If Antarctica had a theme song, I imagine it’d be a lyricless, transcendent tune. It’d be both irresistible and eerie. I imagine it’d sound a lot like this.
Radiohead singer and songwriter Thom Yorke is the mastermind behind “Hands Off the Antarctic”, which dropped earlier this week. The 50-year-old partnered with Greenpeace on the music video, which features stunning footage of the icy realm.
I’ve never been to the Antarctic, but the soundscape paired with the black and white imagery transports you to a harsh, alien world. At the same time, it’s a world that supports countless wild creatures, from elephant seals to whales to gentoo penguins.
The animals that live above and below Antarctica’s ice are why Greenpeace partnered with Yorke on this project in the first place.
The international environmental organisation has been campaigning since January to create the largest protected area on Earth. It hopes to convert a 1.8 million km2 portion of the Weddell Sea on the northeastern side of the continent into the Antarctic Ocean Sanctuary. This would end fishing and keep other extractive industries out of these waters.
The European Union already put forth a proposal to the Antarctic Ocean Commission to push this sanctuary along during the commission’s meeting later this month, from October 22 to November 2.
“It’s an area that needs to be protected,” said Chris Till with Greenpeace’s Protect the Antarctic Campaign, to us.
“These kinds of sanctuaries are absolutely vital to safeguarding the health of our wider oceans. They provide an amazing safe haven for wildlife to recover and that has benefits that affect the whole ocean.”
So Greenpeace is turning to musicians, artists, scientists, actors, and a load of other ambassadors around the world to spread the campaign’s message. The organisation has already worked with celebrities such as Oscar-winning actor Javier Bardem (Loving Pablo) and actress Alison Sudol of the Harry Potter Fantastic Beasts franchise.
“It’s important to use every avenue we can to get this message out,” Till said. “Therefore, we’re using every avenue.”
The collaboration with Yorke began a few months ago, Till told us. The organisation debuted it Tuesday night in London, where they projected the footage onto the city’s iconic Marble Arch.
The goal is to convince the Antarctic Ocean Commission, an international body made up of 24 states and the European Union that is responsible for this region, to formalise protections for these waters.
The commission agreed in 2016 to protect part of the Ross Sea. If the commission did it once, the hope is it’ll do it again.
Perhaps Yorke’s creation will help people connect to this far-off piece of our planet. Till, who’s seen the region up close, believes the song will.
“He’s really captured the kind of wild sense of the place in his music,” Till said.
Though the ecosystem isn’t yet crumbling, proponents of the sanctuary want to protect it before things get bad. They want to keep it wild. If they won’t do so for the sake of the environment, perhaps they will for Yorke.