CMP Supporting Artists
 
Jimmy Dillon
"When I was in high school I can tell you that playing the guitar was my salvation. I wish there had been more musical programs available, especially in the field of contemporary music. I am so pleased to be a part of California Music Project where I can give back and be a part of "passing it on" to the next generation of young musicians. Music education is something I feel is essential, and that it plays an important part in the development of our kids. We need more authentic originals, and keeping music education alive in our schools is an important part of this process.”
Song : "Somebody Like You"
 
Rick Holmstrom
"Some of my purest moments playing guitar were in after school guitar lessons taught by Ms. Rorro, my 3rd grade teacher. But this was a Catholic school in Fairbanks, Alaska, where the arts were celebrated. I'd hate to be a 3rd grader in a public school in California now, where it seems little effort is made to encourage kids to appreciate music. C'mon everybody, our kids could be the future Ellington's, Ray's, Cash's and Flea's!"
Song : "Pee Wee's Nightmare"
 
Michelle Shocked
“Every God-given child should have the right to music education in school, just like math, science and reading. The truth is that by denying children music and arts in school we are, in fact, leaving every child behind,” said Michelle Shocked. "Parents and communities need to put pressure on every school board and legislator to make sure we don't let this continue.”
Song : "Picoesque"
 
Bonnie Raitt
“It’s a shame that we are depriving so many California children of the benefits of music in schools. We all need to demand better of our school boards and legislators so every child has the chance to develop to their fullest with a well-rounded education including the arts.”
Song : "Love On One Condition"
 
Flea, Red Hot Chili Peppers
“When I was a kid, the music education that I received via the public school system gave me sanctuary in an otherwise chaotic life. With music now cut from most California public school budgets, kids are being shortchanged from one of the most important parts of the education process, and for some kids like me, that music education means everything. I hope for all kids in California to have the opportunity for a music education."
Song : "Parallel Universe"
 
Anna Nalick
"I was in school only a few years ago and I spent a lot of time doubting my ability to ever succeed as a professional musician because while every other career was touted as being entirely possible, being a musician was viewed as something that should be left behind with playing house. It wasn't until I took a course in college on career opportunities in the music industry that I realized that music is just as serious and just as complicated as a job in any other field. It is also just as possible as any other career goal. Unfortunately, kids like me were limited to self-education for almost the entirety of our schooling. I think that a child with a guitar should be taken just as seriously as a child with a toy doctor kit. I would have had a lot more confidence as a kid if I had a place to develop my talents instead of feeling like I was terrible at every subject because writing lyrics and music would get me nowhere."
Song : "Satellite"
 
Tremolo
"Music education in schools is not simply about training up the next generation of musicians. Its about offering young people the opportunity to express themselves through artistic discipline no matter what they grow up to be. By removing music from public schools we are short-changing future generations from reaching their potential and expanding their minds. And shortchanging them is like shortchanging us. Soon they will be the ones making the decisions about our lives."
Song : "Baby Blue"
 
Beck
His MTV-saturating hit "Loser" threatened to make Beck Hansen merely a slacker icon, or perhaps, to quote Cosmo Kramer, a "hipster doofus." Beck put the skeptics to rest with his critically adored album Odelay, a 1996 collaboration with the Dust Brothers. Beck channeled the funk of James Brown and Prince, while confirming his hipness on the "two turntables and a microphone" of "Where It's At" (which also name-checked ultra-obscure San Diego cult musician Gary Wilson). He then worked with Nigel Godrich, known for his work with ambient-rockers Radiohead, before returning to the Dust Brothers for the 2005 album Guero from which this track is featured. As an Amazon.com reviewer put it, "Guero is like every Beck album condensed into one," although this one has the White Stripes’ Jack White as a bonus.
Song : “Scarecrow”
 
Perla Batalla
Perla Batalla has experienced living in two realms at the same time, although not necessarily "Heaven and Earth." Her father, a Mexican singer and radio personality, and her mother ran a Los Angeles record store (Discoteca Batalla, to become the title of one of her albums); young Perla heard Mexican pop standards along with the blues of Muddy Waters and jazz of John Coltrane. Later, she joined the Lee Strasberg Theater Institute and also sang behind an encouraging Leonard Cohen, then developed her own style while splitting her time between living in San Francisco and Mexico City. Batalla, who debuted in 1993 with Perla Batalla, made the culture-bridging "Heaven and Earth" the title track to her 2000 album, a follow-up to the similarly acclaimed Mestiza.
Song : “Heaven & Earth”
 
Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
After UK music fans and critics, nostalgic for the melodic buzz of the Jesus & Mary Chain, gave Black Rebel Motorcycle flavo(u)r-of-the-month status a few years back, it was easy to mistake the trio for a British band. And while drummer Nick Jago hails from Wales, the band was formed in the Bay Area, then home to guitarist-singers Peter Hayes and Robert Been. (And Been's father, Michael, who was often spotted behind the sound board at BRMC gigs, fronted the '80s Santa Cruz band The Call, of "The Walls Came Down" fame.) While the initial buzz faded, BRMC regrouped impressively on its third album, Howl, trading its "Whatever Happened to Rock 'n' Roll" punk attitude for a still-dynamic, but acoustic-based sound.
Song : “Shuffle Your Feet”
 
Chris Gerolmo
Chris Gerolmo took the long route to recording his debut album, I'm Your Daddy. Along with raising four kids (with his wife, Joan), Gerolmo pursued a highly successful film career after studying with legendary Yugoslav director Dusan Makavejev. He wrote the screenplay for the 1988 civil-rights drama "Mississippi Burning," nominated for seven Academy Awards (including one for Best Picture), and wrote and directed the 1995 HBO production "Citizen X," nominated for seven Emmys. But Gerolmo, inspired by hearing Jimi Hendrix when he was 13, never lost interest in music. His two passions intersected when TV mastermind Steven Bochco asked Chris to be co-creator, head writer and executive producer of the FX network series "Over There." Gerolmo wrote, sings and plays guitar on the theme song.
Song : “Over There” (Main Title Theme)
 
Jackson Browne
A benefit album, especially one with a California theme, wouldn't seem complete without a contribution from Jackson Browne. His name is synonymous with liberal activism, as he co-founded (with Bonnie Raitt, among others) Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE), which put on the trailblazing Madison Square Garden concerts, featuring Bruce Springsteen and Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, that was filmed as "No Nukes." By then, Browne was already synonymous with the sensitive Southern California singer-songwriter, spanning the '70s with finely crafted and evocatively played (guitar wizard David Lindley lent a hand) albums like Jackson Browne, his 1972 debut, For Everyman, Late for the Sky and The Pretender.
Song : “Never Stop”
 
Leela James
Young soul diva Leela James lays down the South Central L.A. law on her song "Music": "Can't we go back to yesterday/Can't we put the thongs away/And fall back in love with music," she pleads. "Where's the music gone?" Clearly, the music lives on in James, who invokes Aretha Franklin, Tina Turner, Chaka Khan and Marvin Gaye on "Music," even as she's getting contemporary hiphop stars like Kanye West, Raphael Saadiq and Wyclef Jean to produce tracks on her debut album, A Change Is Gonna Come, whose executive producer is Commissioner Gordon (he helped educate Lauryn Hill). And while the title song is a reworking of the Sam Cooke classic, James also tries her hand at changing up No Doubt's "Don't Speak" with a jazzy interpretation.
Song : “Music”
 
Jack Johnson
Jack Johnson might be a lightweight when compared to his pugilistic namesake, but the former surfing champion's laidback music has made him a gentle giant in pop music. A native Hawaiian who studied at the University of California in beach-studded Santa Barbara, Johnson's enduringly popular In Between Dreams might be termed, if one could borrow some box-office hype (and Johnson has produced as well as scored several surfing films, including "September Sessions" and "Thicker Than Water"), "the feel-good album of 2005." (The album even sold over a million copies in surf-challenged Britain.) Johnson clearly puts no age limit on "Good People," as his latest, chart-topping album is Sing-a-Longs and Lullabies for the Film Curious George.
Song : “Good People”
 
Dwight Yoakam
Dwight Yoakam is equally at home on the back lots of Hollywood and on "The Streets of Bakersfield." His 1986 album Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc. helped bring "hillbilly music" back into the country fold, and he made his Bakersfield hero, the recently deceased Buck Owens, sexy again (or perhaps for the first time). Yoakam also is a memorable presence on the big screen, menacing Jodie Foster in "Panic Room" and pal Billy Bob Thornton in "Sling Blade." His sense of humor is evident on a cover version of Queen's neo-rockabilly "Crazy Little Thing Called Love," and here on "Intentional Heartache" (from his first album away from guitarist-producer Pete Anderson), an otherwise straightforward country lament that concludes with a rant in which Yoakam reprises his "Sling Blade" character.
Song : “Intentional Heartache”
 
Ben Harper
The pride of the Inland Empire, Ben Harper has brought a restless curiosity to his music for over a decade. Declaring that "I am a classical musician trapped in a slide-guitar player,” Harper bounces between folk and blues, R&B and pop, jam-band and world-beat grooves. In concerts, he'll put aside the guitar and play for a bit on any instrument that's handy. In fact, Harper is so ambitious that his latest release is a double album, Both Sides of the Gun, which finds him midway between rock and a softer place. "I believe in a better way," Harper sings on "Better Way," whose subtle rhythms and melodies betray influences of American blues guitar, African percussion and the hypnotic string sounds of the Middle East.
Song : “ Better Way”
 
Los Lobos
Los Lobos have never been "Just Another Band From East L.A." After re-introducing traditional Mexican music and instruments with their album Del este de Los Angeles and, singing the title song of the 1987 movie "La Bamba," reviving the Latin rock legacy of the short-lived Ritchie Valens, Los Lobos championed both immigrant concerns ("Will the Wolf Survive?") and a world of musical influences, notably on their 1992 album Kiko. Diverse even by those standards, the album The Ride finds Los Lobos collaborating with Elvis Costello and Richard Thompson, Bobby Womack and Mavis Staples, Ruben Blades and Mexican art-rock masters Café Tacuba. "Hurry Tomorrow" has lyrics by Robert Hunter, noted for his work with one of the most California-identified groups, the Grateful Dead.
Song : “Hurry Tomorrow”
 
Warren Zevon
Warren Zevon made his name with such acid-tinged, black-humored songs as "Lawyers, Guns and Money" and "Poor, Poor Pitiful Me" (covered by Linda Ronstadt), but it was fitting that he went out with the moving "Keep Me in Your Heart." Zevon, who died of lung cancer on September 7, 2003, was nominated for a Song of the Year award for "Keep Me," one of five posthumous Grammy nods for his final album, The Wind, overseen by Zevon's son Jordan. Zevon, whose 1978 debut (Excitable Boy, which included the hit "Werewolves of London") had appearances by Jackson Browne and the Eagles, was joined on his final album by old friends like Bruce Springsteen, the Eagles' Don Henley, Emmylou Harris and Tom Petty.
Song : “Keep Me In Your Heart”