Musicians to come together for World  
 Environment Day virtual festival 
 BY EMILY DAVENPORT 
 Three organizations are teaming up  
 to host a virtual festival in honor of  
 World Environment Day this week. 
 On Friday, June 4, Pathway to Paris, 350. 
 org, and the United Nations Environment  
 Program (UNEP) North America Region  
 will host a livestream concert to celebrate  
 the planet Earth. The theme of the show is  
 the protection of our ecosystems and repairing  
 our relationship with nature as we move  
 forward into a new era of global recovery. 
 World Environment Day is the UN’s fl agship  
 day for the environment, encouraging  
 awareness and action for the protection of  
 the environment. 
 “It is critical that we consider the urgent  
 needs of our planet as we transition  
 back into living our lives and performing  
 concerts again after a year of global quarantining  
 and isolation. We simply cannot  
 go back  to  the way  things were  before.  
 So much has been lost due to Covid, an  
 immeasurable amount, and all the while,  
 the climate crisis did not go away; it has  
 always been there underneath the surface,  
 existing every day amongst all of the other  
 (l to r) Jackson Smith, Tomas Doncker, Jesse Smith and Patti Smith. 
 destruction and suffering,” said Jesse Paris  
 Smith, Co-founder of Pathway  to Paris.  
 “As we rebuild our world, we must make  
 changes  greater  than  ever  before,  and  
 transition into a new era which favors our  
 natural and wild places, and focuses deeply  
 on protection and preservation. Global collaborations  
 like this event provide healing  
 PROVIDED 
 and communication during such a challenging  
 time, and these new connections  
 must continue and lead to great change,  
 new  ideas,  ambitious  action,  and  true  
 global renewal.” 
 The line-up for the festival includes performances  
 from Patti Smith, Jack Johnson,  
 Dave Matthews, Tomás Doncker, Rocky  
 Dawuni,  Ben  Harper,  Michael  Stipe,  
 Yury Revich, Priya Darshini, Rima Fujita,  
 Tenzin  Choegyal,  Patrick  Watson,  and  
 Jackson Smith. Patti Smith will perform  
 an acoustic version of her song “People  
 Have the Power” alongside her children  
 and Doncker, as well as a family version of  
 her song “Grateful.” 
 The festival will also feature music and  
 words from Pathway to Paris founders Jesse  
 Paris Smith and Rebecca Foon as well as  
 presentations from world-renowned thinkers  
 and activists, including 350.org founder  
 Bill McKibben, Pennie Opal Plant,  and  
 United Nations Secretary-General Antonio  
 Guterres. 
 “It is our time more than ever to come  
 together to build the future we want to step  
 into, creating a world that deeply values  
 and honors nature and all sentient beings,”  
 said Foon. “We can create a sustainable  
 world, but it takes us all.” 
 “It’s important for us to work together  
 to continuously draw attention to the needs  
 of our suffering planet,” said Patti Smith. 
 “I’m so honored and grateful to be included  
 in this important event in support  
 of our Mother Earth!” said Doncker. 
 The show will be livestreamed at 3 p.m.  
 EST  on  the  Pathway  to  Paris  Facebook  
 page, as well as the Facebook pages for  
 350.org, UNEP, and the UN Environment  
 Programme North America. 
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 16     June 3, 2021 Schneps Media 
 
				
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