Earth Shattering
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008Mathematicians have demonstrated that the beat of a butterfly’s wing will alter the timing of a hurricane on the other side of the planet six months later. Songwriters and singers have an advantage in that, under the lens of a melody, the smallest detail can be magnified and reverberate in a listener’s head. The things we think, the things we say and the things we sing make a difference.
As an organisation committed to halting deforestation by creating projects linking music and ecology, one of our goals is to stimulate new music writing that understands, illuminates and transforms our relationship to nature. A growing number of poets are addressing ecological issues - does ecopoetry provide clues for songwriters and lyricists? If you want to explore this idea here are a couple of recent collections:
- The Thunder Mutters: 101 Poems for the Planet, edited by Alice Oswald (Penguin, 2006)
- Earth Shattering, edited by Neil Astley (Bloodaxe, 2007)
Both of these are available from the Ginkgo Music online shop: www.ginkgomusic.com/shop
We agree with what Bloodaxe write on their website: “As the world’s politicians and corporations orchestrate our headlong rush towards eco-Armageddon, poetry may seem like a hopeless gesture. But its power is in the detail, in the force of each individual poem, in every poem’s effect on every reader. And anyone whose resolve is stirred will strengthen the collective call for change.”
Have a read.