As Jimmy Carter nears his 100th birthday, a musical gala celebrates the
'rock-and-roll president'
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[September 18, 2024]
By BILL BARROW
ATLANTA (AP) — A range of stars from the stage, screen and sport paid
tribute Tuesday to former President Jimmy Carter ahead of his 100th
birthday, the eclectic lineup meant to highlight the 39th president’s
emphasis on human rights and his love of music as a universal language.
“Everyone here is making history,” Jason Carter, the former president’s
grandson, told more than 4,000 people who filled Atlanta’s Fox Theatre
to toast the longest-lived U.S. executive in history. “This is the first
time people have come together to celebrate the 100th birthday of an
American president.”
The benefit concert, with ticket sales funding international programs of
The Carter Center that Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter founded in 1982 after
leaving the White House, brought together artists that crossed
generations and genres that traced back to his 1976 campaign. The
concert will be aired in full on Georgia Public Broadcasting on Oct. 1,
Carter's birthday. Carter remains in hospice care at his home in Plains,
Georgia.
“He really was the rock-and-roll president,” said Chuck Leavell, whose
Georgia-based Allman Brothers Band campaigned with Carter in 1976. But
more than that, Leavell said, Carter always understood music as
something “that brings people together.”
Indeed, Tuesday’s run of show assembled artists as varied as India Arie
singing R&B and soul draped in a resplendent purple gown; the B-52s,
formed in Athens, Georgia, singing “Love Shack” and projecting
psychedelic imagery across the concert hall; and the Atlanta Symphony
Chamber Chorus bringing a classical and patriotic repertoire.
Former President Barack Obama, known for releasing his summer playlists
on social media, marveled at the range.
“Now I have another reason to respect you,” Obama said in a video
message. “He has got great taste in music. ... I’ve never thrown a
concert that features pop, rock, gospel, country, jazz, classical and
hip-hop.”
Of course, Obama noted, “Jimmy never passes up the opportunity to send a
message,” and several artists referenced one of Carter’s widely
circulated quotes about music: “One of the things that has held America
together has been the music that we share and love.”
Leavell took the stage multiple times Tuesday, reprising music he played
and sang almost 50 years ago when Carter, then an underdog former
Georgia governor, outpaced better-known Democrats to win his party’s
nomination and the presidency in the wake of the Vietnam War and the
Watergate scandal.
“Music was such an important part of his political legacy,” Jason Carter
told The Associated Press. “The Allman Brothers helped get him elected.
Willie Nelson helped get him elected. He truly believed that.
“When he was coming out of the South, running for president of the
United States, the Allman Brothers and some of these other folks were
really announcing this New South that was turning the page on the days
of segregation – their lyrics, their whole vibe,” the younger Carter
continued. “He used that to connect across generations.”
Leavell traced Carter’s love of music to his upbringing in church; the
former president has written about his early church experiences,
including visiting a Black congregation near his home just outside
Plains. Carter recalled being more captivated by the music there than
what he heard in his all-white congregation. At the Naval Academy,
Leavell noted, Carter and one of his friends would buy classical
recordings of the same pieces to study how music can be interpreted
differently.
Part of the evening involved recounting Carter’s legacy as president and
with The Carter Center, which advocates democracy, resolves conflict and
fights disease across the world.
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Martin Luther King Jr.'s daughter, Bernice King arrives ahead of a
"Jimmy Carter 100: A Celebration in Song," concert at the Fox
Theatre, Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike
Stewart)
Hannah Hooper, a lead singer of the alternative rock band Grouplove,
praised Carter for dramatically expanding nationally protected park
lands, most of it in Alaska. Actress Renee Zellweger narrated the
lifelong relationship between the former president and his wife, whom he
first met when she was just days old and who died last November after 77
years of marriage.
Two former Atlanta Braves baseball stars, Terry Pendleton and Dale
Murphy, celebrated Carter as the team's No. 1 fan. They recalled what it
was like to play with the Carters sitting in a field-level box, and they
presented the former president's great-grandsons with a Braves jersey to
give their great-grandfather. The jersey number: 100.
Bernice King, the daughter of slain civil rights icon Martin Luther King
Jr., recounted Carter’s relationship with her family — he was close to
her mother, and her grandfather was instrumental in Carter's 1976
election. Though Carter was not actively involved in King Jr.'s work,
Bernice King thanked the former president for publicly crediting her
father for his indirect role in Carter's political rise. Without the
successes of the Civil Rights Movement, she recalled Carter saying, the
nation never would have elevated a Southern governor who came of age in
the era of Jim Crow segregation.
The night was mostly void of partisan politics. But there were signs of
Democratic allegiances to Carter and shadows of the 2024 election.
Patterson Hood of Drive-By Truckers praised Carter as being ahead of his
time and added that the country would have been better off if he had
gotten to “finish the job" — an obvious reference to Carter's landslide
defeat to Republican Ronald Reagan in 1980.
The list of former presidents paying tribute was bipartisan: Democrat
Bill Clinton and Republican George W. Bush were packaged with Obama.
President Joe Biden added his greetings, recalling that he was the first
U.S. senator to endorse Carter's White House bid. “I admire you so darn
much,” Biden said, calling Carter, “Mr. President.”
But there was a notable omission: former President Donald Trump. The
2024 Republican nominee has this year repeatedly cast Carter as a failed
president as he tries to make a comeback bid. After the 2016 election,
Carter questioned Trump's legitimacy.
Arie's selections, meanwhile, included “What If,” the lyrics of which
include first names of Black women who have broken barriers. Among them:
Kamala. That reference to the vice president and Democratic nominee,
Kamala Harris, drew roars from the crowd.
Jason Carter, for his part, said his grandfather has been captivated by
Biden's decision to end his reelection bid and the possibility that
Harris could become the first woman in the Oval Office. The younger
Carter, who now chairs The Carter Center board, said Jimmy Carter
struggled in the months after Rosalynn Carter's death but now is excited
by another campaign.
“He's ready to turn the page on Trump,” Jason Carter said, but more
driven by the opportunity to vote for Harris. “When Kamala came onto the
scene, it really galvanized the party, and it really energized him as
well.”
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