Julian Lennon.Photo: Marilyn Clark

julian lennon; think earth

ForJulian Lennon, saving the environment has always been a top priority.

It’s why he foundedThe White Feather Foundationin 2007, and why he wrote the seminal 1991 hit “Saltwater,” about the emotions stirred when faced with the growing number of climate issues plaguing the Earth.

It’s also why Lennon, 60, has teamed up withFuture Youth Records' Think Earth campaign on a new EP calledThinkEarth 23in celebration of Earth Day 2023.

“I always try to do something special on Earth Day one way or another,” he says. “I tend to go with my gut on these things. And this was one of those project ideas that I thought, ‘Okay, well I kind of like this.’ Especially considering it was about a lot of the kids and their involvement in not only environmental and humanitarian issues, but the arts too, and music.”

The release is meant to raise funds for White Feather Foundation and its Save the Sea Country campaign for the Aboriginal Mirning people to help preserve critical biodiversity and their sacred culture.

“There are a lot of problems in the world, and there’s a lot of people who are not doing anything about it in well-known positions. And I think [there are] those like myself who are empathetic and care about this world and the people in it,” he says. “We’re truly idiots. We’re absolute idiots for not caring, for not understanding that we’re killing ourselves. And the sad thing is a lot of wealthy people know that and just want to live their life to the nth degree, destroying everything in the process. So, it’s just horrifying to see.”

For Lennon, heading into the studio brought a welcome surprise in Keltner, a long time session drummer who famously worked with the singer’s dad John Lennon and his former bandmates George Harrison and Ringo Starr on their solo albums.

Courtesy of Future Youth Records

julian lennon; think earth

“I had met him with mymom Cynthiaon a number of occasions that Mum brought me over to America to rekindle and reconnect with Dad,” he says. “So, we spent quite a lot of time with Jim Keltner and his family, and I haven’t seen him since I was a kid. But he looked just the same.”

The day after the project wrapped, the “Valotte” singer even serendipitously wound up sitting at a table next to Keltner and his wife Cynthia while out to dinner.

“Because of that connection, they sent me a picture that I’d never seen,” he says. “My mom Cynthia and his wife Cynthia when I was about 10 years old. We’ve reunited. That was so special.”

Courtesy of The Mirning People

julian lennon; think earth

He adds: “I encourage and applaud their strengths and their forward motion in all of this because they also won’t back down because they know this is going to affect them. It is affecting them, will affect them and their life and their children, too. They’re moving swiftly forward and knocking down as many walls as they can, and I’m right behind them in that.”

source: people.com