Arts and Entertainment

Small Island Big Song to perform April 7 at Eisenhower

Ocean-nation musical collective will also participate in free engagement events

From left, Mauritius-based musicians Kokol, Emlyn and Kan perform together and with the Small Island Big Song artist collective. They play instruments they upcycled from debris and found items washed ashore. Credit: Small Island Big SongAll Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK — The activist-musicians of Small Island Big Song will perform at Penn State in a live concert aimed at raising awareness of the environmental plights and heritages of their ocean nations.

The multimedia production will start at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 7, in Eisenhower Auditorium. Visit Center for the Performing Arts online for more information.

Tickets are available online at cpa.psu.edu. Tickets are also available by phone at 814-863-0255 or in person at Eisenhower Auditorium from noon to 4 p.m. weekdays. A grant from the University Park Student Fee Board makes Penn State student prices possible.

This presentation is part of “The Reflection Project,” funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

The live tour is part of a multiplatform project conceived by Taiwanese producer BaoBao Chen and Australian music producer Tim Cole. They spent more than three years chronicling artists in communities at the forefront of the climate crisis. The grassroots musical follows artists in 16 island nations across the Pacific and Indian oceans in a heartfelt plea for environmental awareness and cultural preservation. The artists released the self-titled CD and documentary film “Small Island Big Song: An Oceanic Timeline” in 2019.

In addition to raising awareness of the climate crisis facing water-bound nations, the project explores a migration theory that seeks to establish musical links between cultures and accentuates similarities in regional instruments, voices and rhythm.

The Penn State performance will feature the Small Island Big Song artists Sauljaljui and Putad (Taiwan); Emlyn, Kan and Koko (Mauritius); Selina Leem (Marshall Islands); Sammy (Madagascar); and Airileke and Richard Mogu (Papua New Guinea).

Watch artists of Small Island Big Song perform “Ta’u Tama” featuring Vaiteani and Luc. Credit: Small Island Big Song

Related engagement events

In addition to a free virtual dance workshop that was presented earlier in March and a weeklong Penn State residency, Small Island Big Song artists will participate in a variety of free public engagement events, including:

Upcycled Instrument Jam Session: Penn State students will join Small Island Big Song artists to showcase their upcycled instruments. The free public jam session and environmental discussion will be at 5 p.m. Tuesday, April 5, at 3 Dots Downtown.

Panel discussion: Island-nation artists will lead “Small Island Big Song’s Climate Change: Our Response at Artists.” Richard Alley, Evan Pugh University Professor of Geosciences at Penn State, will moderate the two-hour panel discussion featuring musical artists Selina Leem, Emlyn and Putad. The event is part of IllumiNATION’S month of art and sustainability events. The discussion will start at 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 6, in HUB-Robeson Center’s Freeman Auditorium.

Penn State International Dance Ensemble Endowment provides support.

Safety first

The Center for the Performing Arts has the health and safety of our patrons in mind. Visit Covid Precautions for more information on the center’s safety measures.

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Airileke is a producer and percussion musician in the hip-hop, world music and dub reggae genres. He performs with the Small Island Big Song collective. Credit: Small Island Big SongAll Rights Reserved.

Last Updated March 22, 2022

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