Arts and Entertainment

'Small Island Big Song' highlights climate challenges in free film April 23-30

Related Earth Day panel on April 22 to feature artist discussion, mini performance

More than 100 artists representing 16 island nations in the Pacific and Indian oceans unite for the musical cinematographic event “Small Island Big Song: An Oceanic Songline” in a free weeklong virtual stream starting at 7:30 p.m. April 23. Credit: Rush PhotographyAll Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — “In our globalized, computerized world, music can bring us awareness of who we are, our history and our values, and our connection to nature. I bring what my grandfather poured into me,” said Rapa Nui-based musician Yoyo Tuki.

More than 100 artists representing 16 island nations in the Pacific and Indian oceans unite for the musical cinematographic event “Small Island Big Song: An Oceanic Songline.”

Watch the event beginning at 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 23. It will be available for streaming until 7:30 p.m. Friday, April 30. Visit the Center for the Performing Arts online for more information.

Contributions from the members of the Center for the Performing Arts and a grant from the University Park Student Fee Board help make the program free of charge.

The program is part of the Center for the Performing Arts' 2020-21 “Up Close and Virtual” season. The presentation also is part of the “The Reflection Project,” funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

“Small Island Big Song” is a multiplatform project founded by Taiwanese producer BaoBao Chen and Australian music producer Tim Cole. They spent more than three years documenting artists in communities at the forefront of the climate crisis.

Watch a trailer for “Small Island Big Song.” Credit: Small Island Big Song

In addition to raising awareness of environmental issues facing island nations, the project explores a migration theory that seeks to establish musical links between cultures and accentuates similarities in regional instruments, voices and rhythm. More than 100 musicians represent waterfront countries facing climate-related challenges, including Madagascar, Borneo, Tahiti, Bali, Guam, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Taiwan.

The live touring production of “Small Island Big Song,” including an artist residency, is scheduled for the center’s spring 2022 season.

Related Earth Day engagement event

The Center for the Performing Arts and Penn State’s Sustainability Institute will partner to host an artist associated with the “Small Island Big Song” project in an Earth Day panel discussion at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 22. The free public event will be available via the Zoom conferencing app and will be followed by an open Q&A and a short performance by an artist.

Visit the Earth Day panel discussion online to register and for more information.

Spoken-word artist Selina Leem, of the Marshall Islands, will discuss ocean conservation, environmental justice, consequences of climate change, and the role the arts can play in creating change.

Geisinger and Northwest provide support for virtual presentations by the Center for the Performing Arts.

Find the Center for the Performing Arts on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.

Singer-songwriter Emlyn, of Mauritius, off the South African coast, is one of the 100 artists featured in “Small Island Big Song: An Oceanic Songline,” a cinematographic and musical journey through the waterfront nations of the Pacific and Indian oceans. Credit: Photo providedAll Rights Reserved.

Last Updated April 21, 2021

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