Don't just read about climate change--hear it!
Join The ClimateMusic Project on June 9th for the premiere of a new science-guided chamber work by celebrated composer Richard Festinger, performed by the award-winning Telegraph Quartet.
This new work, Icarus in Flight, tracks three human drivers of climate change—
land-use change, population growth, and fossil fuel use— across 200 years
(1850-2050) to viscerally communicate the urgency of the issue.
The evening will include an introduction by Dr. William Collins, Director of the
Climate and Ecological Sciences Division at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, an
opportunity for engagement with our scientists, artists, and solutions partners, and a closing reception.
The ClimateMusic Project is a non-profit, non-partisan science/arts/technology
collaborative. We educate, inspire, and enable diverse audiences to engage
actively on climate change through the creation and performance of science-guided
music and visual experiences that viscerally convey the urgency of the
issue. Through the power of music, we make climate science personal and drive positive action. What do you want the future to sound like?
Please visit climatemusic.org
Don't just read about climate change--hear it!
Join The ClimateMusic Project on June 9th for the premiere of a new science-guided chamber work by celebrated composer Richard Festinger, performed by the award-winning Telegraph Quartet.
This new work, Icarus in Flight, tracks three human drivers of climate change—
land-use change, population growth, and fossil fuel use— across 200 years
(1850-2050) to viscerally communicate the urgency of the issue.
The evening will include an introduction by Dr. William Collins, Director of the
Climate and Ecological Sciences Division at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, an
opportunity for engagement with our scientists, artists, and solutions partners, and a closing reception.
The ClimateMusic Project is a non-profit, non-partisan science/arts/technology
collaborative. We educate, inspire, and enable diverse audiences to engage
actively on climate change through the creation and performance of science-guided
music and visual experiences that viscerally convey the urgency of the
issue. Through the power of music, we make climate science personal and drive positive action. What do you want the future to sound like?
Please visit climatemusic.org
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