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Live Earth Breaks Online Streaming Records

Live EarthPC World reports that 8 million people watch the Live Earth concerts on the MSN website located at liveearth.msn.com.
Microsoft Corp. says it set a record for streaming an online event to the most customers after offering the Live Earth concerts on MSN over the weekend.

About 8 million people watched at least parts of the concerts live over the 36 hours that the shows took place in ten locations around the world. At the peak, 237,000 people watched simultaneously, Microsoft said.

That's more than what Microsoft thinks is the previous most-watched online broadcast, the Live 8 concerts in 2005. According to AOL LLC, which streamed those ten concerts, 5 million people around the world watched live.
The Write News puts the number at 10 million. There have also been hundreds of thousands of Live Earth blog posts. The concerts can still be watched on the liveearth.msn.com and there are thousands of videos tagged Live Earth on YouTube.com.

Posted on July 11, 2007
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Spinal Tap at Live Earth

Live Earth Spinal Tap


This photograph above shows Spinal Tap's July 7 Reunion Performance at Live Earth London at Wembley Stadium with "Every Bass Player in the Known Universe." Bass players from numerous band joined Spinal Tap for their song "Big Bottom." Foo Fighters, David Grey, Block Party, James Blunt and the Beastie Boys took part in the epic jamfest. Live Earth was a 24-hour, 7-continent concert series that took place on 7/7/07, bringing together more than 100 music artists and 2 billion people to trigger a global movement to solve the climate crisis. You can watch video from the Live Earth concerts on MSN at http://liveearth.msn.com/.

Here is a YouTube clip from Spinal Tap's Army of Bassists (hat tip Boing Boing.


Direct video link

Posted on July 9, 2007
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Nunatak: Would You Do It All Again

This is the video for the Nunatak's song "would you do it all again." The song was written and recorded by Nunatak at the British Antarctic Survey Rothera Research Station on Adelaide Island Antarctica. Nunatak performed live from Antarctica for the Live Earth concert. You can read more about them here.



Posted on July 7, 2007
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Nunatak: The Coolest Band at Live Earth

You have probably heard about Live Earth the giant worldwide concert taking place on 7-7-07 to raise awareness about the global warming problem. Rolling Stone reports that one of the bands playing is a group of scientists living in Antarctica. The group is called Nunatak.
Of the dozens of bands playing Live Earth this Saturday, one has a seriously close connection to the event's global-warming warning. When organizers looking to stage events on every continent learned they couldn't land commercial flights on Antarctica due to its fierce winter weather, the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) suggested that rather than bring in outsiders, Live Earth hire the research team's house band, Nunatak.

Nunatak is Greenlandic for "an exposed summit of a ridge mountain or peak (not covered with snow) within an ice field or glacier" - it's also the name of the five-piece band that entertains BAS's 22-person scientist team. All the bandmembers work at the BAS's Rothera Research Station "investigating climate change and evolutional biology on the Antarctic Peninsula," which has experienced an almost 3-degree Celsius climate change over the last 50 years. Tomorrow, the band will make their global debut as they perform their "two most popular tunes" outside on the peninsula in a show that will be broadcast via live feed.

Nunatak - Matt Balmer (electronics engineer, singer-songwriter and guitarist), Tris Thorne (communications engineer, fiddler), Ali Massey (marine biologist, saxophonist), Rob Wester (meterologist, drummer) and Roger Stilwell (field general assistant, bassist) - formed when the scientists were training at the BAC's headquarters before heading down to Antarctica, and the members spend time jamming when they're not outdoors researching.
NPR also has a story about Nunatak and below is a video of the band rehearsing.



Posted on July 6, 2007
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