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Diamond Off the CuffMike D of the Beastie Boys drops science on green tours, politics, and Live Earth06 Jul 2007
The Beastie Boys are (L to R) MCA, Adrock, and Mike D.
Photo: Jennifer Hall
"I'm recording [this interview] so I can send the tapes to Jerry Lewis; he archives all of my interviews," Beastie Boy Mike D deadpanned at the other end of the phone line. "In addition to being an all-around comedian and famous in France, he's very much a stickler for recording interviews."It was a bizarre response to my routine opener about recording interviews, but perhaps not entirely unexpected. I'd read that the hip-hop punk-rockers -- known for hits like "Brass Monkey," "Fight for Your Right (to Party!)," and "Sabotage" -- were sometimes flippant with the press. But as soon as I gathered my wits and began asking him about his personal environmental ethic and raising his kids green, Michael Diamond got serious. Which also shouldn't have surprised me: The Beastie Boys have long been serious about their social activism, donating songs and ticket sales to various charities and organizing major events like the Tibetan Freedom Concert in 1996 and the New Yorkers Against Violence Concert a month after 9/11. Tomorrow, the group -- which includes Diamond (Mike D), Adam Horovitz (Adrock), Adam Yauch (MCA), and Michael Schwartz (Mix Master Mike) -- will play Live Earth London, one of a number of concerts around the world on 7/7/07 to raise awareness about climate change. It was "instant acceptance" when they were asked to participate, Diamond says, putting them on stage with other major artists like Madonna, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Black Eyed Peas, even a reunited Spinal Tap.
We've kind of informed our audiences about the concept of carbon offsets for every event that we're doing and how much energy we [use]. We're going to hopefully have pretty extensive tabling, but we haven't sorted out exactly who we're working with, in terms of groups.
And then we're also trying to get this thing going where you turn in, say, 10 water bottles at the venue and you get an incentive for that -- our own kind of incentive-based recycling program at each venue.
In The Same Vein
Music to Our Ears
Music festivals across the country aim to lessen their footprint We really just try to be aware of things like when we leave the bathroom, let's turn this light off and explain why and the energy it's using. Really I think what I try to explain to them is our responsibility: the care of the land and the environment. As humans, this is our responsibility. It's something we have to take very seriously.
Actually, it's pretty amazing. I think kids now -- I'm hoping -- seem to be brought up with a lot more awareness. Like one of my sons yesterday did a field trip to the Bronx Botanical Gardens. So they were planting plants, and he came back and he was telling me so much about what the plants do and how they help our air. I was really psyched that he actually had this hands-on interaction. It made it all so much more immediate for him.
Those were two things that ... instantly motivated me to become active. So maybe it's a short-term victory, but still I just feel like all these things are being threatened every day. It kind of requires constant vigilance and a constant effort on the part of everybody, really, unfortunately.
Until we one day, hopefully, have a government that actually serves the people and listens to the people's interests as opposed to business's interests, yeah, it's going to require constant vigilance on the part of the people.
The Beastie Boys say it's time to fight climate change.
Photo: Vanya Edwards
I think it falls on me, as a parent, to instill whatever the values say to my kids -- in terms of: Do they want to spend all their money on a pair of 22-inch rims? Or would they rather see some people eat? But that's gonna come from me, not from a song.
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Music to Our Ears. Music festivals across the country aim to lessen their footprint.
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