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Beatboxing at the Ballot Box

Art and politics blur at your local concert venue, where artists from Ani DiFranco to Pearl Jam are making voter turnout their mission.
 
 
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"I never really cared that much about who was president," says Fat Mike, NOFX bassist and founder of Punkvoter, a coalition of musicians, labels and activists out to effect regime change in the White House through a series of Rock Against Bush tours and record releases. "I didn't think it really mattered. But everything changed for me during the 2000 election."

That was the year when about 100 million Americans who are eligible to vote, did not. The older demographic – mostly wealthy and white – dominated that election.

Consider that the government doesn't look much like America anymore: President George W. Bush's cabinet is the wealthiest in U.S. history, with over 80 percent millionaires and nearly half of them worth more than $10 million, according to the Guinness Book of World Records.

Tom Morello, guitarist for Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, puts it this way: "When you accept corporate contributions in the hundreds of thousands, you don't owe much to part-time schoolteachers or alternative rock journalists. You do owe something to the oil companies and the multinationals that put you where you are. And apathy is what these companies want; they want people to sit on the sideline and not realize that they are living agents of history. By either action or inaction, they will determine the present and the future."

Morello is also co-founder of Axis of Justice, a non-profit social justice organization that he formed with System of a Down's Serj Tankian. The Axis of Justice concert series is just one of many movements – like MoveOn.org's Vote For Change tour, Music For America's Voter X events, Ani DiFranco's Vote Dammit tour, and Punkvoter's Rock Against Bush Tour – formed by or working with musicians to help attract young people away from their Xboxes and into the voting booth on November 2.

The citizens who avoided the polls in 2000 like they were installments of an aborted Liza Minnelli reality TV show were primarily young people, single women and people of color. The voter mobilization groups are thirsty to reconnect the youth demographic to the political processes of a country that is often taken for granted. In fact, many of the musicians involved with these organizations claim that they understand better than anyone how young people feel about politics, mostly because they too are voting for the first time in 2004.

"I think that the younger generation we're targeting is going to turn out in record numbers," says Fat Mike. "Of course, Bush has his backers, but they're not counting on the new voters, and the youth vote just doesn't show up in polls. But I think we're looking pretty good. We just have to keep battling."

The 2000 wake-up call that Fat Mike experienced wasn't only felt by the punk community, but also the hip-hop nation so often ignored by both political parties.

"This is the first time I'll vote in an election," says El-P, the New York-bred hip-hop renaissance man behind the enormously popular and resolutely independent Definitive Jux label, which recently hosted a benefit for Music For America to counter the unpopular Republican National Convention presence in his native New York. "I'm just beaten down by it all. The worst thing you could do is not hedge your bets. At this point, being ambivalent out of fear and depression is far outweighed by the idea of putting in the minimal effort it takes to effect change."

Although that change seems to be the resounding theme among artists working to get young people involved in the 2004 election, it extends far past the growing desire to jettison Bush. Rather, artists involved with Punkvoter, Vote For Change, Music For America and more are primarily concerned with communicating to their millions of fans that the world won't change unless they actually do something about it.

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