‘This is not a gimmick’: Album of endangered birdsong flies up charts in Australia

Soaring past big names like Taylor Swift and Michael Buble, an album featuring 53 of Australia’s most endangered birds has flown to No. 3 in the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) album chart since its release on Dec. 3.

 

“Songs of Disappearance,” featuring, among others, the Indian Ocean Red-tailed Tropicbird and the Eastern Grey Plover, was beaten only by the British superstars Adele and Ed Sheeran.

 

The 54-track album was created to coincide with the release of a book, “The Action Plan for Australian Birds,” by Charles Darwin University (CDU) and BirdLife Australia. 

 

“The album is a way to get people to appreciate that this is what we’re likely to lose unless we do something about it,” the book’s editor, Stephen Garnett, a professor at CDU and an environmental scientist, told NBC news Friday.  

 

“It really touches the hearts of people.” 

 

The album was produced by CDU doctoral candidate Anthony Albrecht, who said the tracks feature some of the most rarely heard sounds in Australian nature. These were recorded by nature enthusiast David Stewart, who would sometimes spend hours waiting for a secondslong soundbite, he added.

The team was hoping it might make it into the top 100 albums, so it had “surpassed everyone’s expectation,” he said.  

 

“It really does demonstrate very strong support for these issues,” he added.  

 

“It shows that this is not a joke, it’s not a gimmick, it’s very serious. The songs of these birds are literally disappearing,” Albrecht said. 

 

The title track, arranged by Simone Slattery, an Australian violinist, uses all 53 species, including the songs of the extremely rare Swift Parrot, Orange-Bellied Parrot, and some vulnerable migratory shorebirds such as the Far-Eastern Curlew and Bar-tailed Godwit.  

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