The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Nashville artists help out on stage and off after tornadoes

- By Kristin M. Hall

NASHVILLE, TENN. » Members of the Grammy-winning string band Old Crow Medicine Show put down their fiddles and banjos and picked up chainsaws last week after deadly tornadoes hit middle Tennessee.

“When I am doing this relief work in north Nashville and east Nashville and Donelson, the guys in Old Crow got their chainsaws out,” said lead singer Ketch Secor on Monday night, nearly a week after the severe storms. “We love our concerts and our audience, but when this happens in our town, we’re out there leading the charge.”

Nashville musicians banded together both in their community, but also on stage during a benefit concert Monday night called “To Nashville, With Love” featuring a dozen artists playing to raise money for relief efforts. Some of the musicians who performed don’t live in Tennessee full-time, but record there and have close connection­s.

British singer-songwriter

Yola got to work immediatel­y, helping organize the concert in less than a week. Performers included Old Crow Medicine Show, Sheryl Crow, Dan Auerbach, Jason Isbell, Soccer Mommy, Brothers Osborne and Ashley McBryde. The proceeds from Monday’s concert were going to the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee. At least six tornadoes hit the state and killed 24 people.

“That tornado whipped out a lot of precious things, a lot of mementos, a lot of things that signify a family life or a loved one,” said Yola backstage. “You need to put that love back in.”

Many in the town’s musical community were impacted. Country star Dierks Bentley and his crew showed up in gloves and boots to help his drummer, Steve Misamore, whose home was severely damaged. Dualtone Records’ Nashville office was directly hit, as well as a popular club called The Basement East.

Mike Grimes and Dave Brown, co-owners of The Basement East, said staff members were finishing their shifts early Tuesday morning after a Bernie Sanders fundraisin­g concert when one person stepped outside and saw a funnel cloud approachin­g. The staff grabbed three pedestrian­s off the street and huddled in the basement as the tornado tore down the venue’s cinderbloc­k walls and ripped off the roof. No one was hurt at The Basement East, but two people were killed as they were leaving a neighborin­g bar.

But left standing among the rubble was one piece of wall that featured a mural that declared “I Believe in Nashville.” It was a slogan that became popular in Nashville after the devastatin­g 2010 flooding that hit the city. Even amidst the debris, people have still been walking past roadblocks to take a picture of the mural that survived the winds.

“It’s an amazing thing that it is still standing and very symbolic of the town’s resolve and resiliency,” said Brown.

 ?? PHOTO BY AMY HARRIS/INVISION/AP ?? Sheryl Crow, left, and Brandi Carlile perform at the To Nashville, With Love Benefit Concert at Marathon Music Works on Monday, March 9, in Nashville, TN.
PHOTO BY AMY HARRIS/INVISION/AP Sheryl Crow, left, and Brandi Carlile perform at the To Nashville, With Love Benefit Concert at Marathon Music Works on Monday, March 9, in Nashville, TN.

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