embiggen Posted May 3, 2010 Share Posted May 3, 2010 The city of Nashville and the surrounding area is under water due to relentless rain for 48 hours over the weekend. The Cumberland River is above flood level and water continues to rise. WSMV news Please send prayers and vibes to my hometown, Music City, and I'm sure the Red Cross could use donations to assist in the relief effort. Thank you! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
PopTodd Posted May 3, 2010 Share Posted May 3, 2010 I have friends there, as well.Prayers and vibes being sent now... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
embiggen Posted May 3, 2010 Author Share Posted May 3, 2010 thanks Todd! I'm surprised how little coverage this has received in the news. at least 6 people are confirmed dead. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
PopTodd Posted May 3, 2010 Share Posted May 3, 2010 Barack Obama doesn't care about Country music... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
LouieB Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 Sadly this flood has been overshadowed by the Times Square (non) bombing and the oil spill in the Gulf. Hang in there. LouieB Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jff Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 They did a segment on this on NPR this morning, but other than that I hadn't heard much about it. Sounds horrific. I hope the waters are beginning to recede, or will be very soon. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
rareair Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 one of two water treatment plants for Nashville/Davidson Co. is underwater and useless. the other is being sandbagged by national guard due to rising waters. They are asking people to conserve water with two other counties having no usable water. The corps of engineers are trying to balance relieving pressure on the levees and dams upstream with the fact that the Cumberland River is just beginning to recede. horrific is right. the loss of life coupled with widespread destruction is hard to comprehend. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
embiggen Posted May 4, 2010 Author Share Posted May 4, 2010 they found 2 elderly people that neighbors have been looking for in Belle Meade. they tried to drive away and didn't make it. it's really terrible. being 1,000 miles away doesn't make me feel very good because if I was there I would be doing what I could to help. it's just sick making. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Speed Racer Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 Flooding is so scary - I'm so glad I've never experienced it, and from everything I've read, too many people treat it as a nuisance but not a danger until its way too late. My thoughts are with everyone down there right now. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
The High Heat Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 This all too reminiscent of what happened here in eastern NC during the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd in '99. Some neighborhoods are still gone. The only thing harder than waiting for the water to recede is cleaning up the destruction it leaves behind. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
embiggen Posted May 4, 2010 Author Share Posted May 4, 2010 if you have an extra $10 to spare, please text REDCROSS to 90999 to send to Nashville relief. they still don't know what the full death toll is or the full extent of damage. it's going to take months for them to recover. WHY President Obama hasn't designated the area a disaster is completely beyond me!!! thanks in advance! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Kevan Posted May 6, 2010 Share Posted May 6, 2010 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/05/opinion/05Patchett.html?src=me&ref=opinion Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jff Posted May 19, 2010 Share Posted May 19, 2010 http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/music/la-et-nashville-flood-20100514,0,7376955.story Priceless musical instruments are silent victims of Nashville flooding Facility that stored equipment for country stars such as Taylor Swift, Brad Paisley, Keith Urban and Vince Gill, and housed instruments belonging to Jimi Hendrix, the Who's Peter Townshend and Johnny Cash, spent six days under nine feet of water. May 13, 2010 | 8:29 p.m. As symbolically devastating as the recent flooding in Nashville was to the home of the historic Grand Ole Opry House, the toll on another building little known outside the city's music community may well have a broader, more lasting impact. That building is Soundcheck Nashville, a "cartage" facility, where roughly 1,000 musicians, including country stars such as Taylor Swift, Brad Paisley, Keith Urban and Vince Gill, as well as hundreds of the world's most accomplished studio musicians, store their instruments and equipment. That makes Soundcheck Nashville something of the Fort Knox to the city's music community, one that just spent six days submerged under nine feet of water, damaging millions of dollars' worth of equipment used by musicians on thousands of recordings over the past half-century. Paisley lost virtually all of the instruments and staging equipment for a new tour he's launching. In addition to its storage facilities in the 160,000 square foot building, Soundcheck Nashville also includes stages where many musicians rehearse. Urban lost most of his instruments, and had to borrow a guitar to perform on a telethon to raise money for flood victims. Another major Soundcheck client was the recently opened Musicians Hall of Fame, which stored historic instruments donated by dozens of top players, not only within the country music world, but from rock, R&B, soul and jazz players. Joe Chambers, founder and chief executive of the Musicians Hall of Fame, which just opened a year ago, is distraught over the losses, but acknowledges that it could have been worse. "So many people lost the pillow they lay their head on at night, much less a guitar. But the fact is, a lot of historical instruments were stored at Soundcheck." Among those donated to the hall of fame were a Fender Stratocaster that belonged to Jimi Hendrix, a Gibson Les Paul played by the Who's Peter Townshend, and one of Johnny Cash's guitars. "We had two of Lightning Chance's basses — he's somebody a lot of people don't know about," Chambers said, "He played at the Grand Ole Opry alongside Chet Atkins, Patsy Cline, Hank [Williams] Sr., the Everly Brothers. Both those basses just fell apart. One of them was used on Hank Sr.'s very last recording session — that's the bass that's heard on 'Your Cheatin' Heart.'" Many high-profile musicians declined to be interviewed for this story, citing those far worse off because they aren't in a financial position to buy new equipment. "For many of these guys, this is their retirement plan," said keyboardist John Hobbs, a member of Vince Gill's band, among countless others. "It's the equivalent of their 401(k). Those '50s and '60s Strats and Teles, your Martin acoustics, old Gibsons — they've done far better [as financial investments] over the last 20 or 30 years than the stock market." Soundcheck owner Ben Jumper said clients were responsible for providing their own insurance on equipment kept there, but noted that even those who had some form of content insurance might see their claims rejected unless they also had separate flood insurance. "Flood is a dirty word in the insurance business," Jumper said. "We had minimal flood insurance on Soundcheck, but we've lost millions of dollars worth of instruments and equipment. When they hear the word 'flood' all other insurance coverage goes out the window." Studio musician Chris Leuzinger took a break from doing triage on equipment at one of a small handful of warehouses where damaged instruments have been moved for assessment. "It's hard to describe," he said. "A lot of instruments here were used on many hit records out of Nashville and many other cities too. Those instruments are not replaceable." In-demand session player John Jorgenson, a multi-instrumentalist who toured for seven years with Elton John, lost dozens of vintage instruments and amplifiers — "including many one-of-a-kind made specially for me, many vintage…. All the guitars spent days submerged in water containing diesel fuel and sewage." Leuzinger noted that the Local 257 of the American Federation of Musicians Union has set up a fund and is soliciting donations to help musicians get instruments to resume working. The Recording Academy also is using its MusiCares philanthropic arm to provide short-term aid to those in need. "I'd have to say one of the most heartening thing about what's happened is the way musicians who weren't at Soundcheck have been reaching out to other musicians," keyboardist Hobbs said. "I've had half a dozen calls from other keyboard players in town, letting me know I'm welcome to use any of their gear that's needed." Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.