Live Earth concert, Washington, D.C.

The Live Earth concert in Washington, D.C., officially known as "Mother Earth",[1][2] was held on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., United States and was sponsored by and held on the premises/venue of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian.

Live Earth
GenrePop and rock music
DatesJuly 7, 2007
Location(s)National Mall, Washington, D.C., United States
Years active2007
Founded byAl Gore, Kevin Wall
WebsiteLive Earth US Site

It was only hours before the Washington D.C. concert was scheduled to begin that organizers were able to secure a venue for the last-minute addition to the schedule. The Washington Post reported the U.S. capital had been Gore's first choice for the main concert, but the National Mall was booked. The main concert was moved to New Jersey, but Gore made a surprise announcement during a July 6 media interview that a concert would take place on the plaza of the Museum of the American Indian. "Some who don't understand what is now at stake tried to stop this event on the Mall, but here we are. [crowd is cheering] And it wasn't the cavalry who came to our rescue, it was the American Indians," Gore said during brief opening remarks carried live on the website . Only the first 200 attendees were able to directly view the event at the Museum. Others watched Gore speak and Brooks play from what event organizers called a "JumboTron" outside the immediate viewing area. Due to last minute organizing, there were no working audio speakers that could project sound to the JumboTron viewers.

Running Order

  • Tim Johnson (introduction) (WSH 16:00)
  • Henrietta Mann and Katsi Cook (presenters) (WSH 16:05)
  • Blues Nation - "What", "Can" (WSH 16:10)
  • Garth Brooks (WSH 16:55)
  • Iyanka Cooray ft Hasula Prematilaka (WSH 17:40)
  • Kim Richey (WSH 18:15)
  • Native Roots - "Wine", "The World", "Rain Us Love", "Native Indian People Have Survived", "I Wanna Know", "Song", "The Place I Call Home" (WSH 19:00)
  • Yarina - Presentation, "Going Back to our Homeland", "Festival of the Sun" (WSH 19:45)
  • Trisha Yearwood (WSH 20:30)
Presenter
gollark: <@157607369331834880> It's probably not a *Bitcoin* miner, since mining for Bitcoin can only be done competitively on ASICs at this point.
gollark: It's clearly a tesselation of hexagons and heptagons in the hyperbolic plane.
gollark: Pi is 10.In base pi.
gollark: I memorized 13-ish digits a few years ago because of boredom, and it's never been any use at all.
gollark: I mean, 3.11 is right to two significant figures, and do you really need more?

References

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