How much money went to 9/11 charities?

How much money went to 9/11 charities? Even after all those tribute albums, the donations don't always add up

Alicia Keys
Photo: Alicia Keys: Kevin Mazur/WireImage.com

by Gillian Flynn and Josh Young

Six months have passed since Bruce Springsteen, U2, Dave Matthews, the Dixie Chicks, et al. performed amid hundreds of candles in a telethon for the families of Sept. 11 victims. But how much has United Way’s September 11th Fund received from sales of the tie-in CD, ”America: A Tribute to Heroes”? At press time, not a cent. While no one faults the musicians’ intentions, there’s clearly a mixed record when it comes to donations from 9/11 charity albums.

It’s not that the cash hasn’t been pouring in. Since its December release, ”Tribute” has grossed between $7.5 million and $10 million domestically (plus $1.1 million overseas). But like many of the benefit discs, ”Tribute” is donating net proceeds — money left over after manufacturing, marketing, and distribution costs (in this case, marketing alone ran about $1 million).

Producer Jimmy Iovine, chair of Interscope Geffen A&M, promises the eventual bequest will be substantial, but won’t speculate on how much United Way will receive — or when. ”My wife said, ‘Remember one thing, it’s a lot easier to raise money than it is to give it out,”’ says Iovine. ”They’ll get the money quickly. We don’t make a penny.”

Similarly, the single ”We Are Family” has sold 14,900 copies, but a rep for Tommy Boy says the American Red Cross won’t see green until the label recoups expenses, probably later this year. Even then, donations will be difficult to confirm because the disc — like several others — has no formal relationship with its named charity. ”We were deluged with album partnership requests,” says the Red Cross’ Abbie Gibbs. ”We are very protective of our name and logo — but we don’t turn down money.”

And what about Alan Jackson’s ”Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)” — which was never sold as a benefit effort? According to the singer’s camp, Jackson’s album has no official ties to any nonprofit group and he prefers to make his donations privately.

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