The world needs a soundtrack for the climate crisis

THE GREAT social movements of history all had soundtracks. The civil rights movement had jazz, the blues, and Nina Simone; its anthem was 鈥淲e Shall Overcome,鈥 originally a 19th-century hymn. The story of gay liberation is intertwined with disco culture, and some of the greatest pop songs have been written or adopted as LGBTQ+ anthems, from Gloria Gaynor鈥檚 鈥淚 Will Survive鈥 to 鈥淏orn This Way鈥 by Lady Gaga. Music brought people together and helped move the dial on public acceptance by introducing ideas to the mainstream.
Now, the planet itself needs a new social movement. Widespread behavioral changes are needed to reduce carbon emissions, along with public support for net-zero policies. We need to create a culture of environmentalism, which values nature, if we鈥檙e to defeat the climate crisis and biodiversity collapse. So, many people 鈥 including , the champion of ambient music 鈥 are asking: Where are our climate anthems?
Musicians may struggle to play the same role in the fight for climate action as they鈥檝e done for other societal changes, given the industry鈥檚 carbon footprint and the private planes favored by its superstars.
There鈥檚 a temptation to dismiss art and culture鈥檚 role in climate communication. Isn鈥檛 this a science issue? Shouldn鈥檛 musicians just shut up and sing? Scientists and their research have been, and will always be, crucial in raising the alarm on fossil fuels and humanity鈥檚 damage to the planet. Rapid weather-attribution studies help make climate change visible and present; the development of low-carbon technologies are helping slash emissions.
But who鈥檚 more influential to the masses: an atmospheric physicist, or a pop star? Musicians are able to reach far more people 鈥 and an entirely different demographic 鈥 than scientists or politicians. Nobody needs to hear what musicians think of, say, electricity market reform, but they can be advocates for sustainable lifestyle changes (perhaps 鈥淭hrift Shop鈥 by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis ought to be considered a green tune), raise awareness and compel us to reflect on environmental issues.
Plus, debating whether musicians should use their platforms to talk about the climate crisis ignores how art works. Artists make music about Black rights and queer liberation because these issues affect them, or the people around them, personally. Nina Simone鈥檚 鈥淢ississippi Goddam鈥 came from a place of real rage, as did 鈥淪trange Fruit,鈥 sung by Billie Holiday. In 1985, a supergroup including Bob Dylan, Keith Richards, and Pat Benatar recorded Steve Van Zandt鈥檚 鈥淪un City鈥 under the collective name Artists United Against Apartheid to protest the South African government鈥檚 policies. Australian band with 1987鈥檚 鈥淏eds are Burning鈥 after witnessing the land-rights abuses suffered by Aboriginal communities.
People adopt songs as anthems because the music speaks to themes they can relate to. The same will happen with climate change: as more of us start to feel the impacts of unabated fossil fuel burning, the more open we鈥檒l become to art exploring climate themes. It鈥檚 no surprise that one of the recent topical tunes, 鈥淎ll the Good Girls Go to Hell,鈥 references the wildfires that ripped through her home state of California.
Those who doubt whether artists can rouse actual political change ought to be introduced to Taylor Swift. With one Instagram post, today鈥檚 most powerful cultural figure to vote through Vote.org, a nonpartisan nonprofit organization, on a single September day. The number of 18-year-olds registered to vote doubled over the previous year.
But here鈥檚 where it gets challenging. Music insiders tell me that artists don鈥檛 feel like they can speak up about climate change like they can on other issues, for fear of being accused of hypocrisy.
It鈥檚 unlikely that Swift, for instance, will speak out on the environment given there鈥檚 . When I wrote about Swift鈥檚 , I received plenty of e-mails pointing out the carbon footprint of doing 152 shows on five continents. Imagine the criticism Swift receives.
Some musicians have tried facing the allegations head-on. A group of artists including Eno, Radiohead鈥檚 Thom Yorke, and Mel B (a.k.a. Scary Spice) signed an open letter in 2019 which began:
鈥淒ear journalists who have called us hypocrites, you鈥檙e right. We live high carbon lives and the industries that we are part of have huge carbon footprints. Like you 鈥 and everyone else 鈥 we are stuck in this fossil-fuel economy and without systemic change, our lifestyles will keep on causing climate and ecological harm.鈥
Others are challenging themselves to make the industry greener. to do the logistics of the band鈥檚 current world tour while cutting CO2 emissions by at least 50% compared with their 2016-17 run. That means using biofuels, electric vehicles, and powering the show with rechargeable batteries. It鈥檚 an impressive effort, but one which only a group as successful as Coldplay could undertake at the moment.
So where are our anthems? I鈥檝e created, with help from my Opinion colleagues, a playlist of contenders, but none of them fit the bill. Anthems have meme-able lyrics 鈥 memorable, easy to chant, and catchy 鈥 and they鈥檙e imbued with hope. Too many songs about global warming are currently laced with anxiety. If art reflects how we see the world, what does that say about the state of climate action?
BLOOMBERG OPINION


