[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: WILLIAM J. CLINTON (2000, Book I)]
[June 16, 2000]
[Pages 1157-1159]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Interview With Rebecca Rankin of VH1 in New 
York City
June 16, 2000

``VH1 Save The Music''

    Ms. Rankin.  ``VH1 Save The Music,'' you've been involved for a 
while. When did you first hear about the program, and why did it draw 
you?
    The President.  Well, I'm trying to remember whether I first heard 
about it from my wife or whether I 
read something about it. But I actually wrote a letter to John 
Sykes because I was so excited about what they 
were doing. I had been in school music when I was a young person, 
starting at the age of 9. And I had been really, really upset about all 
these schools dropping their music programs when I was Governor. And 
Hillary and I redid the school standards in Arkansas. We tried very hard 
to protect the music programs and the arts programs and the physical 
education programs for the people who weren't in team sports. And so I 
realized that all over the country these schools were under more and 
more financial pressure, and

[[Page 1158]]

they thought that maybe the path of least resistance was just to get rid 
of the music programs. And so here was someone trying to do something 
about it. I was just thrilled, and I wanted to help.

Music in the President's Life

    Ms. Rankin.  Very cool. Growing up--I know, I've watched a lot of 
tapes on you. We did ``Rock and Roll President'' a while back with you.
    The President.  Yes, in 1992. I loved it.
    Ms. Rankin. Exactly. They gave me a copy of that. Music education 
was really important to you, obviously, growing up----
    The President.  Really important.
    Ms. Rankin. ----and music was really important. Looking at where you 
are now, arguably one of the most important people on the planet, what 
did music education do for you, and how has it come to play in your life 
now?
    The President.  Well, first of all, it gave me an outlet for all 
this energy I had. It gave me a constructive way to be creative. It also 
taught me discipline, and it taught me that to create something 
beautiful required hard work and discipline. It taught me how to be--to 
create alone and also how to work with a group, in a band, a jazz band 
or a combo. And it made me happy. I mean, it just made me happy. It's 
such a wonderful--when I was a kid and I'd have a tough time, as long as 
I could play, I could always be okay. I could just be in a private 
place. And it fueled my imagination. And it gave me an appreciation of 
things in life that has stayed with me to the present day.
    I can still go in my music room that Hillary built me upstairs in the White House and play for 15 
or 20 minutes, and all the cares of the world go away.

Congressional Resolution on Music Education

    Ms. Rankin.  Very nice. So you guys have got to remember that when 
you're playing. Mr. Clinton said it.
    Let's talk about, there was a resolution passed in Congress a few 
days ago, unanimous resolution, saying that music education was 
extremely important. Why is it so important that this was passed, and 
what's it going to do in the future?
    The President.  Well, I think it was important that it was passed 
because it shows that the Representatives of the people of both parties 
have now--are acknowledging that it's important and it's a problem 
because there are so many schools that don't offer it anymore. And I 
think it will tend to increase public awareness of this, public support 
for maintaining the music programs.
    The President's Advisory Commission on Music and the Arts did a 
study a couple of years ago, and Hillary was the honorary chair of the committee. They found 
that local pressure, parental involvement, community involvement was the 
single most important factor in either keeping or restoring music 
programs to the schools. And so I think that's why it matters.
    I think also, though, the Congress and the President have a 
responsibility to keep putting as much money out there to the schools to 
pay for their other expenses as possible--the buildings, the teachers, 
to have smaller classes--so the schools will have the money they need 
for the music programs.
    But you know, there's lots and lots of research on this now which 
shows that if a good school music program increases academic 
performance, that a lot of young people learn in different ways and are 
dramatically stimulated by music. So that's another reason we ought to 
be for this. It actually will help the overall learning enterprise.

``VH1 Save The Music''

    Ms. Rankin.  Yes. That's an important point because I think 
everybody thinks of it as just an art, and it stops there----
    The President.  Not true.
    Ms. Rankin. ----and it's culture, and it carries through.
    We've had a lot of artists helping us this week with ``VH1 Save The 
Music'' week and the ``Today Show.'' Mariah Carey was out yesterday; 
A.J. McLean from the Backstreet Boys; the Goo Goo Dolls. Today we have 
Bon Jovi playing at the ``Today Show'' in Rockefeller Center. Are you a 
Bon Jovi fan?
    The President. He's great. I love Bon Jovi. 
I really--I think he's great. I'm a music fan of his. I like his acting. 
He's doing very well in the movies now. And he's a marvelous young man. 
He's been to the White House to visit Hillary and me on several 
occasions. He's really--he's a very nice man. And I'm pleased for his 
success, and I'm grateful that he's helping today.

[[Page 1159]]

    Ms. Rankin.  What does it say to the public to have such important 
sort of star power behind a program like ``VH1 Save The Music?''
    The President.  Well, I hope that it increases the public's 
awareness. I hope it says, hey, this is really important. I mean, these 
people could all be doing something else. And I hope it says to them, if 
all these people who do music for a living think it's important for all 
our kids to have access to music, maybe it is.

New York City Schools

    Ms. Rankin.  All right. These guys--do you go to this school, P.S. 
96?
    Audience members.  Yes.
    Ms. Rankin.  All right, so the program and what's happening with the 
New York City school boards and public education and music and what's 
going on here today--can you talk a little bit about what's being 
presented today and what's going to----
    The President.  Yes. If you look at these students here, VH1 has 
given them these instruments, so they're going to start a music program. 
Now, just a couple of years ago, this school had one of the worst 
performances in New York. And they've gone from having 80 percent of 
their kids not read at grade level to having three-quarters of their 
kids read at or above grade level in only 2 years. So they want this 
school to be one of the best schools in New York.
    They have a school uniform policy, as you see, which is a very 
positive thing, I think. And now they want a music program. And what 
they know is not only will these children learn music and they'll enjoy 
it; it will further increase the academic performance of this school.
    So I think they're all excited about it, and they're all proud of 
their school. Aren't you?
    Audience members.  Yes.
    Ms. Rankin. It's just kind of exciting to have President Clinton 
here, too, right?
    Audience members.  Yes.
    Ms. Rankin. Oh, yes, just a little.
    Audience member.  An honor.

Music in the President's Life

    Ms. Rankin.  An honor. A big honor.
    One last thing. TV moments, music moments on television--what stands 
out in your mind as a huge one growing up, present day?
    The President.  When the Beatles were on Ed Sullivan. When Elvis 
Presley was on Ed Sullivan. I think those two things, when I was very 
young, made a big impression on me.
    Ms. Rankin.  Cool. All right. Thank you very much. I think you have 
to go back downstairs, so--[laughter]. These are things--I can't see 
what's going on, but I think my 5 minutes are up.
    Thank you so much. It was such an honor.
    The President.  Thank you.

 Note:  The interview was videotaped at 8:40 a.m. in Classroom 200 at 
the Joseph C. Lanzetta School (Public School 96) for later broadcast. In 
his remarks, the President referred to John Sykes, president, VH1; and 
musician Jon Bon Jovi.