{"id":2956143,"date":"2024-06-21T02:00:00","date_gmt":"2024-06-21T06:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/platoesg.com\/sing-a-song-of-urban-nature\/"},"modified":"2024-06-21T02:00:00","modified_gmt":"2024-06-21T06:00:00","slug":"sing-a-song-of-urban-nature","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/platoesg.com\/sing-a-song-of-urban-nature\/","title":{"rendered":"Sing a song of urban nature","gt_translate_keys":[{"key":"rendered","format":"text"}]},"content":{"rendered":"
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\u201cReceiving the lyrics when the children were asleep and turning to play the piano to find the tunes and see spontaneous, crazy, joyful ideas become something, take on their own life. It might seem peculiar for us to be singing about London, but the stories about connection to nature in the towns and cities are universal and human. Even though these are very specific, they tell stories that can touch everyone,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n

Green London sings<\/strong><\/p>\n

Music can tackle complex issues in attractive and accessible ways. Crystal Palace<\/a> is a lament on the long and complex legacies of empire. It was inspired by the park where the former Crystal Palace, originally built for Great Exhibition of 1851 to celebrate the British Empire, was moved in 1854, before burning down in 1936. Ever since there have been debates about what to put in its place, just as we\u2019re challenged to replace lifestyles of western over-consumption. <\/p>\n

One Tree Hill<\/a> on the other hand, is about a journey from living for short term financial gain to embracing the greater importance of nature. Named after a small park in a place called Honor Oak in South London, it is the place where the campaign to make London the world\u2019s first \u2018National Park City\u2019<\/a> was launched, an initiative to get people to see cities differently as places for nature, and where nature is respected as much as it would be in a traditional national park. From the top of One Tree Hill there is a clear view across the River Thames of London\u2019s financial centre, the City, which finances so much ecological destruction for short term gains. <\/p>\n

Completely different again, Battersea Park<\/a> is a song of joy, a reminder of intensely personal moments in special places that root in the soil of the soul. The London park on the river Thames, near the famous power station, icon of former fossil fuel dependence reinvented as a shopping temple of overconsumption, is a place where people come to walk, run, play sport, do yoga, and go boating. It is also where, next to a beautiful Pagoda by the river\u2019s edge shaded by great London plane trees, my daughter Scarlett had her naming ceremony.<\/p>\n

Life out there<\/strong><\/p>\n

Parliament Hill<\/a> recalls the total eclipse of the Sun in August 1999 that I viewed from the hill overlooking London. It was a moment of discontinuity that suddenly, shockingly, reminded you of your connection to the immensity beyond our small, fragile planet, with its vanishingly rare and precious conditions that allow life to flourish. For me it held a mirror to the human obsession with wondering about life in outer space while wilfully destroying it under our feet, and was a reminder that \u2018we are the life that\u2019s out there\u2019. <\/p>\n

Finally in this this first volume, Rise Up<\/a> is a short cry of the heart was inspired by a run through Stockholm\u2019s nature reserve on the edge of Bagarmossen where Anna lives. Running over the uneven trails forced intimate attention on the nature around you and the presence of water everywhere is an inescapable reminder of the vulnerability of cities to rising water, leading easily to the idea that we too must rise up for change. Unglamorous but essential urban green spaces like London\u2019s Mitcham Common will be celebrated in a follow up EP. <\/p>\n

Nature cures<\/strong><\/p>\n

But today we are living through a mass extinction event, the result of a neglectful, destructive relationship between humanity and the rest of nature. And in harming nature we harm ourselves. We have the chance to become re-enchanted though, if we connect, respect and enjoy nature in the towns and cities where most people live. Nature doesn\u2019t need to be loved in a functional, self-interested way, but knowing that access to green space<\/a> reduces anxiety, boosts the immune system and improves mental health clearly adds to the case for restoring nature. Unequal access to green space<\/a> due to race and income makes this a case of racial and class justice too.<\/p>\n

One way to show what we value and are prepared to fight for is to write and sing songs in their honour. Our Urban Nature is one small example of how, with friends and colleagues in the climate movement, we have tried to celebrate our love and inseparable connection to nature. It continues the great tradition of singing for joy and to gather our spirits as we march towards our challenges. Nature sings to us with the dawn chorus to welcome every day, let\u2019s sing back just as often as we fight to restore it. <\/p>\n

\u2018Our Urban Nature\u2019<\/a> is available on most digital platforms. Music written and performed by Tree Oh! (Anna Jonsson, Sara Nilsson and Nina Wohlert), concept and lyrics by Andrew Simms. <\/p>\n

Andrew Simms is co-director of the New Weather Institute<\/a> and assistant director of Scientists for Global Responsibility<\/a>, co-founder of the Badvertising campaign<\/a>, coordinator of the Rapid Transition Alliance<\/a>, an author on new and green economics, and co-author of the original Green New Deal. Follow on X<\/em> @AndrewSimms_uk<\/a> or Mastodon @andrewsimms@indieweb.social<\/a>.<\/p>\n