tv Soundtracks CNN April 27, 2017 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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i have no idea what's going on but our world will never be the same. >> i put a fireman's helmet on the piano. if i didn't have that, i might have just lost it. >> didn't matter what color you were, what religion, you w ere all the same that day. >> the music that came out of 9/11 is bifurcated as the politics as the country were. america strikes back. now sing.
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♪ >> it's the music that carries our history, that carries emotion. it's the music that transports us back. >> tear down this wall! >> this is how we remember history. this is how we put it into context. >> to look at history through the lens of music is a powerful way to see the world. >> 8:40 on this tuesday,
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september 11th. >> plenty of sunshine today. lower humidity than recently. the high 80 dropping to 60 tonight up to 78 with sunshine. >> we all had a fantastic week. suddenly this news came into the thing that planes had crashed into the twin towers and it just seemed so unlikely. >> crashed into one of the towers of the world trade center. >> two planes, one hitting each of the twin towers at the world trade center. >> and then we looked at the tv and there was this madness, like our world had suddenly just gone crazy. your most apocalyptic nightmare had come to pass, you know? >> oh, no! >> on 9/11, sting is performing a show in italy. >> the world has changed in the
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last two hours. >> there's a question about whether he should continue to go on, whether it's appropriate to play a concert on an evening like this. he and his band make a decision to come out and perform "fragile". ♪ if blood will flow when flesh and steel are one ♪ ♪ drying in the color of the evening sun ♪ ♪ tomorrow's rain will wash the stains away ♪ >> in some ways, that was a perfect song to sing where the sentimental aspect of it rubs against the power of that lyric to talk about violence and the fragility of human life.
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♪ on and on the rain will fall >> when you have this kind of emotional earthquake, this kind of hammer to the heart, if you're a professional, you have to suppress that. you have to push all of that down, out of you. >> four u.s. commercial airliners were hijacked. two crashed into the world trade center here in new york city and sent the giant twin towers filled with workers crumbling to the ground. >> people who followed national security weren't all that surprised there had been an attack on american soil. >> did you have any inkling at all in any way that something of this nature and something of this scope might be planned? >> charlie, we don't discuss intelligence. >> people knew that such a thing might be possible. >> there are, quote, good indications that people with links to the osama bin laden organization -- >> -- but it's different to have intellectual awareness and see
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lower manhattan in flames. >> i was blown down the street by the impact of the building. i was blown underneath a truck, one of the fire apparatus and that was it. you know, i was a single dad. i was raising a daughter. so i was so angry because i said i just got myself killed. about two hours later, i was found by a firefighter. i started to panic and crawl my way out of it. we didn't know where we were. >> then we went back up to the firehouse and it was then that i discovered that, you know, firefighters and officers from my own firehouse were missing. >> a lot of us, it just entered the imagination as a film before we came to terms with what it was in reality. i think it wasn't until i passed the firehouse in my neighborhood and saw the wreaths, people were already laying flowers, that i realized the human scale of this.
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♪ ♪ making this way through this darkness can't feel nothing but this chain that binds me ♪ >> i was trying to describe the most powerful images of the 11th, some of the people coming down talked about the emergency workers who were ascending. that image to me was just what -- was an image i just felt left with. ♪ come on up for the horizon come up and lay your hands in mine ♪ ♪ come up for the horizon come up for the horizon tonight ♪ >> those guys going up the stairs, up the stairs, ascending, ascending. ♪ bells ringing filled the air >> people forget, people are brave.
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people are brave. ♪ wheels of fire i come roaring down here ♪ >> somebody has to put this into words ofmotion forveryone to hear. we all felt the earth move and that compelled him to write such an amazing moving song. >> that's a very beautiful album. that's a living eulogy. >> but what he did was exceptional. an artist of his caliber to dedicate an entire album to supporting the country and, you know, to rise up from what they did to us, you know, that's important. ♪ spirits above and behind me faces gone black eyes burning bright ♪ ♪ may the precious blood bind me ♪ >> incredible sense of tragedy on that album "the rising." and obviously uplift, a
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hard-fought realism type of uplift and continually acknowledging those who were absent, not letting us forget them. >> what you were thinking and the way you were writing was contextualized by a new experience and living in a new world. the world was very different. >> and tonight, lower manhattan, the financial center of the world lies in ruins. >> we were in deep grief and why wouldn't we be but almost 3,000 people killed. >> except for a few sirens, i have never heard new york city this quiet. graveyard quiet. >> at the same time, outrage and a determination to do something. >> make no mistake, the united states will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts. >> just looked at my wife and said, i have no idea what's going on but our world will never be the same. ♪
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and 26 vitamins and minerals. boost® the number one high protein complete nutritional drink. the honors for the heroes of september 11th took a musical turn on saturday. it was a six-hour magical night of music headlined by paul mccartney and other artists. >> whether sports teams, musicians, if you were in the entertainment business, everyone was trying to figure out what's the right thing to do. >> we came up with a list of music to help you through the tragedy.
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we didn't call it anything quite that cliche, but that was the idea, you know, that we're going to give you a play list of soulful songs that will work through your emotions on this. >> thank you new york city! >> i was at madison square garden. the best concert ever in the world. >> we ain't going anywhere. [cheers and applause ] >> we played for an audience largely made up of police and firemen and emergency rescue workers and they needed a boost. ♪ some folks like to get away and take a holiday from the neighborhood ♪ ♪ a flight to miami beach or hollywood ♪ ♪ i'm taking a greyhound on the
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hudson river and i'm in a new york state of mind ♪ >> we played "new york state of mind" and we played it very slow. i remember thinking, don't -- don't lose it. i put a fireman's helmet on the piano just to help me concentrate. because if i didn't have that, i might have just lost it. it means a different thing than it used to mean to the audiences. it is kind of an anthem for new york city. i didn't think that when i wrote it. ♪ i'm in a new york state of mind ♪ >> it was just a love song to the city, but it became something else. >> when i was at madison square garden when i was there at the concert for new york, it was just so cool.
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a happy day in a time when there wasn't a lot of that. there wasn't a lot of happiness. i don't remember the holidays. i don't remember a lot of things going on. i mean, that was one of the things that i do remember. it was just an enormous opportunity to at least have a nice time for a few hours and just forget about what was going on 30, 40 blocks down where it was an ongoing nightmare. >> the aftermath of 9/11 for a while, everybody was in it together. >> it was just a time for americans to realize what mattered. it was north, south, east and west. we were all americans for a while there. >> after 9/11, there was a deeply perceived sense of peril that more terrible things might happen and i think faced with a catastrophe of lower manhattan and of the pentagon, people were rallying around the president. there was a sense that we were facing a common threat and we're
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going to fight it together. on the other hand, there were actions taken in the case of violating civil liberties, infringement of rights of muslims in particular. >> one of the ugliest legacies in this crises is home ground, the surge of hate crimes against muslims and people who are mistaken for them. >> at that time, there was already anti-muslim sentiment. there was already this sort of xenophobia, ideas about revenge. ♪ we are family >> two weeks after 9/11, nile rogers, the great producer and songwriter decided to gather together some of his friends who happened to be super celebrities in the world of music to record his classic song "we are family." ♪ we are family >> there are so many people that came together. everyone from diana ross to patti labelle. the message was, we are more
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family than ever now. we have to embrace because we are all in this together. ♪ everyone can achieve when we're together ♪ >> three of my friends were in the first plane that crashed into the north tower. after that, things started to unravel very quickly. so i started getting phone calls from all around the world. when i rerecorded "we are family," i didn't want it to be like "we are the world" so i got rock stars, sports stars and doctors and triage workers and firefighters and police and -- just everybody who was involved in the effort. >> everyone came together. it didn't matter what color you were. it didn't matter what religion. you were all the same that day. >> of course, it was the reason that this family became
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everyone's song and then everyone's global song and it has no color. tears have no color. at the end of the day, we're all going through this. >> with nile rogers, it was such an intervention because it was celebrating multiculturism and a plurality of voices rather than saying some voices matter and others don't. ♪ ♪
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extraordinary time because the cold war had ended. >> has the economy changed for good like a marathoner kicking into sprint? the higher the nasdaq climbed, the faster it went. >> the economy seemed to be going well and we had this decade of, whoa, things are good. ♪ out in the country past the city limit sign where there's a honky tonk ♪ >> all of a sudden, country music became big arena stadium kind of stuff. the music was around, dancing and going out to clubs and having a good time and -- ♪ where all of the cowboys go and do the boot scoot boogie ♪ >> we ran for a few years and had guys on stilts and bucket machines and it was full-blown entertainment, a lot of nonsense and a lot of great music. it was fun.
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>> it just seemed like if this is the end of history, this is fun, which all set up for 9/11 to be all the more shocking and awful. >> we have a report now that a large plane crashed this morning in western pennsylvania not too terribly far from pittsburgh. >> as fate would have it, our next show three or four days after 9/11 happened was in pennsylvania and it was only a few miles from where that plane went down. >> very specifically remember calling my manager up and saying i think it's inappropriate for us to go up there with "boot scoot boogie." it doesn't feel right. the manager called back and said, well, tickets are selling like mad. people are coming out so you're going to need to be there. >> but then about an hour before the show went on, it dawned on me, we were opening our show at that time with "only an american." it was just becoming a hit.
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the first words of the song were "sun coming up over new york city." ♪ sun coming up over new york city ♪ >> before we hit the first note, you could hear a pin drop. and then it was like everybody went haywire. ♪ staring at faces in a rearview mirror ♪ >> that song all of a sudden became sacred ground. the events that transpired defined the music and made it bigger than it was to be. >> brooks & dunn considered conservative, ironically co-written by a democrat in nashville who is not considered a conservative at all. america was kind of having this life of being tossed back and forth like a football between republicans and democrats who wanted to
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claim it politically. ♪ one just might be better then ♪ >> it's funny because george w. bush used it for two elections and barack obama used it in his famous speech in denver. >> it's speaking to everyone, you know? obviously it talks about freedom and having the ability to dream as big as we want to. >> post 9/11, i think something really interesting happened to country music and the landscape of our country and what people, what americans were gravitating towards. >> a certain type of music who taps into not necessarily the aggressive dna in us but one that we are grateful of where we live and we're grateful to be americans. >> as a country, as a people, as a society, i think we need to hear music that was familiar. on the other hand, began to hear songs that reflected that day, which is what alan jackson did with his song.
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♪ where were you when the world stopped turning that september day ♪ >> patriotism and country music has gone hand in hand for a long time and certainly after 9/11, country muscissions were writing songs about their own feelings, things that they were seeing on the news. ♪ rising up against that blue sky ♪ ♪ did you shout out in anger and fear for your neighbor or did you just sit down and cry ♪ >> he's just a singer, a simple song and that song mourns the dead but also appreciates the patriotism of the spirit of the american people in the wake of 9/11. ♪ do you rejoice for the people ♪ >> it's really a song about being in shock. alan jackson admits in the song that he doesn't know what to think about all this.
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he doesn't understand the political situation. that's not an easy thing to write a song about. ♪ look at yourself and what really matters ♪ >> it goes back to country music which is three-quarters of the truth. ♪ real political man i watch cnn but i'm not sure i can tell you the difference in iraq and iran ♪ >> as much as people loved "where were you when the world stopped turning," a lot of people gave him flack for that sentence, "i'm not sure i can tell you the difference between iraq and iran." it's just being honest in a way sometimes only country music is. ♪ where were you when the world stopped turning on that september day ♪
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>> thank you all so much. god bless you. who's the new guy? they call him the whisperer. the whisperer? why do they call him the whisperer? he talks to planes. he talks to planes. watch this. hey watson, what's avionics telling you? maintenance records and performance data suggest replacing capacitor c4. not bad. what's with the coffee maker? sorry. we are not on speaking terms. what's wz286nz zwtz ee maker?
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♪ if foorm all the things were gone that i worked for all my life ♪ ♪ and i had to start again just my children and my wife ♪ ♪ i'd thank my lucky stars to be living here today because the flag still stands for freedom ♪ ♪ and they can't take that away ♪ ♪ i'm proud to be an american where at least i know i'm free ♪ ♪ and i won't forget the men who died who gave their life to me ♪ ♪ and i'd gladly stand up >> after the memorials were done, the firemen's memorial at yankee stadium and policemen memorial at carnegie hall, we
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need to get back to the american way of life, whatever it is. so i've been associated with nascar for a long time. >> the pledge of allegiance as well as -- >> 250,000 people live, how many million watch the tv? i don't know. >> 5,000 firefighters from around the country. >> preceding the race, i'm on the track and the cameraman and the director and just the three of us standing on the track. >> the opening ceremony for today's race is about to begin. >> the invocation of lee greenwood singing "the national anthem". >> i'm not singing "god bless the usa." the director gives me the stop sign. don't sing yet. wait a minute. wait a minute. >> we interrupt because of breaking news events. >> so the center of the field went to tom brokaw. >> tom brokaw with the latest. tom? >> he said, america strikes back. >> good afternoon, everyone. it does appear that united states military action against targets in afghanistan, that
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that action is under way. >> and so the bombs are falling. >> usa! usa! >> now sing. ♪ o say can you see by the dawn's early light what so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming ♪ >> wow. that was tough. but i didn't make a mistake. it was something i had to deliver and not get choked up, like i am now. ♪ for the land of the free and the home of the brave ♪ >> on my orders, the united states military has begun strikes against al qaeda terrorist training camps and
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military installations of the taliban regime in afghanistan. >> for the very first time in my memory you had something of this enormity that was broadcast live. >> film provided by the pentagon shown on television in primetime. >> we were pretty damn gung-ho at the time about going to war. we just wanted to go fight somebody. >> okay. then to the grave and deep introspection, now we're going to be at war. we're going to get these guys. >> when i think of music of 9/11, i think people in rock and roll didn't know if they were pro or anti-war. it's hard to come out with strong protest songs if you're kind of on the fence. >> the music and the artists post 9/11, they are reflective of many of the emotions that we feel and the first one being
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denial. i think i skipped denial and went right to the -- what's the one where i'm angry? and where's toby keith? that's the one i went to. ♪ american girls and american guys we'll always stand up and salute we'll always recognize ♪ >> once it had fully soaked in that we would not and could not be the same country after 9/11, it emerged i won't say slowly but my recollection is it didn't emerge all that slowly. ♪ my daddy served in the army and lost his right eye ♪ >> a song such as toby keith's "red white and blue," it was a and i don't think this is an overstatement, sort of a rallying cry. >> and sort of delving into your patriotic feelings and striking
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out at the rest of the world. ♪ falling under attack he might have sucker punched coming from somewhere in the back ♪ ♪ as soon as we could see it clearly through our big black eye ♪ ♪ we lit up your world like the fourth of july ♪ >> it really spoke to this visceral thing that was going on in america, like we've got to go find these people. >> there's a long history in country from the depression forward on up to the vietnam war, a lot of gung-ho, go get 'em songs so it was all there bubbling until 9/11 came and all of a sudden country music was kind of the town hall of america musically. ♪ brought to you courtesy of the red white and blue ♪ >> it was such a powerful song but also a polarizing song. it certainly didn't seem to bother toby keith. he's never been one to care about whether his music is polarizing and he's always been one to take a stand.
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>> i'm not going to lay down and i'm not going to shut up. ♪ justice will be served and the battle will rage ♪ >> whether you want peace, love and country music or kick somebody in the ass, whether you agree with the politics of it, as americans, we all get to express ourselves. hell yeah. sing it loud. ♪ because we'll put a boot in your ass ♪ >> whereas some people wanted comfort, toby keith wanted to stick a boot up someone's ass. he was angry. he wrote that song and people absolutely loved it. >> since he released at angry american," it's been used as a battle cry for u.s. armed forces in iraq. bombs were branded with it. >> as far as extreme as i sound like in my field, i'm probably catching the average joe in the middle better than anybody. >> there's no surprise that the
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country took to it. frankly, i lik it myself. on the other hand, there were elements of chauvinism and then an adult thinking person, you knew the dangers of that. this is your new name. this is your new house. and a perfectly inconspicuous suv. you must become invisible. [hero] i'll take my chances. tired of paying hundreds more a year in taxes and fees on your wireless bill? only t-mobile one gives you unlimited data with taxes and fees included. that'll save you hundreds. get two lines of unlimited data for a hundred dollars. that's right. two lines. a hundred bucks. all in.
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i think pretty much everyone in the united states was on arwith what our military was beg asked to do afghanistan. >> i don't think you saw a house without an american flag. everybody had american flags up. it was a very patriotic time. very emotional. >> but the invasion of iraq, of course, opened up these huge rifts in american society again. >> thousands of americans in minneapolis voiced their anger at the prospect of war. in philadelphia and in seattle. >> and that was reflected somewhat in the artists. >> the hottest and biggest act in country music was the dixie chicks. they were smoking. they were on fire at that time. ♪ waiting for the life of the traveling soldier ♪ ♪ our love will never end
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>> the dixie chicks sold 10 million albums, filling arenas. ♪ soldiers coming home >> they had the number one song in the country with "traveling soldier." >> so the dixie chicks were putting on a concert in london in 2003. >> you sure it's not too much? >> the iraq regime continues to possess some of the most lethal weapons ever devised. >> in 2003, there was a u.s. administration that was hell bent on going to war with iraq. staying at a hotel in parklane and every single morning you would wake up and there would be another massive demonstration. >> the gravity of this moment is matched by the gravity of the threat that iraq's weapons of mass destruction posed to the world.
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>> there's no doubt that sudam hussein now has weapons of mass destruction. >> we know they have weapons of mass destruction. >> what's the war update? >> they are moving troops but they haven't crossed yet. >> the units are moving into positions at the border. battle rdy. >> somebody take a baby? we've got to hit the stage. >> just so you know, we're on the good side with this war. >> natalie made an off-the-cuff remark. >> and we're ashamed the president of the united states is from texas. >> she was ashamed the president of the united states was from texas, which of course was her home state. >> we want to feel good old-fashion pride and the up roar over the dixie chicks.
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>> the backlash from natalie's statement was absolutely mind blowing. >> they don't know what they're talking about. >> i think they are the ditzy twits. >> tease are the dumbest, dumbest bimoes with all due respect. >> these are callous, foolish women who deserve to be slapped around. >> absolutely. >> natalie will be shot dead on sunday, july 6th, in dallas, texas. >> they are always there for the whole time. >> i mean, i know how vulnerable i feel. i can't imagine how natalie feels. standing up there, you feel so naked. so naked. >> scary time. just wrong what happened not only to us but other people that were, you know, shut up or made to feel threatened. >> i watched intellectuals get censored. anybody who had something to say that wasn't completely orthodox,
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bill maher, anybody, getting bashed, the president's spokesperson warning people to watch what they say. >> a reminder to all americans they need to watch what they say, watch what they do. >> keep playing, keep making music. >> and keep your mouth shut. >> wrong. >> right? >> the mood of our audience changes, we're not going to play them anymore. it's simply financial suicide. ♪ we're taking the long way >> and then it's time to make another record. ♪ two sisters in a pink rv >> so many people had asked natalie to apologize in the wake of her statements in london. people at record labels, image consu consultants, they were all saying go apologize, say maybe you were drinking on stage, you
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know, trying to come up with every excuse in the book to have her retract her statement and she wouldn't do it. >> what about "fought with a stranger". >> yeah. they wrote "not ready to make nice" simply about the backlash to natalie's statement in london. ♪ i know you say can't you just get over it ♪ ♪ it turned my whole world around and i kind of like it ♪ >> i tell you what, i have never seen someone not back down like natalie did not back down. ♪ with no regrets and i don't mind saying it's a sad sad story ♪ ♪ when a mother will teach her daughter that she ought to hate a perfect stranger ♪ ♪ and how in the world can the words that i said send somebody's so over the edge ♪
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>> the thing that's so amazing about that song is the audience. ♪ i'm not ready to make nice >> 20,000 people singing that song at the top of their lungs, you feel it. you feel the emotion. i've worked with a lot of big artists over the years but that song is one of the most powerful songs ever. ♪ i'm not ready to make nice i'm not ready to back down ♪ ♪ i don't have time to go around and round ♪ ♪ you have to make it right
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>> the music that came out of 9/11 is as bifurcated as the politics of the country were. this is the era of a hanging -- this is the year of florida. that's the lesson of that ♪ sounds good, i'm not sure ♪ i'm still waiting >> sound tracks, songs that define history brought to you by mercedes-benz, the best or nothing.
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later, music can upset you so much. we don't want to forget, we don't want to forget. so, i don't avoid them, but they upset me. ♪ >> i think that the songs that are connected to september 11th now, yes, there'somfort about connecting to it, an emotion that i maybe can't communicate still, but it's actually really painful. ♪ hello darkness, my old friend, i've come to talk with you again ♪ >> on the ten-year anniversary, i watched it this morning at home and cried.
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i was crying for the people in the audience, people hugging, and i was thinking, they lost somebody. they tried to save somebody. ♪ >> i decided to sing "the sound of silence" and it was a tough one because i was single it in front of the families of the people who had died. it was very emotional. i had to look away when i thought it was going to get too emotional for me to continue singing. "the sound of silence" wasn't written with anything like 9/11 possibly in my imagination. i was only 21 years old when i wrote it.
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you try to do anything you can in these times where you can't do anything really, except you give people an opportunity to find solace. ♪ ♪ no one dared disturb the sound of silence ♪ >> we were left with a gaping hole in lower manhattan. we could try to make plans to address with a new building. we were also left with a gaping wound in our own national psyche. immunity has been replaced by a deep polarization about what the policies are that will actually make us as a people safer. so, in the long run, it turns
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out that physical scars in the ground are a lot easier to heal than those emotional ones that we all carry with us. >> i think after 9/11 it was sort of difficult to feel really positive about america because we were so internally divided as a country. ♪ >> it was 2009. jay z and alicia keys released their song, "empire state of mind." in some ways i think "empire state of mind" was a unifying moment. there is this idea that you have to be proud of your roots. and even though it was very specific -- it was about new york and jay z is wrapping about things that have to do with his life and where he grew up -- there is just something about that song that feels much bigger than the song itself. and that's actually what an anthem is. >> an anthem is something that really echos the emotions of the people that speaks it in music
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form for them. it says everything in a phrase. ♪ >> that is what anthems are made of. ♪ >> post-9/11, what was important for us as a country was to be resilient and come back. so much of it comes back to music. >> the music will always remind us that it is possible. >> i don't know if music can really change the world, but i think it certainly gives us a real powerful spirit while we're doing our best to do so. ♪ >> music is a great expression of humanity, an explosive expression of humanity, and it
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will always be influential. [cheering and applauding] >> good evening, thanks for joining us. the battle to repeal and replace obamacare is firing up again with a new amendment that could leave people with preexisting conditions out of luck. on that this hour. we begin with the russia-white house watch. today we learned that michael flynn is under yet another investigation, this one from the top watch dog at the pentagon over failing to disclose payments he received for a speech at a russian television event. the house oversight committee says newly revealed documents show that flynn was warned explicitly about taking foreign money years ago. this comes just days after the house oversight committee said that flynn may have broken the law by not disclosing the payments. and as you may or may not remember depending on how closely you follow the president's twitter feed a month
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