This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series eco music

As I’ve mentioned previously, I follow Al Gore on twitter (this is the web service where people can send short text-length messages across the web to anyone who wishes to subscribe). Their short messages (tweets) come into my gmail, so I was working away late last week when I noticed a message come in from Al. Al doesn’t tweet that regularly at all, so when he does its usually about something important. He was briefly thanking all those who helped get the first US climate bill through Congress end of last week!! I followed his link to find that he and many others had won a tightly contested battle. It is by no means a perfect piece of proposed legislation; a lot of concessions were made, evident as the document runs to 1200 pages and it still has to get through the Senate. However, its the first time that any legislation on this topic has ever made it this far and is been claimed as a historic turning point in the US.

So that was positive, I was thinking and good timing for the lead up to the UN climate change summit in Copenhagen this Dec when the world will be watching and hoping that all goverments will come together to formulate a new global policy to replace Kyoto. So many people are working tirelessly in this area in response to the almost total consensus (>99%) of peer reviewed scientists that human activities  are responsible for the planet’s rapid global warming,  although its still an issue much misunderstood in the popular media.

Also late last week,I started hearing reports that Michael Jackson had died. The global phenonemon that was Michael Jackson, his music and electric dance performances that touched so many of us over the decades, the tragic latter years of a man surrounded by disturbing controversy, meant he was always was part of our global consciousness. Yet with the media circus that surrounds this artist’s death I was reminded of his music and I looked and listened again. I looked for his ‘earthsong’ video on youtube – it was his biggest ever hit in the UK from his album, History, part 1, released in 1995, beating both U2 and a Beatle re-release to the No. 1 Xmas song of that year (strange or is it, it was largely ignored in the US?). I dimly remembered seeing the visuals of the video at the time. Described as a blues/ gospel work, operatic in scale and cost, it was so ambitious then and now staggering to see it now in the context of growing awareness of climate chaos.  Have a look at the video and then Jackson performing it live below.  Even though it seems over the top, it seems so ahead of its time now.

I’m always thinking how hard it is as an artist to make works about issues that can connect without preaching – I think Michael came a long way in acheiving it in earthsong. I was also looking recently at the new Oxfam Blue in the Face video campaign for the Copenhagen climate summit in December. It’s great they are organising such a campaign but I couldn’t help comparing how like a mobile-phone advert it was compared to the emotion displayed in  Jackson’s ‘Earthsong’(and isn’t it’s good to also see Jarvis Cocker come around to campaigning on this issue; remember he famously interrupted Earthsong when Jackson performed it live in the UK)

Earthsong 2005

Earthsong live in Munich 1996: The HIStory World Tour began on September 7, 1996, and finished on October 15, 1997. Jackson performed 82 concerts in 58 cities to over 4.5 million fans.

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ps

Was just about to post the above when I was saw a short piece in last weekend’s Sunday Times. I was startled to see that Jackson had revealed in the last few weeks before his death, admist a busy schedule of rehearsals for a comeback UK tour (which his brother tragically has since revealed he wasn’t well enough to do), that he was writing and composing new songs. He had excitedly rang  his long time friend Deepak Chopra, bestselling author of numerous spiritual books, that he was writing material as good a ‘Billy Jean’ and sent him this new demo tracks, under a lot security! So poignantly, his new songs were again addressing climate change… Deepak quotes some of the lines that Michael wrote…

‘the trees are our lungs,
the rivers our circulation,
the earth is our body’.

He also wished to work with Chopra on a new green hymn for the world.

The reclusive, chronically ill and tragic figure that was Michael Jackson in recent years was often referred to as ‘whacko Jacko’ in the popular media, who called him weird. Apparently Jackson often said to Deepak, Why do they call me weird?’ Isn’t the world weird where we have climate chaos, global warming, extinction of species, war, terrosim, where there is genocide in places like Sudan, isn’t that weird?’

I wonder what will become of of his new ‘earthsong’ track that he sent to Deepak. There was no-one quite like Michael to connect with so much of our youth, and the youthful part in all of us. As I’ve been reading recently in Global Warming for Dummies, our youth can ‘add a real sense of urgency to climate talks by stressing that the future -climate change, which may seem abstract to policymakers, industry and the public – is very real for them…Youth bring to the table optimism and high energy… and a sense of moral obligation in their elders…and they see climate change with a sense of simplicity…without employing numbing jargon or invoking complex political issues’

… Deepak, the world probably needs Michael’s new ‘earthsong’ for this December!

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This entry is part 2 of 4 in the series eco music

Please, pour yourself a cup of tea and join us . . .
We are out in the streets promoting peace, justice, social and economic equality through song and humour

Just a little something for International Women’s day later this week (8 March), a bit of music from the Canada-led 15 year plus phenomenon, the now International Raging Grannies and one of their latest songs, Climate Change is Coming to Town

Take a few minutes and listen to the Toronto Raging Grannies Climate Change is Coming to Town (it’s brilliant)>> click here

More about this amazing, elder women’s movement here

PS, Grandad didn’t want to miss out on performing this either ( the harmonica interlude is fab, even my dog Holly starting barking)

PPS please let me know your fav climate/eco songs, ;-)

Song Courtesy  of Toronto Raging  Grannies
 (To the tune of Santa Claus is Coming to Town)

 Oh,  you better reduce your greenhouse gases.
 You better educate the  public masses.
 Climate change is coming to town!

 It knows  that you’ve been stalling.
 While land turns into lakes.
 Our  inaction is appalling.
 So  commit for the earth’s sake.

 Oh, you better invest in wind  and solar.
 Cause Santa needs this to save the polar.
 Climate  change is coming to town!

 Oh, you better create low emission  transport.
 Santa does this with reindeer escorts.
 Climate  change is coming to town!

 Santa knows that you’re not  naughty.
 He sees that you do care.
 So tell our politicians.
 We  don’t need more hot air.

 Oh if we want to keep our ice and  our snow.
 We have to keep commitments to Kyoto.
 Climate change  is coming to town!

 Oh it’ll take work, it won’t be a  breeze.
 But we have to act now to drop those degrees.
 Climate  change is coming . . .
 Climate change is coming . . .
 Climate  change is coming . . .
 to town!

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This entry is part 3 of 4 in the series eco music

A Hard Rains Gonna Fall -’It was a song of desperation. What could we do? Could we control the men who were on the verge of wiping us out. The words came  fast – very fast. It was a song of terror. Line after line, trying to capture the feeling of nothingness.’ Bob Dylan. (Image from the travelling Hard Rain Bob Dylan- Mark Edwards exhibition, London, 2009)

I had a great response to the raging grannies climate change song in my last post. One of my readers sent me in their favourite climate change song and I couldn’t resist sharing it with you.

Hold onto your hats, here’s Tiny Tim’s  ‘The Ice Caps a meltin – oh, ho, ho, ho-ho’

Some of you know my other half is the biggest Bob Dylan fan in the world. So I had little trouble persuading him to see a great outdoor exhibition that centres on Bob Dylan’s song ‘A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall’ recently in London. This world travelling exhibition of photos shows the growing extent of the global environmental crisis. Its  hard to look at but stunning photographs of the many social and ecological consequences across the world are accompanied by the text of the lyrics of Bob Dylan’s song. It’s a unique coming together of some of Bob’s most hard-hitting lyrics and the work of many leading photographers, led by the inspiration of Mark Edwards. These photos were on public display during the lead up to the Copenhagen summit, in London’s Trafalgar Square, on the railings of St Martin’s in the Fields church. (I’m still not sure why Ireland had no exhibitions for this event, but maybe I missed something? However this exhibition has been to Ireland’s Electric Picnic and some other venues a few years ago). BoBob Dylan climate change songb Dylan wrote this song during the intense time of the Cuban Missile Crisis but has stated that this song has a much broader sweep, a wider meaning, one appropriate before, during and after the Cuban Missile Crisis. See more about the inspiring work behind the travelling Hard Rain project here.

I’ll just finish with a little collaboration I did with The Strokes version of the Marvin Gaye’s incredible song  ‘The Ecology’. I never thought I’d be among the thousands who make tribute You tube fan song video’s, but back in January, trying to get over the Copenhagen Blues, I dashed outside and made this little piece in an hour when I should have been working. Hope you like it – maybe turn down the speakers if you are at work ;-)

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This entry is part 4 of 4 in the series eco music

‘The aim of the drawing is to move the discussion of sustainability from a very general and abstract opinion, to more direct prisms of interaction between people. In that, the experiment is in watching the move from problem calling to solutions, creations, or expressions. The main element is the “flower of sustainability”, a visual and textual aid to bring out reflection and ideas on how to live with sustainability.’

Insa Winkler & Oleg Koeford, Germany

‘Since 1987 sustainable development is defined and convened by the United Nations as balancing the fulfillment of human needs with the protection of the natural environment. Thus needs can be met not only in the present, but in the indefinite future. The field of sustainable development has been conceptually broken into four constituent parts: environmental sustainability, economic sustainability, social sustainability and political sustainability. But it is defined as a process or state that maintained a certain level indefinitely’,  writes artist Insa Winkler.

Insa and her partner have created a participative drawing project that can connect individuals and communities to visualise sustainability in peoples’ everyday lives by literally drawing flowers. I found Insa’s work at Copenhagen last December and have just done my own sustainability flower for my own art practice, it can be for anything though. The beauty of this drawing idea is that is can be used to think about one’s own vision of sustainability and equally it can ’seed’ sustainability ideas whole local communities in an afternoon. Just imagine giving this idea, a box of chalks and the free down-loadable flower templates (they come in all sizes, with few to many petalled varieties) to people to decorate their street for a day. There have been a variety of ways this idea has been presented, as pavement drawings, as furniture, as large windmill flowers in urban shopping areas…

The Flower of Sustainabilty by Insa Winkler and Oleg Koeford

I’m not surprised these artists works has travelled to far away places from Kyrgystan to South Korea and not surprisingly it coincided with a Joseph Beuys Living Sculpture project in Venice (Beuys, a leading German artist believed that art had an important role in visioning social change, he had a huge interest in the environment and one of the founding members of the first Green Party).

Goto http://www.flower-of-sustainability.eu/ to learn more and download your flower. I also have one free small booklet on this project free to the first person interested. (I’ve just realised I’ve heard of Insa’s before in the RSA’s Land Art -A cultural ecology handbook (p.113), she’s done a great permaculture/ slow art type project on pigs, acorns and  farming too, see here

Sustainability: a new frontier for the arts and culturesIf you are interested in further reading on Art/Culture and Sustainability do check out this higher education book put together by Sacha Kagan/Volker Kirchberg

‘Sustainability: a new frontier for the arts and cultures (2008) (I got mine from Amazon Germany no problem).  I’m not surprised Insa’s work is on the cover and one of the contributing authors is David Haley, who leads the Social and Environmental Arts Research Centre, A&E: Art & Ecology Research Group, Water & Well-Being and  the MA Art & Environment programme at Manchester University. I had the good fortune to meet David at the first RSA Arts & Ecology Programme/Forestry Commission conference last year in London.

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PS my last post about Wordsworth had a small test video I had done attached but it didn’t show up in the email post that went out. You can see it here if you missed it

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Ecoartnotebook by Cathy Fitzgerald is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.
Based on a work at www.cathyfitzgerald.ie