Melbourne Zoo Celebrates Earth Hour with Aussie Acoustic Show

Earth Hour Unplugged is back for another year at Melbourne Zoo. Instead of sitting home in the dark, why not head out to this year’s eco-friendly acoustic concert featuring Tim Rogers and local acts Wagons and Blackchords?

While food and beverages will be on sale on site you’re free to BYO, so load up your picnic basket with gourmet treats and a few bottles of bubbles and prepare to soak up the good vibes. It all happens on March 27, with lights out from 8:30 to 9:30 pm.

Tickets are on sale now through Melbourne Zoo’s website and 1300 ZOOS VIC. Limited tickets will be available at the gate, but I recommend getting them early to avoid missing out. Gates open at 5:30 pm, which will give you a little time to meet the animals before the show starts at 6:30 pm.

Image used with permission from Chrissie Vincent Publicity

Q & A with C.W. Stoneking

With his most recent album called Jungle Blues, local bluesman C.W. Stoneking seems like the perfect headliner for this week’s Earth Hour concert at Melbourne Zoo. But before he joins the big cats and crocodiles, C.W. took a little time out to chat to Oz Music Scene.

You’re playing the Earth Hour concert at Melbourne Zoo this weekend. Why did you want to be a part of it?
To be honest with you I didn’t really know about it until they asked me to do it. In my isolation in the suburbs with my children, making music, I had no idea. I’d never even heard of it before.

How important are events like this in raising awareness of environmental issues?
I think it sounds pretty good. It’s good for people to get together and do something. People’s attention spans might run out I guess, which is why they only make them a day-long event, or an hour-long event in this case maybe. But it’s interesting.

What are some of the things you do in your own life to make the world a little greener?
I don’t know what I do. My garden isn’t very green. Everything I do there makes it more brown.

One of the really cool things about the event is that it’s all acoustic. What do you like about playing in that stripped back mode?
I sort of came up playing acoustic when I got my start. Some of the bands I’ve had, we even used to do shows with no microphones. But I like it pretty good. I like having electricity as well, because it helps you rock out some more. I’ve got a drummer now, so you need to get on top of all that noise that they make. But also acoustic is good as well.

Your sound draws heavily from the music of the 20s and the 30s. What’s so appealing to you about that classic musical era?
There’s a lot of things for me that are appealing about it. They had good style back then. You could see it in everything they did really. It’s in the music as well. You compare a good-looking building back then to something that they come up with now. There’s just bits and pieces that don’t need to be there, you know? I’m talking from a visual standpoint. People overdo things a bit now. They had some good ways to do it, so I try to follow in that vein a bit when I make my music as well.

Was it ever difficult to get a foot in the door because your music was so different to what’s on the radio?
No, not really. I wouldn’t say that because I guess when I was starting out I wasn’t really trying to get ahead of myself in terms of getting some sort of deal that was going to shoot me straight to the top. I was more interested in just developing my sound. And once I’d kind of done that and put out my last record, or the record before last, I guess I’d just spent my time well because people liked the record. And then it was easier for me because I was different I guess. I had a whole stretch of ground all to myself.

You played the Port Fairy Folk Festival this month and you’re doing the East Coast Blues and Roots festival in April. What do you enjoy about those festival shows?
You play to pretty big crowds. Usually a lot of people want to buy your record. But I guess one of the best things for me, as a person who usually never goes out unless I’m on tour, is that I get to see some other music. I guess that would be one of the best things for me. As far as doing shows goes, I generally prefer doing my own shows in an enclosed space. The festival energy is more … there’s a lot of things going on.

It must have been something special growing up in an Aboriginal community in the Northern Territory. How did your upbringing make you the person you are today?
I guess I spent a lot of the time playing, instead of thinking about buying stuff or hanging around the shops. So maybe that was how it helped me. Except now I spend lots of time hanging around the shops. But I still get the chance to play a few when I’m writing songs, things like that.

And finally, do you have a message for your local fans?
I would like to say hello to them, and that I hope they’re enjoying my record. I hope to get a new one to them before too long.

C.W. Stoneking plays Melbourne Zoo for Earth Hour this Saturday, May 28. Tickets are still available from the venue.

Image source: Craig Bender @ Wikimedia Commons

Win Tickets to Melbourne Zoo Earth Hour Acoustic Concert

What are you planning to do this Earth Hour? If board games by candlelight don’t excite you, consider getting down to Melbourne Zoo on March 28. The place will be jumping with entertainment from local blues legend C.W. Stoneking & The Primitive Horn Orchestra, American blues darling Mamie Minch, and Melbourne swamp rockers Dirt River Radio.

In keeping with the eco-friendly ethos this will be an acoustic show with lights out from 8:30 to 9:30. To make it an extra green event, a portion of the proceeds will help to neutralise the concert’s carbon emissions.

This is a BYO concert, so make sure you bring along some cheese and biscuits and bubbles to celebrate! Gates open at 5:30 pm, giving you a little time to see the zoo’s furry residents before the show starts at 7.

I have three double passes to give away to Oz Music Scene readers. To win, just tell me your favourite eco-friendly tip! Make sure you leave your e-mail address with your comment so I can be in touch if you’re a lucky winner. You’ll also need to make sure you can get to Melbourne Zoo on March 28, as travel is the winner’s responsibility. The first three valid entries will each win a double pass. Good luck!

Image used with permission from AmpHead Music

Musicians Go Green

These days it seems everyone wants to be a little greener. Our favourite musicians are no exception, with plenty of the industry’s hottest stars supporting environmentally friendly events. Next Saturday it’s Earth Hour, where folks all around the country will turn their lights out for an hour from 8 pm. The initiative looks to raise awareness of the dangers of greenhouse gas emissions.

Silverchair, Jimmy Barnes, Rolf Harris, Missy Higgins, Kate Ceberano, Natalie Imbruglia, Pete Murray, The Veronicas, Katie Noonan, Ben Lee, Tex Perkins, and Vanessa Amorosi are just some of the stars who will participate in this great event. Earth Hour director Andy Ridley said their involvement is a great help to the cause.

“Celebrities can carry a message to a mass audience,” he explained to PerthNow. Earth Hour’s message is that everyone needs to take responsibility to address climate change. So whether you are Silverchair, an accountant, a father, a politician, or a CEO, Earth Hour is something you can take part in.”

Earth Hour started last year in Sydney, and has spread this year to become a global movement. All you’ve got to do to take part is turn off your lights for one hour from 8 pm on March 29. Too easy!

Then in April we’ve got the Climate Festival travelling down the East Coast. This cool event hopes to raise awareness of climate change and the impact it has on young people.

Tommy Lee (yes that Tommy Lee) and DJ Aero will headline with their surprising blend of percussion and electronica. Then we’ve got some of the best party bands from Australia and the rest of the world, like Junkie XL, DJ T, Klaas, Supafly, Seany B, Resin Dogs, and The Scientists of Modern Music.

100% of the profits will benefit The Wilderness Society, and $3 from every ticket sold will make sure the events are completely carbon neutral. But that’s not all. Vendors will sell organic food and merchandise, stalls will help educate folks about the environment, and there’ll also be plenty of recycling bins on hand.

The Climate Festival will visit Birrarung Marr in Melbourne on 5 April, the Big Top at Sydney’s Luna Park on 6 April, and Brisbane’s River Stage on April 12. Tickets are available now for $75 plus booking fees from Moshtix (Sydney and Melbourne) and Ticketmaster (Brisbane).

Image source: Jan Kopriva @ Unsplash