 00:26:42,470 involved in my school, my family. 412 00:26:42,601 --> 00:26:45,081 My dad growing up, he played in pit orchestras 413 00:26:45,212 --> 00:26:47,344 for all the musicals that would come off of Broadway 414 00:26:47,475 --> 00:26:48,694 when they would to town into Philly. 415 00:26:50,347 --> 00:26:52,393 And we had a repair shop in my basement, 416 00:26:52,523 --> 00:26:54,613 so there's always different kinds of instruments, 417 00:26:54,743 --> 00:26:56,310 all kinds of stuff laying around. 418 00:26:56,440 --> 00:26:59,313 So, I started playing clarinet at second grade I think and 419 00:26:59,443 --> 00:27:01,228 my mom was a singer and my stepmom 420 00:27:01,358 --> 00:27:04,187 was in the Philadelphia Orchestra, so I was very, very blessed. 421 00:27:07,538 --> 00:27:08,931 -[Justin] That's hard to say what would... -[Sarah] Yeah. 422 00:27:09,062 --> 00:27:10,890 ...what would happen, uh, if we weren't 423 00:27:11,542 --> 00:27:14,371 exposed to, to music in, in school 424 00:27:14,502 --> 00:27:16,373 when we were coming up because it might have been a talent 425 00:27:16,504 --> 00:27:17,853 that we just might not have tapped into. 426 00:27:17,984 --> 00:27:19,333 -Yeah, totally. -Because we might not have known 427 00:27:19,463 --> 00:27:20,247 it was there. 428 00:27:22,118 --> 00:27:25,731 I'm a luthier, uh, called an old world luthier. 429 00:27:25,861 --> 00:27:28,516 Because of the way I build still. It's very traditional, 430 00:27:28,647 --> 00:27:30,126 and I'm third generation luthier. 431 00:27:30,257 --> 00:27:32,172 The business started in 1928 432 00:27:32,302 --> 00:27:34,348 with my grandfather and my great-uncle. 433 00:27:34,478 --> 00:27:38,439 And, uh, my grandfather, uh, started working in a furniture shop, 434 00:27:38,569 --> 00:27:40,310 um, but they were both musicians. 435 00:27:40,441 --> 00:27:44,097 And, uh, musicians started bringing them broken instruments 436 00:27:44,227 --> 00:27:45,881 and asking him to repair them. 437 00:27:46,012 --> 00:27:48,579 Somebody kind of challenged him one time to build a guitar. 438 00:27:48,710 --> 00:27:50,581 They eventually started getting a reputation 439 00:27:50,712 --> 00:27:53,497 for what they were doing, and they started the business. 440 00:27:54,934 --> 00:27:57,371 Because I still do everything old-fashioned 441 00:27:57,501 --> 00:28:00,417 or old world, you're not going to find a lot of power tools. 442 00:28:00,548 --> 00:28:04,900 This is a... a guitar with wood that came from a fence 443 00:28:05,031 --> 00:28:07,120 that was on the property at Graceland. 444 00:28:07,598 --> 00:28:11,254 And, uh, even the forest got a little, a little crown on there for the King. 445 00:28:11,385 --> 00:28:14,823 Two, here we go. In two, out two. 446 00:28:14,954 --> 00:28:16,695 [Laurie Schell] Nashville is music city. 447 00:28:16,825 --> 00:28:21,177 Music is fundamental to everything that is Nashville. 448 00:28:21,308 --> 00:28:23,440 [teacher] Three, four, five. 449 00:28:23,571 --> 00:28:27,706 [Laurie Schell] Music city has a message to the world 450 00:28:28,228 --> 00:28:30,534 that music is important to all of us. 451 00:28:30,665 --> 00:28:31,797 ♪ Love you, baby 452 00:28:31,927 --> 00:28:34,364 ♪ Let me love 453 00:28:34,495 --> 00:28:36,497 I got an email from Laurie asking me 454 00:28:36,627 --> 00:28:38,325 if I would be interested in being involved, 455 00:28:38,455 --> 00:28:40,457 and create quality music programs 456 00:28:40,588 --> 00:28:42,851 in all of our schools here in Davidson County. 457 00:28:42,982 --> 00:28:45,288 There's a lot of great research out there 458 00:28:45,419 --> 00:28:49,249 about music and students and student success. 459 00:28:49,379 --> 00:28:51,468 But we wanted to see what happened 460 00:28:51,599 --> 00:28:53,819 when we asked those same questions 461 00:28:53,949 --> 00:28:55,342 of our students here in Nashville. 462 00:28:55,821 --> 00:28:59,172 And we found that there is very strong correlation 463 00:28:59,302 --> 00:29:01,827 between participating in music 464 00:29:02,175 --> 00:29:05,831 and student attendance, grade point average. 465 00:29:05,961 --> 00:29:09,791 Coming to school every day is, is a great thing 466 00:29:09,922 --> 00:29:12,838 and it, it enables students to be happy 467 00:29:12,968 --> 00:29:15,188 about being there, and wanting to learn. 468 00:29:15,754 --> 00:29:18,234 They're more likely to be successful. 469 00:29:18,365 --> 00:29:19,845 [upbeat music] 470 00:29:19,975 --> 00:29:21,585 [Manuel Delgado] Our goal is never to 471 00:29:21,716 --> 00:29:23,762 take away band, choir, and orchestra. 472 00:29:23,892 --> 00:29:26,765 We want to keep those traditional disciplines in the school. 473 00:29:26,895 --> 00:29:29,245 But a lot of kids kind of fall through the cracks 474 00:29:29,724 --> 00:29:32,727 that might be interested in other genres or styles of music. 475 00:29:33,162 --> 00:29:35,512 So they talked about, you know, bringing in hip hop 476 00:29:35,643 --> 00:29:37,427 and world drumming and lead guitar, 477 00:29:37,558 --> 00:29:39,995 song writing, and, uh, mariachi. 478 00:29:40,126 --> 00:29:42,171 [upbeat music] 479 00:29:42,302 --> 00:29:44,608 ♪ Ah, twist and shout Shake it up, baby ♪ 480 00:29:44,739 --> 00:29:47,960 ♪ Twist and shout 481 00:29:48,090 --> 00:29:50,571 ♪ Come on, come on Come on, baby, now ♪ 482 00:29:50,701 --> 00:29:52,442 ♪ Come on, baby 483 00:29:52,573 --> 00:29:54,401 ♪ Come on, and work it on out 484 00:29:54,531 --> 00:29:56,707 ♪ Work it on out 485 00:29:56,838 --> 00:29:58,797 [Gabriela Fuentes] If there is scientific research saying 486 00:29:58,927 --> 00:30:00,886 "Hey, this builds up your cognitive skills. 487 00:30:01,016 --> 00:30:03,018 Hey, this builds up your test scores." 488 00:30:03,149 --> 00:30:05,499 And that's what every school wants, 489 00:30:05,629 --> 00:30:07,240 why is that we don't have it then? 490 00:30:07,370 --> 00:30:10,809 I remember the music that, um, that I listened to as a kid, 491 00:30:10,939 --> 00:30:12,680 the Latin music, the salsa music, 492 00:30:13,550 --> 00:30:14,900 I didn't like it as a kid. 493 00:30:15,422 --> 00:30:17,946 I thought it was bringing us down, 494 00:30:18,077 --> 00:30:20,819 because a lot of the hoodlums in the neighborhood, they loved it. 495 00:30:21,645 --> 00:30:23,822 [humming Latin music] 496 00:30:23,952 --> 00:30:26,694 And I was like... [scoffing] and I was trying to say, "Come on, 497 00:30:26,825 --> 00:30:29,479 we're not all the same, we're not all like that." 498 00:30:29,610 --> 00:30:31,742 And one cat came up to me and said, 499 00:30:33,440 --> 00:30:36,922 "Yeah, you don't like it now, but when you get older, man, you're going to love it." 500 00:30:37,052 --> 00:30:38,140 I'm like, "Yeah, right." 501 00:30:38,271 --> 00:30:40,055 And sure enough... [laughing] 502 00:30:40,186 --> 00:30:42,101 ...in like my early 20's, 503 00:30:42,231 --> 00:30:45,234 19 and 20 years old, I heard one album 504 00:30:45,365 --> 00:30:48,237 by Willie Colon and Ruben Blades called Siembra. 505 00:30:48,977 --> 00:30:50,936 And it just, oh. 506 00:30:51,937 --> 00:30:53,677 ♪ Ah 507 00:30:53,808 --> 00:30:55,592 [Gabriela Fuentes] The kids come from broken homes, 508 00:30:56,028 --> 00:30:58,726 and they come with self-esteem issues. 509 00:30:58,857 --> 00:31:01,294 And a lot of that is building that up first. 510 00:31:02,164 --> 00:31:05,559 I don't know if they'll all become musicians later on, 511 00:31:05,689 --> 00:31:09,041 but I just hope that they enjoyed it while they're here. 512 00:31:09,606 --> 00:31:11,608 ♪ La, la bamba 513 00:31:11,739 --> 00:31:13,436 You start to give them this confidence 514 00:31:13,567 --> 00:31:15,134 that it's like you can do anything. 515 00:31:15,264 --> 00:31:16,875 ♪ La, la bamba 516 00:31:20,835 --> 00:31:22,097 ♪ Mariachi 517 00:31:26,014 --> 00:31:27,494 [kid] You ask anyone in that class, 518 00:31:27,624 --> 00:31:30,018 they'll probably say this one is like their favorite. 519 00:31:30,627 --> 00:31:32,847 -[orchestral music] -Up. 520 00:31:32,978 --> 00:31:36,372 Again, again, air not face. One, two, ready, again. 521 00:31:40,550 --> 00:31:42,465 [Susan] I had an interesting home life. 522 00:31:42,596 --> 00:31:45,686 I was not a wealthy kid. I had maybe two outfits. 523 00:31:45,816 --> 00:31:48,080 I wore the same clothes to school every day. 524 00:31:48,210 --> 00:31:51,213 And I was one of those kids that could have very easily been lost. 525 00:31:51,344 --> 00:31:53,650 But I had a great band director who happened to be female. 526 00:31:53,781 --> 00:31:55,478 [orchestral music] 527 00:31:56,349 --> 00:31:58,917 She influenced me. She gave me a place to be. 528 00:31:59,047 --> 00:32:04,879 And she... I felt like I was valued and I was talented and I, I could do something. 529 00:32:05,010 --> 00:32:08,796 And I was more than the bank account that my parents didn't have. 530 00:32:08,927 --> 00:32:12,713 It saved me, I, I could have been very easily lost and could have been a statistic. 531 00:32:12,843 --> 00:32:15,150 And then I ended up going into that profession, 532 00:32:15,716 --> 00:32:18,806 because I wanted to be, wanted to be that for someone else. 533 00:32:18,937 --> 00:32:21,113 -[boy] Mrs. Waters, she's amazing. -Oh, I love Ms. Waters. 534 00:32:21,243 --> 00:32:23,724 -She's one of the best teachers in this whole entire school. -[girl] Yeah. 535 00:32:23,854 --> 00:32:25,900 She makes sure that we understand what we're doing 536 00:32:26,031 --> 00:32:29,208 and what we're playing, and she's just, she's just a nice person overall. 537 00:32:29,338 --> 00:32:34,169 Music and art are the reason 538 00:32:34,300 --> 00:32:37,216 so many of our kids come to school. 539 00:32:38,652 --> 00:32:41,785 Freshman year, I was very shy and I was very quiet, 540 00:32:41,916 --> 00:32:45,572 and I would just prefer to stay out of people's way. 541 00:32:46,138 --> 00:32:49,750 But then when I got to mariachi, and then I got really good at it, 542 00:32:49,880 --> 00:32:51,317 and we'd just go out and perform, 543 00:32:51,447 --> 00:32:52,840 it kind of snapped that out of me. 544 00:32:52,971 --> 00:32:56,148 It was just like very powerful, I was like, wow. 545 00:32:57,366 --> 00:33:00,761 [Dr. Nola Jones] So, we have a really unique situation in Nashville, Tennessee, 546 00:33:00,891 --> 00:33:02,763 because we're Music City, USA. 547 00:33:02,893 --> 00:33:05,896 The reality is, the public school systems can't do it alone. 548 00:33:06,332 --> 00:33:10,771 The fact that we are a collective is very important to our work. 549 00:33:10,901 --> 00:33:15,341 Uh, the mayor's office is standing by us, the c-- the music community, 550 00:33:15,471 --> 00:33:18,213 the CMA Foundation is standing by us. 551 00:33:18,344 --> 00:33:22,609 And in fact, has made over, uh, ten, 11 million dollar 552 00:33:22,739 --> 00:33:27,918 commitment to music education over the past decade in Nashville. 553 00:33:28,049 --> 00:33:31,444 Uh, we couldn't do this work without them. 554 00:33:31,574 --> 00:33:34,055 School is hard enough. You know, when you're a kid, and you know, 555 00:33:34,186 --> 00:33:36,362 I mean there's bullying and all these things going on, 556 00:33:36,492 --> 00:33:40,018 I, I really thing music is a great escape for kids 557 00:33:40,148 --> 00:33:41,497 and I think it's quite unfortunate 558 00:33:41,628 --> 00:33:43,630 that those programs are being cut. 559 00:33:43,760 --> 00:33:47,155 You're cheating the children out of, uh, an experience. 560 00:33:47,286 --> 00:33:50,811 I always felt like I came into the world loving music. 561 00:33:50,941 --> 00:33:52,987 I was exposed to music at a very young age. 562 00:33:53,118 --> 00:33:54,989 Everyone in my family loved music. 563 00:33:55,903 --> 00:34:01,387 ♪ Hey, love, why can't you be More like that? ♪ 564 00:34:02,779 --> 00:34:08,655 ♪ Hey, love, why can't you be Made to last? ♪ 565 00:34:09,656 --> 00:34:15,618 ♪ Hey, love, wish I could find Some comfort there ♪ 566 00:34:15,749 --> 00:34:21,059 ♪ Hey, love Wish you were like 567 00:34:21,189 --> 00:34:24,323 ♪ This old t-shirt 568 00:34:26,107 --> 00:34:28,196 I think that music is extremely valuable. 569 00:34:28,327 --> 00:34:33,114 I have five kids and they've all had experiences with music in school. 570 00:34:33,636 --> 00:34:35,986 Three of them became musicians, 571 00:34:36,117 --> 00:34:40,600 and I think that, uh, the music had a lot to do, like my, my-- 572 00:34:41,166 --> 00:34:43,603 We forget about the self-esteem issues that, 573 00:34:43,733 --> 00:34:47,955 that it's a time where a kid needs to have 574 00:34:48,086 --> 00:34:50,479 a strong sense of self to survive. 575 00:34:51,350 --> 00:34:54,614 And music can help develop that. 576 00:34:55,093 --> 00:34:58,226 The main, like, impact was in junior high. 577 00:34:58,357 --> 00:35:01,316 I had a teacher who, I still remember her name, 578 00:35:01,447 --> 00:35:03,884 Mrs. Rumple was her name, and she was so cool. 579 00:35:04,014 --> 00:35:07,496 She actually introduced me to, uh, Motown music for the first time. 580 00:35:07,627 --> 00:35:10,238 That was like, sort of that age when I was petrified 581 00:35:10,369 --> 00:35:12,240 to sing on stage, but I have this gift 582 00:35:12,371 --> 00:35:14,590 and I didn't really know what to do with it and 583 00:35:14,721 --> 00:35:18,899 she really was a big encourager of me being a solo artist. 584 00:35:19,029 --> 00:35:22,555 She was such a, a great influence to every kid in my school. 585 00:35:22,685 --> 00:35:27,777 And I'm, I'm from a small town in, in Iowa, and she made a big impact. It was really wonderful. 586 00:35:28,822 --> 00:35:34,915 [Dr. Nola Jones] Our citizens believe that music is, is vital to a well-rounded curriculum. 587 00:35:35,045 --> 00:35:39,093 And so when the public education system can't provide everything... 588 00:35:40,181 --> 00:35:41,748 they're committed to making it happen. 589 00:35:41,878 --> 00:35:44,229 And they've stepped up, our city leaders, 590 00:35:44,359 --> 00:35:47,057 our administrator, our upward administration, 591 00:35:47,188 --> 00:35:50,148 they've all stepped up to make this a reality. 592 00:35:50,278 --> 00:35:53,629 Never have I seen so many people coming together 593 00:35:53,760 --> 00:35:56,328 to make this happen as I do right now. 594 00:35:56,458 --> 00:35:59,592 [Dr. Nola Jones] I believe that while every city may not have 595 00:35:59,722 --> 00:36:01,420 the music industry as a resource, 596 00:36:01,550 --> 00:36:04,379 every large city has a resource that they can tap. 597 00:36:05,075 --> 00:36:07,426 And I feel like we can really be a model 598 00:36:07,556 --> 00:36:10,603 for the rest of the country for urban education and arts education. 599 00:36:10,733 --> 00:36:12,953 [upbeat music] 600 00:36:13,083 --> 00:36:14,824 [crew member] Yeah, what you can, you're off a little over here. 601 00:36:14,955 --> 00:36:16,391 -You think so? -Yeah. 602 00:36:16,522 --> 00:36:18,350 -We're just going to-- -Okay, you got it. 603 00:36:18,480 --> 00:36:20,656 Michael is nine years older than me, 604 00:36:20,787 --> 00:36:25,966 and so, uh, aside from the music that we got, uh, from school, 605 00:36:26,096 --> 00:36:29,404 he pretty early on started putting bands together 606 00:36:29,535 --> 00:36:31,493 with my sister, who was also a musician. 607 00:36:31,624 --> 00:36:33,234 [blues music] 608 00:36:35,584 --> 00:36:38,021 I remember sitting on the steps of our basement, 609 00:36:38,152 --> 00:36:41,721 and hearing him rehearse with their band 610 00:36:41,851 --> 00:36:43,679 and looking at that, looking at the music that 611 00:36:43,810 --> 00:36:46,116 they were creating and later on, the music that he was writing. 612 00:36:46,247 --> 00:36:48,684 And I would hear a song being created upstairs. 613 00:36:48,815 --> 00:36:50,469 And my sister was like kind of a folky, 614 00:36:50,599 --> 00:36:52,862 you know, uh, Joanie Mitchell type singer and, 615 00:36:52,993 --> 00:36:56,649 and, uh, so that was like hugely kind of influential. 616 00:36:56,779 --> 00:37:00,218 And even though I think I was already really interested 617 00:37:00,348 --> 00:37:03,786 in acting probably before I even knew what being an actor was, 618 00:37:03,917 --> 00:37:07,399 I also simultaneously had melodies in my head, 619 00:37:07,529 --> 00:37:10,140 and lyrics in my head, and it generally came. 620 00:37:10,271 --> 00:37:13,840 I was a very romantic child, so it generally came from heartbreak, 621 00:37:13,970 --> 00:37:17,365 like way too early. You know, like ten year old heartbreak. 622 00:37:17,496 --> 00:37:20,412 I would say well I got to write, I got to write a sad song, you know. 623 00:37:21,587 --> 00:37:23,502 [upbeat music] 624 00:37:30,639 --> 00:37:32,728 ♪ Between the ides of March 625 00:37:34,687 --> 00:37:36,732 ♪ The midnight songs we made 626 00:37:38,343 --> 00:37:41,650 ♪ You're world turns From black and white ♪ 627 00:37:42,999 --> 00:37:45,219 ♪ Gray on gray on gray 628 00:37:47,308 --> 00:37:50,833 ♪ Here it comes 629 00:37:52,008 --> 00:37:55,447 ♪ And it feels like love again 630 00:37:55,577 --> 00:37:59,364 ♪ Here it comes 631 00:38:00,408 --> 00:38:03,542 ♪ Screaming up Like a downtown train ♪ 632 00:38:04,151 --> 00:38:05,761 ♪ Like broken glass 633 00:38:06,501 --> 00:38:10,157 ♪ Here it comes 634 00:38:10,288 --> 00:38:12,681 ♪ I love 635 00:38:14,509 --> 00:38:16,642 ♪ Watching it pass 636 00:38:17,382 --> 00:38:20,733 [Michael] We, uh, grew up in a family of six kids 637 00:38:21,255 --> 00:38:26,434 that, uh, valued creativity and self-expression above all else. 638 00:38:26,565 --> 00:38:29,307 Grades, sports, money. 639 00:38:29,872 --> 00:38:33,223 So, um, it was about acting lessons and dance lessons 640 00:38:33,354 --> 00:38:35,400 and music lessons and art lessons. 641 00:38:35,530 --> 00:38:37,837 I think we grew up in a very kind of creative house 642 00:38:37,967 --> 00:38:42,102 where expressing yourself in some kind of artistic way was very natural for us. 643 00:38:42,232 --> 00:38:44,931 Uh, we both when through the Philadelphia Public School System. 644 00:38:45,061 --> 00:38:49,501 Uh, I remember, I guess maybe they gave you a recorder. 645 00:38:49,631 --> 00:38:52,025 That would be the first thing that'd give you, 646 00:38:52,155 --> 00:38:56,464 and then at one point they came and said, "You can choose something." 647 00:38:56,595 --> 00:39:02,078 I think it was violin or, you know, I think I played a trumpet for a little while. [laughing] 648 00:39:02,209 --> 00:39:03,471 The things I find out in these interviews. 649 00:39:03,602 --> 00:39:05,038 You never knew I played the trumpet? 650 00:39:05,168 --> 00:39:06,822 Yeah, I, I got a trumpet. 651 00:39:06,953 --> 00:39:08,737 I loved it, I loved opening it up 652 00:39:08,868 --> 00:39:11,174 and, uh, putting it together. 653 00:39:11,305 --> 00:39:14,569 I loved the, the smell of the, of the instrument 654 00:39:14,700 --> 00:39:19,487 and, uh, the, the velvet in the box, and the way it all fit there. 655 00:39:20,532 --> 00:39:22,577 I was a terrible trumpet player. I couldn't, 656 00:39:22,708 --> 00:39:24,710 couldn't get anything out of it, but it was fun. 657 00:39:24,840 --> 00:39:26,538 [dramatic music] 658 00:39:28,322 --> 00:39:30,672 [guitar strumming] 659 00:39:35,938 --> 00:39:39,202 I got a call recently, in the last couple of years that 660 00:39:39,551 --> 00:39:43,598 my high school and the schools, all across where I come from 661 00:39:43,729 --> 00:39:45,687 were having to cut budgets, and cut music programs. 662 00:39:45,818 --> 00:39:47,820 And I... I was just heartbroken by that. 663 00:39:47,950 --> 00:39:50,300 ♪ It won't be that song 664 00:39:50,431 --> 00:39:53,652 ♪ Gets you high Makes you dance ♪ 665 00:39:53,782 --> 00:39:55,218 ♪ Makes you fall 666 00:39:55,349 --> 00:39:58,570 ♪ That melody rewinds you 667 00:39:58,700 --> 00:40:00,398 ♪ Wants to disappear 668 00:40:00,528 --> 00:40:02,269 ♪ Makes time stall 669 00:40:02,400 --> 00:40:05,403 ♪ Be those words fill you up 670 00:40:05,533 --> 00:40:07,796 ♪ Roll your windows down 671 00:40:07,927 --> 00:40:09,407 ♪ Keeps you young 672 00:40:09,537 --> 00:40:15,238 ♪ Makes you believe Right where you belong ♪ 673 00:40:15,369 --> 00:40:17,110 ♪ Won't be that song 674 00:40:18,503 --> 00:40:21,070 ♪ It won't be Won't be, won't be ♪ 675 00:40:21,201 --> 00:40:23,856 ♪ Won't be that song 676 00:40:25,248 --> 00:40:28,426 ♪ Yeah, yeah 677 00:40:32,604 --> 00:40:34,519 [soft music] 678 00:40:39,698 --> 00:40:41,874 [upbeat music] 679 00:40:57,803 --> 00:40:59,761 [students chattering] 680 00:41:02,547 --> 00:41:04,462 [slow piano music] 681 00:41:05,593 --> 00:41:09,249 -You remember that? -Allegro is a school designed to infuse music 682 00:41:09,379 --> 00:41:11,469 into all areas of the curriculum. 683 00:41:13,645 --> 00:41:16,561 [Rebecca Darling] There was a need for more music schools 684 00:41:16,691 --> 00:41:19,694 to serve the Greater Charleston area. 685 00:41:20,303 --> 00:41:23,176 Um, particularly those students who don't have access 686 00:41:23,306 --> 00:41:28,486 to private music lessons or may have the skills 687 00:41:28,616 --> 00:41:31,445 but not the means to be able to become a musician. 688 00:41:31,576 --> 00:41:33,491 [upbeat music] 689 00:41:38,800 --> 00:41:41,194 So the charter was built around the idea 690 00:41:41,324 --> 00:41:45,111 that students could come here without having to audition. 691 00:41:45,241 --> 00:41:47,940 So they don't really need to have any prior experience, 692 00:41:48,070 --> 00:41:49,681 they just need to like music. 693 00:41:49,811 --> 00:41:51,987 During the chorus just play the rift. 694 00:41:52,118 --> 00:41:54,163 [Rebecca Darling] We operate on a lottery system. 695 00:41:54,294 --> 00:41:57,340 So any child in the district has the opportunity 696 00:41:57,471 --> 00:41:59,212 to come here and be a part of Allegro. 697 00:41:59,342 --> 00:42:00,605 [upbeat guitar music] 698 00:42:02,215 --> 00:42:04,043 [Daniel Neikirk] We take the music component and we use that 699 00:42:04,173 --> 00:42:07,176 to engage students, draw them into the educational process 700 00:42:07,307 --> 00:42:09,744 and use music to teach them instead of just 701 00:42:09,875 --> 00:42:11,180 teaching them music. 702 00:42:11,311 --> 00:42:13,313 We're not training professional musicians, 703 00:42:13,443 --> 00:42:15,010 we are training professionals using music. 704 00:42:15,141 --> 00:42:18,536 ♪ You should have came 705 00:42:18,666 --> 00:42:22,583 ♪ An easy morning but things 706 00:42:23,976 --> 00:42:29,242 Fifteen percent of the kids had experience with an instrument. 707 00:42:29,372 --> 00:42:33,159 Meaning they might have played the violin back in elementary school, 708 00:42:33,289 --> 00:42:36,031 but they really didn't have an indepth understanding of the instrument. 709 00:42:36,597 --> 00:42:40,601 Really didn't know much of anything about music or the fabric of music. 710 00:42:40,732 --> 00:42:42,690 So we started from point A 711 00:42:42,821 --> 00:42:45,301 in terms of treble clef and bass clef. 712 00:42:45,432 --> 00:42:47,739 So not only do we want reverb on our voice, 713 00:42:47,869 --> 00:42:50,611 every single instrument is going to want reverb. 714 00:42:50,742 --> 00:42:53,266 And you're going to hear why, okay? 715 00:42:53,701 --> 00:42:59,054 So, if I just go like this, check, check, check, check. 716 00:42:59,489 --> 00:43:01,666 That's reverb, right, right? 717 00:43:01,796 --> 00:43:02,884 -[students laughing] -Okay? 718 00:43:03,015 --> 00:43:04,625 What's special about this school 719 00:43:04,756 --> 00:43:07,802 is that we see them five days a week. 720 00:43:07,933 --> 00:43:10,370 I taught at an elementary school locally 721 00:43:10,500 --> 00:43:13,895 and I only saw those students one time a week for 45 minutes. 722 00:43:14,026 --> 00:43:17,682 Here, I see my students every single day 723 00:43:17,812 --> 00:43:19,161 for an hour a day. 724 00:43:19,292 --> 00:43:21,337 So that has given us so much leeway 725 00:43:21,468 --> 00:43:23,905 in terms of what we can study, 726 00:43:24,036 --> 00:43:25,777 the pace at which we can study. 727 00:43:25,907 --> 00:43:27,866 So the things we've been able to accomplish 728 00:43:27,996 --> 00:43:30,608 in the past year has been really incredible. 729 00:43:32,479 --> 00:43:34,699 I believe that if you understand music, 730 00:43:34,829 --> 00:43:36,657 the math kind of flows as well and vice versa. 731 00:43:36,788 --> 00:43:39,921 You can intertwine all that, the math and the music. 732 00:43:40,052 --> 00:43:43,925 With a lot of the fractions, the most difficult thing for kids, fractions. 733 00:43:44,056 --> 00:43:45,797 But if they understand that, 734 00:43:45,927 --> 00:43:48,147 it seems like a lot of kids kind of move, 735 00:43:48,277 --> 00:43:50,540 with, move through fractions without a problem. 736 00:43:50,671 --> 00:43:53,631 So first thing, we got to figure out a patter. 737 00:43:53,761 --> 00:43:59,506 We have this interesting, unique concept that other schools can't offer. 738 00:43:59,637 --> 00:44:00,986 We have a whole bunch of music 739 00:44:01,116 --> 00:44:04,076 and you can play any instrument with private lessons. 740 00:44:04,511 --> 00:44:07,601 Uh, and you can work on anything that you like musically. 741 00:44:07,732 --> 00:44:10,560 Work on your talent and your strengths and improve that. 742 00:44:10,691 --> 00:44:14,608 Compared to other schools, you know, you're kind of just settling on a sport. 743 00:44:16,131 --> 00:44:19,265 Music affected me, I mean, I guess when I was like six years old. 744 00:44:19,613 --> 00:44:22,964 The first time, uh, when I heard, it was like Jimi Hendrix 745 00:44:23,095 --> 00:44:24,923 and the Beatles and Elvis. 746 00:44:25,053 --> 00:44:27,186 And I just wanted to play guitar. 747 00:44:27,316 --> 00:44:30,189 My dad's a guitar player, so he gave me my first guitar, 748 00:44:30,319 --> 00:44:34,236 and I picked it up and I was hooked from, from then on. 749 00:44:34,367 --> 00:44:36,195 You know, I couldn't put it down, I was obsessed with it. 750 00:44:36,325 --> 00:44:38,414 So, and I turned to electric when I was about, 751 00:44:38,980 --> 00:44:40,199 I think I was about 11 years old 752 00:44:40,329 --> 00:44:42,027 because I studied classical for a minute, 753 00:44:42,157 --> 00:44:43,942 and it got really boring and I just saw like 754 00:44:44,072 --> 00:44:47,119 Santana perform and that was a turning point. 755 00:44:47,249 --> 00:44:49,643 So I picked up the electric and never put it down. 756 00:44:49,774 --> 00:44:51,689 [upbeat rock music] 757 00:45:17,932 --> 00:45:20,761 I think it's therapy, I think that listening to it 758 00:45:20,892 --> 00:45:23,024 is therapy, creating it is, as well. 759 00:45:23,155 --> 00:45:27,550 Um, because it's like, you know, you're writing your diary, 760 00:45:27,681 --> 00:45:29,248 that's like lyrics, you know what I mean? 761 00:45:29,378 --> 00:45:30,728 So you're putting it out there, 762 00:45:30,858 --> 00:45:31,903 and other people can relate to it. 763 00:45:32,033 --> 00:45:33,426 A song comes on the radio 764 00:45:33,556 --> 00:45:34,819 and just brings your spirits up. 765 00:45:34,949 --> 00:45:37,212 I remember when I moved out from Philadelphia 766 00:45:37,343 --> 00:45:40,128 to Los Angeles in 1978. 767 00:45:40,520 --> 00:45:44,567 Um, I packed up my stuff, I started to drive across country 768 00:45:44,698 --> 00:45:47,048 and I hit Springsteen's "Independence Day". 769 00:45:47,179 --> 00:45:51,096 And it, uh, and it literally was exactly what I was doing. 770 00:45:51,226 --> 00:45:53,141 If you look at life as a movie 771 00:45:53,272 --> 00:45:57,319 and music is the soundtrack, there's not a day that goes by 772 00:45:57,450 --> 00:45:59,757 where I am not in the middle of doing something 773 00:46:00,888 --> 00:46:02,847 and a song pops into my head. 774 00:46:02,977 --> 00:46:04,892 [upbeat music] 775 00:46:17,383 --> 00:46:20,734 [Gabrielle Bailey] Music is within everybody in some type of way. 776 00:46:20,865 --> 00:46:22,780 I definitely do believe that music 777 00:46:22,910 --> 00:46:26,609 is within every single last person in some type of form. 778 00:46:27,610 --> 00:46:29,743 [dramatic music] 779 00:46:33,573 --> 00:46:35,880 [orchestral music] 780 00:46:37,446 --> 00:46:39,405 [Davey Yarborough] The purpose of Duke Ellington School of the Arts 781 00:46:39,535 --> 00:46:42,712 is to prepare young budding artists for college. 782 00:46:42,843 --> 00:46:46,151 Gabby is a senior, so this'll be our fourth year, uh, working together. 783 00:46:46,281 --> 00:46:48,240 [orchestral music] 784 00:46:48,980 --> 00:46:51,809 Gabby has always been, uh, assertive, 785 00:46:51,939 --> 00:46:53,941 so in, in her audition when she found out 786 00:46:54,072 --> 00:46:57,205 that she really didn't know everything that she did, 787 00:46:57,336 --> 00:46:58,816 she got, it really hurt her. 788 00:46:59,381 --> 00:47:01,514 Um, but I explained to her, I said, 789 00:47:01,644 --> 00:47:02,994 "But that's why you go to school. You know, 790 00:47:03,124 --> 00:47:05,213 to, you know, you'll learn, you'll pick this up. 791 00:47:05,344 --> 00:47:07,520 Don't, you know, life's not over, you're just getting started." 792 00:47:07,650 --> 00:47:08,826 And she took that to heart. 793 00:47:08,956 --> 00:47:10,566 [horn blowing] 794 00:47:12,786 --> 00:47:16,007 [Gabrielle Bailey] Mostly it was a challenge, like they basically 795 00:47:16,137 --> 00:47:18,183 treated us like we was in college, basically. 796 00:47:18,313 --> 00:47:20,315 Like with due dates and deadlines, and 797 00:47:20,446 --> 00:47:22,840 you had to do this to meet up to these expectations. 798 00:47:22,970 --> 00:47:27,018 It's kind of like a college preparatory school, so it's very useful. 799 00:47:27,148 --> 00:47:29,803 Even in academic side, it's helpful in some type of way 800 00:47:29,934 --> 00:47:32,023 because even though they give you tons and tons 801 00:47:32,153 --> 00:47:35,069 of work, it's like that's what you're going to get when you got to college. 802 00:47:35,200 --> 00:47:36,854 [upbeat music] 803 00:47:38,072 --> 00:47:39,813 The School of Arts is my second home. 804 00:47:39,944 --> 00:47:42,424 I'm here all day, every day. 805 00:47:42,555 --> 00:47:47,081 Even on the weekends I'm here doing work, uh, working on my music and 806 00:47:47,212 --> 00:47:49,997 I, I have faith in my generation when it comes to jazz. 807 00:47:50,128 --> 00:47:51,956 [jazz music] 808 00:47:56,047 --> 00:47:57,918 Well, basically I grew up on jazz and gospel. 809 00:47:58,571 --> 00:48:02,880 My mom, she listens to a lot of like blues, like soul, jazz, a lot. 810 00:48:03,010 --> 00:48:04,925 My family is full of musicians, 811 00:48:05,056 --> 00:48:06,753 so I was kind of like born into it. 812 00:48:06,884 --> 00:48:08,886 It was kind of like a gift, I guess. 813 00:48:09,016 --> 00:48:11,497 ♪ Good morning, heartache 814 00:48:11,627 --> 00:48:14,456 ♪ You old gloomy side 815 00:48:14,587 --> 00:48:17,633 ♪ Good morning, heartache 816 00:48:17,764 --> 00:48:22,073 ♪ Thought we said goodbye Last night ♪ 817 00:48:22,203 --> 00:48:25,859 ♪ I tossed and Turned until it seemed ♪ 818 00:48:25,990 --> 00:48:28,731 ♪ You have gone 819 00:48:28,862 --> 00:48:32,735 ♪ But here you are With the dawn ♪ 820 00:48:32,866 --> 00:48:34,781 [upbeat music] 821 00:48:34,912 --> 00:48:37,871 When you emphasize math and science... 822 00:48:39,699 --> 00:48:44,051 at the expense of music and the arts, 823 00:48:44,530 --> 00:48:50,057 what is left is a terribly imbalanced person. 824 00:48:52,016 --> 00:48:54,235 Less means more. 825 00:48:55,671 --> 00:48:58,152 You can do all of the slick stuff in the world, 826 00:48:58,283 --> 00:49:00,285 but if you don't know how to do something 827 00:49:00,415 --> 00:49:03,114 organized and simple, you're not a good musician. 828 00:49:03,244 --> 00:49:05,159 [audience cheering] 829 00:49:06,291 --> 00:49:09,990 It's like this, if you, if you give a kid STEM research, 830 00:49:10,121 --> 00:49:12,384 in other words you can teach them science, 831 00:49:12,514 --> 00:49:14,168 you can teach them technology, 832 00:49:14,299 --> 00:49:16,823 you can teach them math, and anything you want, 833 00:49:16,954 --> 00:49:19,260 but if you take arts away from that child, 834 00:49:19,391 --> 00:49:21,175 it's like you only have a half a child. 835 00:49:21,306 --> 00:49:23,525 [Keith David] I think music is just as academic as anything else. 836 00:49:23,656 --> 00:49:27,965 You know, I, I'm a firm believer in STEAM. [laughing] Instead of STEM. 837 00:49:28,095 --> 00:49:30,358 [blues music] 838 00:49:56,602 --> 00:49:58,473 [heart beating] 839 00:49:58,604 --> 00:50:02,347 We carry with us, two native instruments. 840 00:50:02,477 --> 00:50:05,959 The human voice or drumming in our chest, you know. 841 00:50:06,090 --> 00:50:08,005 Because we have a hollow cavity. 842 00:50:08,135 --> 00:50:11,008 We're very natural and able to make music. 843 00:50:11,138 --> 00:50:12,966 [upbeat music] 844 00:50:15,360 --> 00:50:18,972 Artists speak to our humanity. 845 00:50:19,407 --> 00:50:24,543 And an art education enlarges that humanity 846 00:50:24,673 --> 00:50:27,894 of what our young people should have and possess. 847 00:50:28,286 --> 00:50:29,765 We're going to start with attention, 848 00:50:29,896 --> 00:50:32,420 so we can show the new kids how attention is done. 849 00:50:34,422 --> 00:50:35,902 -Drums, attention! -[teacher clapping] 850 00:50:36,033 --> 00:50:37,295 -[drums banging] -There you go. 851 00:50:37,425 --> 00:50:40,298 Well, I, I believe that we have already seen 852 00:50:40,428 --> 00:50:42,735 and now we're seeing the acceleration of 853 00:50:42,865 --> 00:50:48,132 if you look at test scores in, in the basics, in, in math and science, 854 00:50:48,262 --> 00:50:52,397 those kinds of things, we've gone from being the perennial number one, 855 00:50:52,527 --> 00:50:57,054 to literally being in the high 20's and low 30's across the board. 856 00:50:57,184 --> 00:51:01,319 Suzuki one said that education isn't complete without music. 857 00:51:01,449 --> 00:51:02,972 -[teacher clapping] Attention! -[drums banging] 858 00:51:03,103 --> 00:51:04,800 -Here we go, attention. -[drums banging] 859 00:51:04,931 --> 00:51:08,108 [Dez Dickerson] So the, the elimination of music, 860 00:51:08,239 --> 00:51:11,416 it's not just about music and learning to play instruments, 861 00:51:11,546 --> 00:51:16,029 it impacts intellectual capacity and capability across the board. 862 00:51:17,248 --> 00:51:18,466 What is music? 863 00:51:19,032 --> 00:51:21,165 There are a lot of things to describe it, 864 00:51:21,295 --> 00:51:26,039 um, but never get down to the real definition. 865 00:51:26,561 --> 00:51:28,781 The two words, "Organized Sound." 866 00:51:28,911 --> 00:51:29,999 [upbeat piano music] 867 00:51:30,130 --> 00:51:31,610 [people chattering] 868 00:51:35,092 --> 00:51:37,529 She taught me about the importance of music education. 869 00:51:38,095 --> 00:51:40,053 It's such a wonderful thing to teach kids. 870 00:51:40,184 --> 00:51:43,970 History, the meaning of things in a very painless fashion. 871 00:51:44,101 --> 00:51:46,625 Rituals of courtship, so many things come through music. 872 00:51:46,755 --> 00:51:50,411 You don't think of organized, and, and jazz is a perfect example of that, 873 00:51:50,542 --> 00:51:52,370 because there were saying, "Oh, that's just spontaneous. 874 00:51:52,500 --> 00:51:56,243 There's no, no rhyme or reason to what it is, which is not true. 875 00:51:56,374 --> 00:51:59,028 It takes a certain dedication 876 00:51:59,159 --> 00:52:04,512 to be able to translate it and speak well. 877 00:52:04,643 --> 00:52:06,949 [jazz music] 878 00:52:07,080 --> 00:52:10,083 And often times, uh, nobody really wants, 879 00:52:10,214 --> 00:52:14,870 like, to go back to the past and, like, really try and see, 880 00:52:15,001 --> 00:52:16,742 oh, that's what people were doing back then, 881 00:52:16,872 --> 00:52:20,093 maybe I can, you know, see what they were doing back then 882 00:52:20,224 --> 00:52:22,574 that was killing, let me add that to what I'm doing. 883 00:52:22,704 --> 00:52:25,359 Like in pop music, you can hear like different changes 884 00:52:25,490 --> 00:52:28,362 that you probably recognize from like, a standard jazz tune. 885 00:52:28,493 --> 00:52:29,755 You're like, "Oh, I remember that." 886 00:52:29,885 --> 00:52:31,757 Especially with like little licks or something 887 00:52:31,887 --> 00:52:33,889 that they play in between, you definitely hear it. 888 00:52:34,020 --> 00:52:35,717 [upbeat music] 889 00:52:39,721 --> 00:52:42,681 It is so crucial for us as a culture 890 00:52:43,160 --> 00:52:45,074 to continue to fund the arts. 891 00:52:45,205 --> 00:52:47,773 And it's very disappointing, the direction that, uh, 892 00:52:47,903 --> 00:52:52,299 many markets have treated arts funding, uh, as a third wheel. 893 00:52:53,996 --> 00:52:56,651 The arts and jazz, especially is our history. 894 00:52:56,782 --> 00:52:59,654 It's our culture, you know, what this country is all about. 895 00:53:01,003 --> 00:53:03,136 [Whoopi Goldberg] At this point in time, we have to get together 896 00:53:03,267 --> 00:53:04,746 with whatever schools we can find, 897 00:53:04,877 --> 00:53:07,053 who are interested in having music and say 898 00:53:07,184 --> 00:53:10,012 let's, how do we rebuild this into the curriculum? 899 00:53:10,665 --> 00:53:12,841 Because the teachers are there, they want to do it 900 00:53:12,972 --> 00:53:15,496 and GoFundMe campaigns. 901 00:53:15,627 --> 00:53:19,370 And teachers, music teachers who say this is what I need. 902 00:53:19,500 --> 00:53:23,025 You know, I'm going to start, uh, a page that says 903 00:53:23,156 --> 00:53:25,245 if you can help me get four trumpets 904 00:53:25,376 --> 00:53:28,683 and five pairs of drums. It's going to, it's going to be up to us. 905 00:53:28,814 --> 00:53:31,469 I remember taking choir my senior year. 906 00:53:31,599 --> 00:53:33,122 I didn't give a shit about choir, 907 00:53:33,253 --> 00:53:35,386 I just wanted to be in a class that was in some way 908 00:53:35,516 --> 00:53:38,258 related to music. So I could, you know, 909 00:53:39,607 --> 00:53:43,220 to sort of escape the rest of that whole reality. From that I took a guitar class. 910 00:53:43,350 --> 00:53:46,832 Get out there and, and, and play what's in your heart, sing what's in your heart. 911 00:53:46,962 --> 00:53:49,878 I mean it's, it's waiting to come out of you. 912 00:53:50,009 --> 00:53:53,186 If you want to play guitar, the most important thing that 913 00:53:54,143 --> 00:53:56,189 you need obviously is the guitar. 914 00:53:56,320 --> 00:53:58,670 If you want to play trumpet, same thing, you know, so, 915 00:53:58,800 --> 00:54:03,152 it is horrible that kids, if kids have this yearning, this desire, 916 00:54:03,588 --> 00:54:08,984 to do something and don't have access to the, you know, to the tool. 917 00:54:09,115 --> 00:54:11,813 I mean, imagine if no one ever bought Stevie Wonder 918 00:54:11,944 --> 00:54:14,163 a piano and he had no access to one. 919 00:54:14,294 --> 00:54:16,470 -[teacher] Don't be afraid. -[student] I'm not afraid, I just don't want to. 920 00:54:16,601 --> 00:54:19,081 Come on, there's no reason for you not to want to. 921 00:54:19,212 --> 00:54:22,650 If you can, there's no reason. There's no reason, because you can. 922 00:54:23,564 --> 00:54:27,481 There's a lot of people that can't, that want to, that can't. You can. 923 00:54:27,612 --> 00:54:29,614 [upbeat music] 924 00:54:31,659 --> 00:54:33,400 [scatting] 925 00:54:35,184 --> 00:54:37,578 The reason I like that is because the bassline is moving. 926 00:54:38,187 --> 00:54:40,364 And when the bassline is moving, it gives you the opportunity 927 00:54:40,494 --> 00:54:42,540 to create stories that exist in space. 928 00:54:42,670 --> 00:54:44,455 The process is different for everyone. 929 00:54:44,585 --> 00:54:46,283 I, as I said, I hear it in my head 930 00:54:46,413 --> 00:54:49,895 and put it, pick it apart and see what happens. 931 00:54:50,025 --> 00:54:52,289 Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't, you know. 932 00:54:52,419 --> 00:54:54,769 -[man scatting] -Uh-huh. 933 00:54:56,684 --> 00:54:58,860 That's good. Some kind of whatever, you know what I mean? 934 00:54:58,991 --> 00:55:01,080 -[upbeat music] -Uh-huh, uh-huh. 935 00:55:02,864 --> 00:55:04,388 [audience cheering] 936 00:55:06,477 --> 00:55:07,695 [audience member] Alright, hey. 937 00:55:21,405 --> 00:55:22,623 [audience member] Alright. 938 00:55:23,668 --> 00:55:25,452 [audience clapping] 939 00:56:00,705 --> 00:56:02,881 [man] Well, complaining about all the different problems we have, 940 00:56:03,011 --> 00:56:04,665 it's time that we look at culture 941 00:56:04,796 --> 00:56:06,798 and begin to understand, if you don't know who you are, 942 00:56:06,928 --> 00:56:09,670 you have absolutely no idea what you're supposed to be doing. 943 00:56:09,801 --> 00:56:11,890 To support these education programs, 944 00:56:12,020 --> 00:56:14,196 there's nothing more crucial than important 945 00:56:14,327 --> 00:56:17,286 to the cultural life and the life of our nation at this time. 946 00:56:27,993 --> 00:56:31,910 It's like if we just introduce music and art to people, 947 00:56:32,432 --> 00:56:34,478 then it's up to them to move forward. 948 00:56:34,608 --> 00:56:36,697 It's up to everybody to find their own path. 949 00:56:36,828 --> 00:56:39,744 But if you don't inspire people from the get go, 950 00:56:40,222 --> 00:56:42,224 uh, I think we've lost the battle. 951 00:56:42,355 --> 00:56:47,708 Cutting back on the arts, taking music out of the schools, 952 00:56:47,839 --> 00:56:50,668 so that those kids who are born into circumstances 953 00:56:50,798 --> 00:56:55,107 where the schools have been deprived of music, 954 00:56:55,716 --> 00:56:57,283 attention must be paid. 955 00:56:58,284 --> 00:57:00,417 It brought tears to my eyes. 956 00:57:01,200 --> 00:57:04,159 When I was graduating high school, I was surrounded by 957 00:57:04,290 --> 00:57:06,684 very competent people in the arts, 958 00:57:07,075 --> 00:57:10,427 dance, visual arts, music, acting, 959 00:57:10,557 --> 00:57:12,733 that I've known for three years. 960 00:57:12,864 --> 00:57:16,650 I graduated with a group of people that I've known for nine years. 961 00:57:17,477 --> 00:57:20,306 And there was a sense of comradery that I saw. 962 00:57:20,437 --> 00:57:22,395 [upbeat music] 963 00:57:37,279 --> 00:57:40,369 [Gabrielle Bailey] Here is like a second home. 964 00:57:40,500 --> 00:57:42,371 It's a centered, it's a centered place. 965 00:57:42,502 --> 00:57:44,809 Like, I will come here, you know, if, if I'm mad 966 00:57:44,939 --> 00:57:46,463 I will come in this room, and I'll get it all out 967 00:57:46,593 --> 00:57:48,377 with my instrument, because that's like the only place 968 00:57:48,508 --> 00:57:50,597 I can really do it. At home I can't do it, 969 00:57:50,728 --> 00:57:52,947 because, you know, I have like four other brothers and sisters. 970 00:57:53,078 --> 00:57:54,340 And they don't want to hear all that. 971 00:57:54,471 --> 00:57:56,951 So here is like a good place to 972 00:57:57,082 --> 00:57:59,258 really, like, bring out what you feel 973 00:57:59,388 --> 00:58:01,913 and just do whatever you need to do to take care of you. 974 00:58:03,175 --> 00:58:06,221 I think it's a no brainer that music funding 975 00:58:06,874 --> 00:58:10,617 for programs in schools should be on a federal level. 976 00:58:11,226 --> 00:58:12,750 If you leave it up to a state level, 977 00:58:12,880 --> 00:58:14,491 it's just not going to get done 978 00:58:14,621 --> 00:58:16,318 because it's an easy thing to cut. 979 00:58:16,449 --> 00:58:19,496 PBS would be cut, Meals On Wheels would be cut, 980 00:58:19,626 --> 00:58:21,802 the National Endowment for the Arts would be cut. 981 00:58:21,933 --> 00:58:25,066 The guy who has three oil painting of himself in his bathroom wants the cut 982 00:58:25,197 --> 00:58:26,720 the National Endowment for the Arts. 983 00:58:26,851 --> 00:58:30,289 -[audience laughing] -♪ Keep smiling, keep shining 984 00:58:30,419 --> 00:58:36,600 ♪ Knowing you can Always count on me for sure ♪ 985 00:58:38,471 --> 00:58:41,518 ♪ That's what friends are for 986 00:58:42,170 --> 00:58:47,262 When I was coming up, music was an automatic part of arts in our school. 987 00:58:47,393 --> 00:58:50,178 It, it's not only music that's been taken from us, 988 00:58:50,309 --> 00:58:55,140 all facets of art have been just discarded. And why? 989 00:58:55,270 --> 00:58:57,708 It's a mind boggling situation, 990 00:58:57,838 --> 00:59:01,929 when in fact that's, that's a part of our educational values 991 00:59:02,364 --> 00:59:05,542 that have just been taken away from us. And why? 992 00:59:05,672 --> 00:59:07,065 There's really no reason. 993 00:59:07,195 --> 00:59:08,719 The question is where do you get the instruments 994 00:59:08,849 --> 00:59:10,547 and, and you don't know where they've been, 995 00:59:10,677 --> 00:59:13,550 so the mouthpiece on a trumpet, you want to boil that damn thing 996 00:59:13,680 --> 00:59:14,899 before you give it to your kid. 997 00:59:15,029 --> 00:59:16,770 I've had the honor and the privilege 998 00:59:16,901 --> 00:59:19,686 to work with organizations like Mr. Holland's Opus 999 00:59:19,817 --> 00:59:22,907 and the Mancini Foundation, Friends of Music, 1000 00:59:23,037 --> 00:59:25,170 groups like that, that really inspire me 1001 00:59:25,300 --> 00:59:29,304 because they gift instruments to kids and students 1002 00:59:29,435 --> 00:59:31,002 and individuals who really want to learn 1003 00:59:31,132 --> 00:59:33,178 who don't have the wherewithal to get an instrument. 1004 00:59:33,308 --> 00:59:35,441 In this family, our philosophy is you got to try 1005 00:59:35,572 --> 00:59:37,574 every instrument until you find your grove. 1006 00:59:37,704 --> 00:59:41,055 It's just a thing that comes out of you and I, I think you're born with it. 1007 00:59:41,708 --> 00:59:45,277 And I think about four you go, "Oh, I really like this." 1008 00:59:45,407 --> 00:59:48,367 And I think about about nine, when everything start to violate you 1009 00:59:48,497 --> 00:59:50,804 and turn you into a person that you don't want to be, 1010 00:59:51,631 --> 00:59:54,460 you maybe even dive further into listening 1011 00:59:54,591 --> 00:59:57,724 and, and absorbing everything that can keep you away 1012 00:59:57,855 --> 01:00:00,074 from the things by the time you're a teenager 1013 01:00:00,205 --> 01:00:02,729 that could destroy you, and destroy your viewpoint, 1014 01:00:02,860 --> 01:00:04,557 because there's so much negative feedback 1015 01:00:04,688 --> 01:00:06,994 of how you should behave or what you should do, 1016 01:00:07,125 --> 01:00:10,519 and music for many has been a rebellion 1017 01:00:10,998 --> 01:00:12,696 and allowed them to have a voice. 1018 01:00:12,826 --> 01:00:15,002 They'd have nothing if it wasn't for music. 1019 01:00:15,133 --> 01:00:17,570 [upbeat music] 1020 01:00:18,658 --> 01:00:21,139 [Mark Bryan] We are in the Caroline Studios mobile bus 1021 01:00:21,269 --> 01:00:23,489 and we, uh, thanks to Dennis Gallagher and STA, 1022 01:00:23,620 --> 01:00:26,579 have a space where kids can come and make beats. 1023 01:00:26,710 --> 01:00:30,496 We can drive to you, we can drive right to the schools, churches, summer camps, and 1024 01:00:30,627 --> 01:00:34,761 provide a space where kids can some to a safe environment to make, to be creative. 1025 01:00:34,892 --> 01:00:37,764 Let's click right here. It's been a lot of 1026 01:00:37,895 --> 01:00:40,158 low income neighborhoods uh, that we've been able 1027 01:00:40,288 --> 01:00:42,464 to service, but we're not limited to that. We want to, 1028 01:00:42,595 --> 01:00:44,858 uh, the, the goal for this is to be able to reach kids, 1029 01:00:45,511 --> 01:00:49,515 of any demographic that want to this expe-- want to have this experience 1030 01:00:49,646 --> 01:00:52,344 and want to learn this craft. I know when I was a teenager, 1031 01:00:52,474 --> 01:00:54,172 I would have killed for something like this. 1032 01:00:54,302 --> 01:00:55,477 Because of that, if that happens, 1033 01:00:55,608 --> 01:00:56,957 if you drop, drop it in the wrong place 1034 01:00:57,088 --> 01:00:58,655 or anything like that, Apple, 1035 01:00:58,785 --> 01:01:00,526 hold down Apple and hit Z. 1036 01:01:00,657 --> 01:01:03,137 It let's them know that this is, uh, a real craft, 1037 01:01:03,268 --> 01:01:05,836 a real profession, a real career that you can go into 1038 01:01:05,966 --> 01:01:08,577 at, at, at a young age if you're interested in something like that 1039 01:01:08,708 --> 01:01:11,015 and, and you maybe have no idea how to start, 1040 01:01:11,145 --> 01:01:12,451 this gives you a place to start. It gives you 1041 01:01:12,581 --> 01:01:13,974 the idea of like, "Wow, 1042 01:01:14,105 --> 01:01:16,368 I can actually get in there, make something my own, 1043 01:01:16,498 --> 01:01:18,979 I can learn to be for, on the artist side, 1044 01:01:19,110 --> 01:01:20,720 I can learn to be on the engineer side." 1045 01:01:20,851 --> 01:01:22,940 You can loop that right, to what, like, what you just played, 1046 01:01:23,070 --> 01:01:24,681 we can play that all over again. 1047 01:01:24,811 --> 01:01:27,684 I-- I don't know where else you'd get that from at that age 1048 01:01:27,814 --> 01:01:29,294 unless your parents are working 1049 01:01:29,424 --> 01:01:30,382 for a studio or something like that. 1050 01:01:30,512 --> 01:01:32,079 It's just hard to get a grasp 1051 01:01:32,210 --> 01:01:33,472 of how that can be a career for you. 1052 01:01:33,602 --> 01:01:36,257 So these, we're doing digital tracks here 1053 01:01:36,910 --> 01:01:38,651 and then, in here's the audio booth. 1054 01:01:38,782 --> 01:01:40,609 After you've made your digital tracks 1055 01:01:40,740 --> 01:01:42,350 in there with drums and whatever else, 1056 01:01:42,481 --> 01:01:44,831 if you want to rap or sing over that track, 1057 01:01:44,962 --> 01:01:46,703 you make a new track in there 1058 01:01:46,833 --> 01:01:48,226 and then you come in here and use this mic 1059 01:01:48,356 --> 01:01:49,706 to lay those tracks down. 1060 01:01:49,836 --> 01:01:51,185 Alright, buddy, here we go. 1061 01:01:51,316 --> 01:01:52,839 [upbeat music] 1062 01:01:52,970 --> 01:01:55,059 ♪ Russel Wilson Has the victory ♪ 1063 01:01:55,189 --> 01:01:57,322 ♪ Everybody tell him They discovery ♪ 1064 01:01:57,452 --> 01:01:59,716 ♪ South during Mississippi University ♪ 1065 01:01:59,846 --> 01:02:01,282 ♪ Across the country 1066 01:02:02,893 --> 01:02:04,546 ♪ He was the quarterback Even he put that on the map ♪ 1067 01:02:06,461 --> 01:02:08,289 ♪ Russel Wilson had a team Southern Mississippi University ♪ 1068 01:02:08,420 --> 01:02:10,552 [Denis] Well, actually Mark and I were working together 1069 01:02:10,683 --> 01:02:13,294 on our own joint, uh, uh, charities together 1070 01:02:13,425 --> 01:02:16,689 and we got together, and he was explaining to me what Carolina Studies did. 1071 01:02:16,820 --> 01:02:18,778 And I said to him, "Geesh, you're going form building 1072 01:02:18,909 --> 01:02:20,737 to building, it sounds like you need a bus to get there." 1073 01:02:20,867 --> 01:02:23,304 And he looked at me and he said, "That's great, how do I get a bus?" 1074 01:02:23,435 --> 01:02:27,831 We were able to get the bus, we were able to do the build, the initial build out for them. 1075 01:02:27,961 --> 01:02:31,356 We have a corporate responsibility to help p-- programs like this 1076 01:02:31,486 --> 01:02:33,750 that literally now need funding. 1077 01:02:33,880 --> 01:02:36,709 So we've created an absolutely unique opportunity 1078 01:02:36,840 --> 01:02:39,016 for Mark and his team to be able to literally go 1079 01:02:39,146 --> 01:02:42,062 to schools and have afterschool programs for music programs. 1080 01:02:43,063 --> 01:02:45,109 [dramatic music] 1081 01:02:46,850 --> 01:02:49,853 This is their album, Man Plans God Laughs, 1082 01:02:49,983 --> 01:02:53,682 here to slam the door shut in Brooklyn, Public Enemy. 1083 01:02:53,813 --> 01:02:55,423 [audience cheering and clapping] 1084 01:02:57,643 --> 01:02:58,949 [performer] And many of us by the way we act. 1085 01:02:59,079 --> 01:03:01,299 Fuck the goddamn government, man. 1086 01:03:01,429 --> 01:03:03,301 ♪ Here it is, bam 1087 01:03:03,431 --> 01:03:06,347 ♪ Can you say goddam This the dope jam ♪ 1088 01:03:06,478 --> 01:03:08,523 ♪ But let's define The term called dope ♪ 1089 01:03:08,654 --> 01:03:09,960 ♪ And you think it mean Funky now ♪ 1090 01:03:10,090 --> 01:03:11,613 ♪ No, here is a true tale 1091 01:03:11,744 --> 01:03:14,138 ♪ Of the ones that deal Are the ones that fail ♪ 1092 01:03:14,268 --> 01:03:16,053 ♪ Yeah, you can move If you want to move ♪ 1093 01:03:16,662 --> 01:03:17,837 ♪ What it prove 1094 01:03:18,272 --> 01:03:19,708 I grew up in Hollis, Queens, 1095 01:03:20,840 --> 01:03:24,061 which is, uh, a very creative part of New York. 1096 01:03:24,191 --> 01:03:27,325 A lot of big names come from Southern Queens. 1097 01:03:27,891 --> 01:03:30,850 We went to school in a newly integrated series of schools 1098 01:03:30,981 --> 01:03:32,939 for elementary, junior high, and high school. 1099 01:03:33,461 --> 01:03:35,942 The music programs in those schools 1100 01:03:36,073 --> 01:03:39,728 were fairly thin when we got there, 1101 01:03:39,859 --> 01:03:41,382 but there was something. 1102 01:03:43,297 --> 01:03:45,691 By the time I graduated high school, 1103 01:03:45,822 --> 01:03:50,565 there was a, there was a clear shift, a clear shift away from the arts. 1104 01:03:50,696 --> 01:03:52,524 And I didn't know it then and in retrospect 1105 01:03:52,654 --> 01:03:55,005 I realize that's when it was starting to happen. 1106 01:03:56,745 --> 01:04:01,489 The power of music is so astounding 1107 01:04:01,620 --> 01:04:04,666 when it's truly connected to the right vehicle 1108 01:04:05,102 --> 01:04:08,496 that you don't want to not give every student 1109 01:04:08,627 --> 01:04:10,063 the opportunity to connect with it. 1110 01:04:10,542 --> 01:04:13,806 [Kristen] PS Arts was founded 25 years ago 1111 01:04:13,937 --> 01:04:16,983 in direct response to budget cuts, uh, in California 1112 01:04:17,114 --> 01:04:19,986 that nearly decimated arts programs in schools. 1113 01:04:20,117 --> 01:04:23,120 I personally as a dancer, feel like hip hop 1114 01:04:23,250 --> 01:04:27,472 is a great connector, because there is music, there is poetry, 1115 01:04:27,602 --> 01:04:32,956 there is politics... [laughing] there is obviously dance. 1116 01:04:33,086 --> 01:04:35,784 So I feel like it's a way to teach 1117 01:04:36,176 --> 01:04:38,700 from a historical perspective and tolerance. 1118 01:04:38,831 --> 01:04:42,661 It's a way to teach all kinds of, of different ideas 1119 01:04:42,791 --> 01:04:45,185 in the world kind of coalesce into hip hop. 1120 01:04:45,316 --> 01:04:47,971 Mark it one time, so you don't have to do it 1121 01:04:48,101 --> 01:04:50,016 on the ground part, just without we can get sense 1122 01:04:50,147 --> 01:04:52,062 of the musicality, the rhythm of it, 1123 01:04:52,192 --> 01:04:54,151 and then we'll do it full out on the ground, okay? 1124 01:04:54,281 --> 01:04:55,892 So the class that I have today 1125 01:04:56,022 --> 01:04:57,458 is Ms. Quinn's fourth grade class, 1126 01:04:57,589 --> 01:04:59,939 um, which has been with me since last year. 1127 01:05:00,070 --> 01:05:02,594 They're a fun bunch of individuals behind me 1128 01:05:02,724 --> 01:05:04,857 and we just like to enjoy coming in, 1129 01:05:04,988 --> 01:05:06,946 doing our warmup and stretch, 1130 01:05:07,077 --> 01:05:08,208 and learning different styles of dance 1131 01:05:09,514 --> 01:05:10,515 from contemporary to some jazz, to hip hop. 1132 01:05:11,820 --> 01:05:13,170 In particular, in urban schools in Los Angeles, 1133 01:05:13,648 --> 01:05:15,999 it's going to be a genre that they're familiar with, 1134 01:05:16,129 --> 01:05:19,785 that they've heard, that they've heard all their lives and that they connect with. 1135 01:05:19,916 --> 01:05:22,527 And there's as you know, we can't transform lives without connecting. 1136 01:05:22,657 --> 01:05:23,571 [teacher] Take it down. 1137 01:05:24,398 --> 01:05:26,357 We take things for granted 1138 01:05:27,010 --> 01:05:30,013 and then when it's gone we see, we see problems. 1139 01:05:30,709 --> 01:05:35,061 So I would say maybe looking back into 1140 01:05:35,192 --> 01:05:39,065 when did music get introduced into schools and why, 1141 01:05:39,196 --> 01:05:42,416 I think that might uncover why it's out of schools. 1142 01:05:43,069 --> 01:05:45,767 At some point someone saw a value in it, 1143 01:05:46,464 --> 01:05:48,074 and that's why it ended up there. 1144 01:05:49,946 --> 01:05:52,600 At some point someone said this has no value, and that's why it's out. 1145 01:05:53,166 --> 01:05:57,736 Understanding why it's not there is the only way you're going to get it back in. 1146 01:05:57,866 --> 01:05:59,564 [dramatic music] 1147 01:06:02,697 --> 01:06:05,700 I think it's incredibly important. 1148 01:06:05,831 --> 01:06:09,356 I think that when you're young, you have, when you're a child, 1149 01:06:09,487 --> 01:06:12,925 your, your brain is so big and you have an opportunity 1150 01:06:13,056 --> 01:06:15,232 to really become a complete person. 1151 01:06:15,362 --> 01:06:19,627 So in America there's, you know, been a lot of cuts in the arts in high school. 1152 01:06:19,758 --> 01:06:24,676 And, and you know, to me, it's so hard to conceive of 1153 01:06:24,806 --> 01:06:27,940 coming out of school as a whole person without having had the arts. 1154 01:06:28,506 --> 01:06:29,986 I love music so much, 1155 01:06:30,595 --> 01:06:32,466 I think I was a musician in another life. 1156 01:06:32,901 --> 01:06:37,036 And so I am going to be damn sure that my children 1157 01:06:37,167 --> 01:06:40,561 have a musical foundation in their life no matter what. 1158 01:06:40,692 --> 01:06:42,302 You have to know the language first 1159 01:06:42,433 --> 01:06:44,609 in order to know what you're going to play. 1160 01:06:44,739 --> 01:06:47,003 Because, you know, you have to speak the language to play it, 1161 01:06:47,133 --> 01:06:49,092 because if you just play whatever is on the paper, 1162 01:06:49,222 --> 01:06:50,571 then you're not really telling the story. 1163 01:06:50,702 --> 01:06:52,008 Because you're supposed to tell a story 1164 01:06:52,138 --> 01:06:53,705 when you play your music, so. 1165 01:06:53,835 --> 01:06:56,795 When you look at Prince or you look at Lenny Kravitz 1166 01:06:56,925 --> 01:06:58,362 and he's standing there and he's playing the guitar 1167 01:06:58,492 --> 01:07:00,190 and he's contorted himself because 1168 01:07:00,320 --> 01:07:03,932 if he could make that sound with his body, he would. 1169 01:07:04,063 --> 01:07:07,240 But he is making that sound with his body with this instrument. 1170 01:07:07,371 --> 01:07:09,634 This tool that allows him to... [whining] 1171 01:07:09,764 --> 01:07:11,157 ♪ Why don't you turn me loose 1172 01:07:11,288 --> 01:07:13,681 Talk to about the power. [laughing] 1173 01:07:14,247 --> 01:07:17,555 I might as well talk to you about the power of nature 1174 01:07:17,685 --> 01:07:21,211 or the power of God or the power of, uh, living. 1175 01:07:21,341 --> 01:07:23,039 It's just what music does to you, 1176 01:07:23,169 --> 01:07:26,564 because I think it follows the flow of blood in your body 1177 01:07:26,694 --> 01:07:28,566 the, the way that the ocean does. 1178 01:07:28,696 --> 01:07:31,047 You know, the tides come in and they, you know, roll out 1179 01:07:31,177 --> 01:07:33,397 and I feel like music does the same thing. 1180 01:07:33,527 --> 01:07:37,531 It connects to whatever, you know, vein it is in 1181 01:07:37,662 --> 01:07:39,707 and that's what keeps you grooving. 1182 01:07:39,838 --> 01:07:43,015 You have to have considerable power along these lines, 1183 01:07:43,146 --> 01:07:46,497 I've learned over a long... [chuckling] lifetime and music. 1184 01:07:46,627 --> 01:07:48,542 And they go together. Love of country. 1185 01:07:48,977 --> 01:07:53,199 Love is music and dance and song and laughter. 1186 01:07:53,330 --> 01:07:55,245 [gentle music] 1187 01:07:57,551 --> 01:07:59,945 I've stood... [laughing] so many times, 1188 01:08:00,076 --> 01:08:05,037 standing behind an audience that is about to enjoy a belly laugh. 1189 01:08:05,168 --> 01:08:07,822 This here is the struggle of the races. 1190 01:08:07,953 --> 01:08:10,173 Man's inhumanity to man. 1191 01:08:10,303 --> 01:08:14,133 Yet through it all, the shiny hope of a new brotherhood, see? 1192 01:08:14,568 --> 01:08:16,004 [audience laughing] 1193 01:08:17,876 --> 01:08:22,707 You know, When an audience are laughing from what I call the belly, 1194 01:08:22,837 --> 01:08:25,666 the belly laugh, they have a tendency to come up 1195 01:08:25,797 --> 01:08:28,539 out of their chairs even, some a little bit 1196 01:08:28,669 --> 01:08:31,629 and go forward with that laugh and then come back. 1197 01:08:31,759 --> 01:08:33,718 [lady laughing] 1198 01:08:42,074 --> 01:08:47,384 It's a human way of, of, uh, common appreciation 1199 01:08:47,514 --> 01:08:49,168 or love of the moment. 1200 01:08:49,299 --> 01:08:53,172 Or you know, not to mention the joy of laughter. 1201 01:08:53,825 --> 01:08:59,787 And, uh, it's as spiritual a moment as any 1202 01:08:59,918 --> 01:09:03,269 I have ever seen in a church or a synagogue. 1203 01:09:03,400 --> 01:09:06,185 [gentle music] 1204 01:09:06,316 --> 01:09:08,187 [upbeat music] 1205 01:09:08,318 --> 01:09:10,146 [Tony] Well, what you said is they think, 1206 01:09:10,276 --> 01:09:12,322 they think they want to cut the arts, 1207 01:09:12,452 --> 01:09:14,846 they should lose their jobs for saying that. 1208 01:09:14,976 --> 01:09:16,848 You should never take the arts away. 1209 01:09:16,978 --> 01:09:19,372 That's beyond, that's the first thing. 1210 01:09:19,503 --> 01:09:22,636 Yeah, my father, he had the reputation in Italy 1211 01:09:23,115 --> 01:09:26,597 of singing on the top of a mountain 1212 01:09:26,727 --> 01:09:28,555 and the whole village would hear him. 1213 01:09:28,686 --> 01:09:33,473 It made my brother go, go into classical training. 1214 01:09:34,257 --> 01:09:38,304 And I felt being ten years old, I felt a little left out, 1215 01:09:38,435 --> 01:09:41,133 you know, because he was getting a trainer. 1216 01:09:42,439 --> 01:09:45,355 Even though we were very poor, my mother found a way 1217 01:09:45,485 --> 01:09:50,011 to get a... a teacher and he did very well. 1218 01:09:50,142 --> 01:09:52,971 He was very successful, but he didn't like it. 1219 01:09:53,537 --> 01:09:55,147 He didn't like being popular. 1220 01:09:55,278 --> 01:10:00,239 ♪ I've got the world On a string ♪ 1221 01:10:01,632 --> 01:10:04,678 ♪ I'm sitting on a rainbow 1222 01:10:06,289 --> 01:10:11,250 ♪ I've got the string Around my finger ♪ 1223 01:10:14,732 --> 01:10:18,736 ♪ What a world, what a life 1224 01:10:19,780 --> 01:10:23,567 ♪ I'm in love 1225 01:10:24,785 --> 01:10:26,657 [interviewer] What was the first music that you heard? 1226 01:10:27,266 --> 01:10:30,182 Um, probably something on "Hee Haw." 1227 01:10:30,313 --> 01:10:32,097 [upbeat country music] 1228 01:10:33,403 --> 01:10:34,708 Hee, Haw. 1229 01:10:34,839 --> 01:10:37,842 Like watching TV with my grandfather or, um... 1230 01:10:37,972 --> 01:10:41,498 [clicking tongue] whatever was in his truck or my mother's car at the time. 1231 01:10:41,628 --> 01:10:44,109 I remember very vividly early impressions 1232 01:10:44,240 --> 01:10:46,329 from seeing musical performances on "Hee Haw" 1233 01:10:46,938 --> 01:10:48,200 and watching that with him. 1234 01:10:49,723 --> 01:10:50,724 And he would say, he liked to tell me which characters 1235 01:10:50,855 --> 01:10:53,292 were actually playing instruments. 1236 01:10:53,423 --> 01:10:55,163 Which now I know looking back, none of them were. 1237 01:10:55,294 --> 01:10:58,471 It was all tracks, but, uh, everybody loves music. 1238 01:10:59,603 --> 01:11:02,258 I don't really trust anybody that doesn't... [laughing] you know. 1239 01:11:02,388 --> 01:11:05,522 You know, musicians don't necessarily care about color. 1240 01:11:05,652 --> 01:11:07,524 If you have the groove, you're in. 1241 01:11:08,002 --> 01:11:10,091 [upbeat orchestral music] 1242 01:11:16,228 --> 01:11:21,277 And it's the only thing that unites us 1243 01:11:21,407 --> 01:11:23,757 without having to speak. 1244 01:11:24,889 --> 01:11:27,065 Because you can go to any country 1245 01:11:27,195 --> 01:11:29,720 and hear the music and be moved by it. 1246 01:11:30,155 --> 01:11:31,504 You don't have to know what it says. 1247 01:11:31,635 --> 01:11:33,506 You don't need to know what the words are. 1248 01:11:34,942 --> 01:11:38,946 I, I wasn't an athletic kid and we didn't really have 1249 01:11:39,077 --> 01:11:40,905 very much theater to speak of. 1250 01:11:41,035 --> 01:11:45,431 But, um, the music was just like the most fun thing. 1251 01:11:48,173 --> 01:11:52,612 That was a chance to, um, be, be good at something 1252 01:11:52,743 --> 01:11:55,659 outside of, um, sports and math. 1253 01:11:55,789 --> 01:11:57,748 [jazz music] 1254 01:11:58,270 --> 01:12:01,055 The difference is, if you play sports, 1255 01:12:01,404 --> 01:12:05,538 you're going to be too old at a very young age. 1256 01:12:05,669 --> 01:12:09,629 If you play music, you can just keep going till you get to old to go. 1257 01:12:09,760 --> 01:12:11,501 [upbeat violin music] 1258 01:12:12,110 --> 01:12:13,807 Your whole life you can enjoy that. 1259 01:12:16,723 --> 01:12:18,377 I suppose you shouldn't play that with a hat on. 1260 01:12:18,508 --> 01:12:20,031 -[everyone laughing] -[man] If you can play it, why not? 1261 01:12:20,161 --> 01:12:26,080 ♪ Don't open The door to heaven ♪ 1262 01:12:26,211 --> 01:12:29,301 I never dreamed that my career 1263 01:12:29,432 --> 01:12:32,913 would last as long as it has. It's just amazing to me. 1264 01:12:33,044 --> 01:12:35,829 ♪ Don't touch me 1265 01:12:35,960 --> 01:12:41,139 ♪ If you don't love me Sweetheart ♪ 1266 01:12:41,269 --> 01:12:43,271 I absolutely love what I do. 1267 01:12:43,402 --> 01:12:49,452 It's so great when you can reach people, and make them feel something. 1268 01:12:50,322 --> 01:12:53,020 [man] We're not different. We're the same. 1269 01:12:53,151 --> 01:12:55,196 And the things that motivate us and 1270 01:12:55,327 --> 01:12:58,591 move us and, and create emotional responses, 1271 01:12:58,722 --> 01:13:01,420 if I can express my own emotional reality, 1272 01:13:01,986 --> 01:13:05,642 I, I will touch the nerves of many, many people, 1273 01:13:05,772 --> 01:13:09,123 because we're all essentially working with the same stuff. 1274 01:13:09,254 --> 01:13:10,298 [man] How you been? 1275 01:13:10,429 --> 01:13:12,083 Use more of those? 1276 01:13:13,040 --> 01:13:16,957 And my mom talks about that I was dancing before I was walking. 1277 01:13:17,480 --> 01:13:20,874 That she things the only reason why I stood up was to dance. 1278 01:13:21,397 --> 01:13:23,224 The first song I learned was "Take Me Out To The Ballgame." 1279 01:13:23,355 --> 01:13:26,880 And hearing Harry Carey sing it, you know. 1280 01:13:27,011 --> 01:13:28,534 So that was the first vocalist I ever knew 1281 01:13:28,665 --> 01:13:30,144 was Harry Carey at the Cubs games. 1282 01:13:30,275 --> 01:13:32,190 "The National Anthem" and "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" 1283 01:13:32,320 --> 01:13:34,975 were songs that I just, like, I had this big voice 1284 01:13:35,106 --> 01:13:37,587 that wanted to come out of me and I would literally shake when I would sing. I would be like. 1285 01:13:37,717 --> 01:13:39,545 ♪ Oh, say can you see 1286 01:13:39,676 --> 01:13:42,243 And it's not just republicans or democrats, 1287 01:13:42,374 --> 01:13:44,985 it's folks who have no connection to the arts, 1288 01:13:45,116 --> 01:13:46,683 who don't understand why the arts are important. 1289 01:13:46,813 --> 01:13:49,642 If I didn't have somebody to encourage me 1290 01:13:50,121 --> 01:13:53,429 to, to play music, I wouldn't be the same person I am today. 1291 01:13:53,559 --> 01:13:54,908 I mean, look at my dad, you know. 1292 01:13:55,039 --> 01:13:58,434 My dad missed four days of work in 35 years. 1293 01:13:59,130 --> 01:14:02,307 Mm-mm, there's not a lot of money for a high school teacher. 1294 01:14:02,438 --> 01:14:06,485 And the amount of people that came out of, of adults that I see now, 1295 01:14:06,616 --> 01:14:09,967 who've gone on from his classes to become successful 1296 01:14:10,097 --> 01:14:13,492 writers, directors, set designers, all of these things. 1297 01:14:13,623 --> 01:14:18,323 Lighting, uh, designers... [sniffling] they come from him and he got paid so little. 1298 01:14:18,454 --> 01:14:20,760 These are the people who are supposed to influence us 1299 01:14:20,891 --> 01:14:23,284 the most and prepare us for the world 1300 01:14:23,415 --> 01:14:25,461 and they get paid so little. 1301 01:14:25,591 --> 01:14:27,680 [slow guitar strumming] 1302 01:14:42,565 --> 01:14:45,916 [Davey] When you decide that we want to, first thing we're going to cut in our budget 1303 01:14:46,046 --> 01:14:49,267 is going to be art and music and phys ed, 1304 01:14:49,397 --> 01:14:52,357 which again... [stuttering] why would you do that? 1305 01:14:52,488 --> 01:14:54,664 We're talking about developing brains and bodies 1306 01:14:54,794 --> 01:14:57,101 and, and, and getting the fluids to run through the body 1307 01:14:57,231 --> 01:14:58,581 and making, keeping you healthy. 1308 01:15:00,234 --> 01:15:02,846 Music connects us all because the arts don't say no to you. 1309 01:15:03,499 --> 01:15:06,589 They say if, uh, you don't know what you want to be, 1310 01:15:06,719 --> 01:15:10,375 try a piano, try, try, uh, recitation, 1311 01:15:10,506 --> 01:15:13,291 try a timbale, try a drum. 1312 01:15:13,421 --> 01:15:16,250 You know, the arts say, "Come on and try me." 1313 01:15:16,381 --> 01:15:19,471 I might be, I could be anything you want me to be for you. 1314 01:15:20,472 --> 01:15:21,821 That's what they mean to me. 1315 01:15:21,952 --> 01:15:25,042 They are an open invitation to change. 1316 01:15:31,788 --> 01:15:33,616 Music is incredibly healing. 1317 01:15:33,746 --> 01:15:35,313 It is a tremendous healer. 1318 01:15:35,443 --> 01:15:37,837 You know sometimes we'll go to a Spotify, 1319 01:15:37,968 --> 01:15:40,144 SPA and relaxation channel. 1320 01:15:40,274 --> 01:15:42,450 Or you'll be laying there going, 1321 01:15:42,842 --> 01:15:47,238 "oh, my God, I need to be taken to an ethereal place, where Enya when I need her?" 1322 01:15:47,368 --> 01:15:49,240 Well, music is magical. 1323 01:15:49,370 --> 01:15:51,764 And, uh, when you're communicating on stage, 1324 01:15:51,895 --> 01:15:53,026 there's a lot of things happening. 1325 01:15:53,157 --> 01:15:55,376 There's a conversation, uh, among 1326 01:15:55,507 --> 01:15:57,248 your band, within your band. 1327 01:15:57,378 --> 01:16:01,339 And when everything clicks, uh, it's, it's a blast. 1328 01:16:01,731 --> 01:16:03,080 Just listen. 1329 01:16:03,210 --> 01:16:04,342 Like when I hear some of these songs, 1330 01:16:04,472 --> 01:16:05,691 I'm like there was empty sound, 1331 01:16:05,822 --> 01:16:07,127 there was just silence, 1332 01:16:07,258 --> 01:16:09,173 and then someone put that horn in there 1333 01:16:09,521 --> 01:16:13,612 and that piano beat, and then like, and then like was off the beat, 1334 01:16:13,743 --> 01:16:17,877 and then scratching the, like, and then that suddenly became. 1335 01:16:18,008 --> 01:16:20,271 [upbeat jazz music] 1336 01:16:21,533 --> 01:16:25,145 It's, um, difficult to maintain arts programs 1337 01:16:25,276 --> 01:16:28,932 because it's so expensive, uh, tuition wise. 1338 01:16:29,062 --> 01:16:32,544 The cost of New York City and housing and food and transportation. 1339 01:16:32,675 --> 01:16:34,198 I don't really have the answer. 1340 01:16:34,328 --> 01:16:36,766 I mean, I'm in this program, I'm directing this program, 1341 01:16:36,896 --> 01:16:40,117 I see the issues with finance and student loans. 1342 01:16:40,639 --> 01:16:43,599 And it's, and it's, it's way out of control. 1343 01:16:43,729 --> 01:16:45,818 [upbeat music] 1344 01:16:49,953 --> 01:16:52,477 Miles Davis was our hero. 1345 01:16:53,696 --> 01:16:56,002 Um, we didn't want to just play with Miles Davis, 1346 01:16:56,133 --> 01:16:58,614 we want to be Miles Davis, because he was so cool. 1347 01:16:58,744 --> 01:17:03,836 And so if this is taken out of the schools... 1348 01:17:05,011 --> 01:17:08,667 and young people and old people 1349 01:17:08,798 --> 01:17:14,847 are not exposed to the arts, it becomes a problem. 1350 01:17:18,024 --> 01:17:20,766 [John Burk] A music education, I think, can help someone. 1351 01:17:20,897 --> 01:17:22,942 Well, there's been studies that shows, that, uh, 1352 01:17:23,073 --> 01:17:26,554 it, it seems to help mathematical abilities and other reasoning abilities. 1353 01:17:26,685 --> 01:17:29,253 You know, for example for a kid who's not a, 1354 01:17:29,383 --> 01:17:31,647 a great athlete, it's another team sport. 1355 01:17:32,822 --> 01:17:35,912 And, uh, and it really is a team sport for the most part. 1356 01:17:36,042 --> 01:17:38,610 Yeah, because the melody is kind of like, 1357 01:17:38,741 --> 01:17:40,917 it's a lot of space and bassline is a lot of space, 1358 01:17:41,047 --> 01:17:44,224 so you, you have a lot of room for, for color. 1359 01:17:45,051 --> 01:17:48,707 It's got to sound, um, organic. 1360 01:17:49,186 --> 01:17:51,014 [man] This is how the creative mind works. 1361 01:17:51,144 --> 01:17:52,668 And these are some of the great artists 1362 01:17:52,798 --> 01:17:54,713 in the world and this is how they think. 1363 01:17:54,844 --> 01:17:56,497 And none of them would be happy 1364 01:17:56,628 --> 01:17:58,586 if they had to pursue another path. 1365 01:17:58,717 --> 01:18:00,240 [upbeat music] 1366 01:18:01,459 --> 01:18:04,331 [Antonio] And it's not about selecting prodigies. 1367 01:18:04,767 --> 01:18:08,466 Uh, it's not to have a Yo-Yo Ma at age seven 1368 01:18:08,596 --> 01:18:11,251 presented at the White House by Leonard Bernstein. 1369 01:18:11,382 --> 01:18:14,559 Uh, it's a different, it's a different sort of thing. 1370 01:18:14,690 --> 01:18:16,430 [dramatic music] 1371 01:18:24,961 --> 01:18:27,877 [Carl Schafer] One of the things I do is supervise student teachers 1372 01:18:28,007 --> 01:18:30,749 at California State University-Fullerton. 1373 01:18:31,271 --> 01:18:34,884 Uh, this last year, where normally there's a dozen, 1374 01:18:35,014 --> 01:18:38,148 fifteen instrumental music student teachers, there were three. 1375 01:18:40,498 --> 01:18:42,761 [upbeat music] 1376 01:18:51,335 --> 01:18:57,907 A good music teacher, uh, is many way a, a hard thing to describe. 1377 01:18:58,037 --> 01:19:00,300 There this thing we call passion 1378 01:19:00,431 --> 01:19:05,523 the, to, to share this, uh, music with, with, uh, students. 1379 01:19:05,653 --> 01:19:08,134 -[student] It's a quarter note. -That's a half note. 1380 01:19:08,265 --> 01:19:10,702 -[teacher] Tell him again, Joe. -It's a half note. 1381 01:19:10,833 --> 01:19:14,358 -[teacher] How many beats does it receive? -It, it receives two beats. 1382 01:19:14,837 --> 01:19:16,273 So we play on one and three. 1383 01:19:16,403 --> 01:19:18,318 -[teacher] Two and four is what? -Silence. 1384 01:19:18,449 --> 01:19:19,580 [teacher] That's what I'm talking about. 1385 01:19:19,711 --> 01:19:20,538 [Carl Schafer] My involvement 1386 01:19:20,668 --> 01:19:23,149 with the issue of compliance 1387 01:19:23,846 --> 01:19:26,152 really began four years ago. 1388 01:19:26,283 --> 01:19:29,634 I have been working in advocacy all my years 1389 01:19:29,765 --> 01:19:33,551 as an educator, and the approach that I've taken 1390 01:19:33,681 --> 01:19:36,423 and, virtually, everybody else, has been, 1391 01:19:36,554 --> 01:19:39,426 is to try and persuade the decision makers 1392 01:19:39,557 --> 01:19:43,430 that arts are important and should be a part of the curriculum. 1393 01:19:43,561 --> 01:19:45,519 [jazz music] 1394 01:19:46,999 --> 01:19:51,134 Unfortunately, governing boards throughout the state 1395 01:19:51,264 --> 01:19:55,225 have been treating the arts as an optional part of the curriculum. 1396 01:19:55,660 --> 01:19:58,271 What we've been doing in the, in the Recording Academy 1397 01:19:58,402 --> 01:20:00,578 is, uh, through some of our advocacy efforts, 1398 01:20:00,708 --> 01:20:03,494 we learn that there is a law in California 1399 01:20:03,624 --> 01:20:07,367 that specifies that every school in the state 1400 01:20:07,498 --> 01:20:10,066 has to have a music education program. 1401 01:20:10,196 --> 01:20:12,242 It, it was kind of a revelation. [laughing] 1402 01:20:12,372 --> 01:20:16,028 That, wow, here it is in the California Education Code 1403 01:20:16,159 --> 01:20:18,770 and no one has taken the initiative 1404 01:20:18,901 --> 01:20:22,382 to, to, uh, have districts comply with it. 1405 01:20:22,513 --> 01:20:26,256 51050, uh, essentially says, and I'll read it. 1406 01:20:26,386 --> 01:20:28,301 "Governing board of every school district 1407 01:20:28,432 --> 01:20:32,610 shall enforce in its schools the courses of study." 1408 01:20:33,872 --> 01:20:37,310 I took a look at the ed code and it suddenly occurred to me, 1409 01:20:37,441 --> 01:20:41,227 well, wait a minute, this is in the education code, 1410 01:20:41,358 --> 01:20:46,885 this is the law, then why is it not being enforced? 1411 01:20:47,016 --> 01:20:50,715 My goal is that, ultimately, all school districts 1412 01:20:50,846 --> 01:20:53,196 will comply with the education code. 1413 01:20:53,326 --> 01:20:55,676 [dark ominous music] 1414 01:21:11,954 --> 01:21:13,869 [people chattering] 1415 01:21:15,871 --> 01:21:18,308 [man] Maybe, we can have people do all those. 1416 01:21:18,961 --> 01:21:21,137 [Neve] Yeah, I mean, I went with The Creative Coalition and 1417 01:21:21,267 --> 01:21:23,574 to The Capital to talk about getting more money 1418 01:21:23,704 --> 01:21:25,576 for the National Endowment For The Arts, and 1419 01:21:25,706 --> 01:21:27,273 keeping that money going even, because they're talking about 1420 01:21:27,404 --> 01:21:28,884 even cutting it, which is shocking. 1421 01:21:29,014 --> 01:21:30,624 It's crazy. I mean, it's 1422 01:21:30,755 --> 01:21:32,496 to be on The Capital and sitting in these rooms 1423 01:21:32,626 --> 01:21:34,541 and trying to convince politicians 1424 01:21:34,672 --> 01:21:37,153 of why the arts are important, and then to look at the rooms 1425 01:21:37,283 --> 01:21:38,937 that we were actually sitting in... 1426 01:21:39,764 --> 01:21:42,114 even the mosaics, the tiles, the ceilings, 1427 01:21:42,245 --> 01:21:44,464 the paintings on the walls, it was stunning. 1428 01:21:44,595 --> 01:21:46,597 Architecture was stunning. 1429 01:21:46,727 --> 01:21:48,816 And then to be trying to convince these people 1430 01:21:48,947 --> 01:21:51,558 of why the arts are important was just, just strange. 1431 01:21:51,689 --> 01:21:52,908 [upbeat music] 1432 01:21:53,038 --> 01:21:54,170 [man] On the train. 1433 01:21:54,300 --> 01:21:56,912 This is so like weird. [laughing] 1434 01:21:57,042 --> 01:21:58,652 [people chattering] 1435 01:22:02,265 --> 01:22:04,658 [Constance Zimmer] Doesn't everything stem from jazz? 1436 01:22:04,789 --> 01:22:07,183 You know, it's, it's interesting because we have 1437 01:22:07,313 --> 01:22:10,969 always on in our house at all times of the day, 1438 01:22:11,317 --> 01:22:14,755 music, jazz, classical music. 1439 01:22:14,886 --> 01:22:16,453 Because we have an eight year-old in our house 1440 01:22:16,583 --> 01:22:19,151 and I feel like silence is deadly. 1441 01:22:19,282 --> 01:22:21,806 -I'm like the tiny child in the front. -[everyone laughing] 1442 01:22:21,937 --> 01:22:23,764 [woman] And you look good, you know. 1443 01:22:23,895 --> 01:22:25,418 [Constance] And it feels like whenever we have 1444 01:22:25,549 --> 01:22:27,638 all of these rhythms and sounds, 1445 01:22:27,768 --> 01:22:33,078 it's, it's an incredibly easy way to kind of get the brain 1446 01:22:33,209 --> 01:22:35,994 to engage without even realizing it's being engaged. 1447 01:22:36,125 --> 01:22:38,127 [upbeat music] 1448 01:22:47,484 --> 01:22:50,313 Scientists are predicting that there's probably 1449 01:22:50,443 --> 01:22:53,272 not many jobs that can't be replicated by machines 1450 01:22:53,403 --> 01:22:56,754 in the future, except, maybe, for the creative arts. 1451 01:22:56,884 --> 01:22:59,844 It's so uniquely human, it's so uniquely expressive. 1452 01:22:59,975 --> 01:23:04,327 It's so embodying what we are as individuals 1453 01:23:04,457 --> 01:23:08,418 and as a society, and as a culture, uh, that we have to support it. 1454 01:23:08,548 --> 01:23:12,291 Being able to see the faces of kids that I knew 1455 01:23:12,422 --> 01:23:15,555 when I was nine, with those red cap and gowns, 1456 01:23:15,686 --> 01:23:19,255 was a really sentimental moment for me. 1457 01:23:19,385 --> 01:23:23,085 And it made me think about how important music has been in my life. 1458 01:23:23,215 --> 01:23:25,609 When I'm working and I'm traveling, I dance. 1459 01:23:25,739 --> 01:23:27,045 I dance at night by myself. 1460 01:23:27,176 --> 01:23:29,178 I put my headphones on and just listen to music 1461 01:23:29,308 --> 01:23:31,180 and just dance and just be in the song. 1462 01:23:31,310 --> 01:23:32,746 I think that's what we love about musicals, 1463 01:23:32,877 --> 01:23:34,531 it's like you really believe like someone. 1464 01:23:34,661 --> 01:23:37,229 ♪ The hills are alive With the sound of music ♪ 1465 01:23:37,360 --> 01:23:39,362 Like that's what you would want to do in a beautiful place like that. 1466 01:23:39,492 --> 01:23:44,802 [man] It is just amazing to recognize and realize 1467 01:23:44,932 --> 01:23:47,718 the importance of what that arts experience 1468 01:23:47,848 --> 01:23:49,894 does for young people. 1469 01:23:50,025 --> 01:23:52,027 [upbeat music] 1470 01:24:15,398 --> 01:24:17,748 [Deletra] I am very, very excited about her future. 1471 01:24:17,878 --> 01:24:19,315 To my surprise, I thought 1472 01:24:19,445 --> 01:24:23,014 she was going to go into music performance and jazz. 1473 01:24:23,145 --> 01:24:25,060 Even though she still will do that, 1474 01:24:25,190 --> 01:24:26,844 she decided to be a music educator. 1475 01:24:26,974 --> 01:24:29,064 She's going to get a degree in music education. 1476 01:24:29,194 --> 01:24:32,589 I want to spread my knowledge to the other generations. 1477 01:24:34,025 --> 01:24:37,289 They call it the universal language for a reason, music. 1478 01:24:37,420 --> 01:24:40,118 It almost mirrors everyday life. 1479 01:24:40,249 --> 01:24:44,340 The soundtrack of my life has been, um, a companion. 1480 01:24:44,470 --> 01:24:46,472 I have to play music to get out of the house. 1481 01:24:46,603 --> 01:24:49,649 Music as a whole, changes lives, it saves live. 1482 01:24:49,780 --> 01:24:53,088 I mean, people, we're getting people off the streets. 1483 01:24:53,218 --> 01:24:56,874 Instead of choosing dark, you know, road that they could go down 1484 01:24:57,004 --> 01:25:02,401 they choose music. And, um, it really, it really changes everything. 1485 01:25:02,532 --> 01:25:06,971 Cutting funding is not just about cutting music programs, 1486 01:25:07,102 --> 01:25:11,976 what you're doing is you're cutting an avenue, a voice for these kids. 1487 01:25:12,107 --> 01:25:13,325 And that, I think is tragic. 1488 01:25:13,456 --> 01:25:16,111 It's just been a friend, and a love, 1489 01:25:16,241 --> 01:25:18,809 and a lover, and just it gets in my body. 1490 01:25:18,939 --> 01:25:22,029 Music and art connects all our four IDs. 1491 01:25:22,160 --> 01:25:24,380 It connects our physical to our emotional 1492 01:25:24,510 --> 01:25:27,034 to our spiritual, and to our intellectual. 1493 01:25:27,165 --> 01:25:28,862 And that's how it creates inner peace. 1494 01:25:28,993 --> 01:25:30,995 The vibrations of music does that. 1495 01:25:31,126 --> 01:25:33,693 That's the cocktail. It's a legal drug. 1496 01:25:33,824 --> 01:25:39,873 Music transcends your life, and it can enhance your life. 1497 01:25:40,004 --> 01:25:43,138 How is that we learn in the first place when we begin in life? 1498 01:25:43,268 --> 01:25:44,791 "The Alphabet Song?" 1499 01:25:44,922 --> 01:25:47,054 Did you learn your alphabet just by reciting the letters 1500 01:25:47,185 --> 01:25:48,926 or did you learn it through song? 1501 01:25:49,056 --> 01:25:51,668 With broad based back city support 1502 01:25:51,798 --> 01:25:55,280 and corporate support and district support, 1503 01:25:55,411 --> 01:25:58,718 we can give students the education they deserve. 1504 01:25:58,849 --> 01:26:00,372 [upbeat music] 1505 01:26:02,287 --> 01:26:04,246 [Daniel Egwurube] Galileo once said that you could never teach a man 1506 01:26:04,376 --> 01:26:07,553 anything, you can only help him to find it within himself. 1507 01:26:07,684 --> 01:26:11,166 And what Harmony Project has taught me in my life, is exactly that. 1508 01:26:12,254 --> 01:26:14,908 That young people everywhere are ready to explode 1509 01:26:15,039 --> 01:26:16,954 by giving them something to channel 1510 01:26:17,084 --> 01:26:19,261 that magma of creativity out of their core 1511 01:26:19,391 --> 01:26:23,308 as you can unleash ambition chasing initiatives that can carry them in life. 1512 01:26:23,439 --> 01:26:25,397 [dramatic music] 1513 01:26:27,921 --> 01:26:29,967 [upbeat music] 1514 01:26:55,688 --> 01:26:58,474 And I like vinyl, because that's what I understand. 1515 01:26:58,604 --> 01:27:02,042 And that's how I know if I have indulged too much, 1516 01:27:02,173 --> 01:27:05,481 because my hand would shake trying to put the needle down on the record. 1517 01:27:05,611 --> 01:27:07,613 [upbeat music] 1518 01:27:08,701 --> 01:27:12,531 ♪ Music goes round and round Whoa ♪ 1519 01:27:12,662 --> 01:27:14,229 -♪ Oh, and it comes out here -[men laughing] 1520 01:27:14,359 --> 01:27:17,406 A, a world without music is just Twitter. 1521 01:27:17,536 --> 01:27:19,625 [upbeat rock music] 1522 01:27:22,411 --> 01:27:24,326 Hey, I love rock and roll. 1523 01:27:24,456 --> 01:27:27,067 [upbeat jazz music] 1524 01:27:57,576 --> 01:27:58,490 ♪ Yeah 1525 01:28:01,711 --> 01:28:02,625 ♪ Don't say 1526 01:28:39,052 --> 01:28:40,184 ♪ Oh, yeah 1527 01:28:41,751 --> 01:28:43,361 [vinyl crackling]