Music, talent and hope, unite millions across the world online in support of coronavirus workers

Together At Home event, saw many of the biggest names in music join the UN health agency and Global Citizen movement in supporting the millions of healthcare and other front line workers who are helping stave off the ravages of the coronavirus pandemic. Superstar Lady Gaga, promised and delivered a “love letter to the world”, featuring an extraordinary multi-generational line up of performers, including the Rolling Stones, Stevie Wonder, Billie Eilish, Paul McCartney, Beyoncé, John Legend, Lizzo, Jennifer Hudson, Taylor Swift and dozens of others, that delivered eight hours of music interwoven with testimony from workers across the world, and the communities that are supporting them in the battle against COVID-19.

Amidst the intimate and heart-felt performances recorded by artists mostly sheltering in place in their own homes, the UN chief took the opportunity to reiterate his call for a global ceasefire in bloody conflicts across the world, “to focus on our common enemy — the virus.” He pointedly thanked the viewers, performers, organizers, scientists and sponsors of the global event, for their support of the World Health Organization (WHO) and other humanitarian agencies, which are leading the multilateral effort to reverse the tide of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Speaking earlier in the night, the President of the UN General Assembly, Tijjani Muhammad-Bande, told the millions of viewers online that in the 75 years since the founding the UN, “solidarity has been our first and best line of defence.” Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, told the global audience that by being at home, we were “helping our brave health workers”, and echoing the theme of the UN drive towards the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), she said it was key to “leave no one behind and accelerate in our race to find a vaccine.”

In a world where so many are now living out their lives confined to home, the unprecedented sight of so many of the world’s top singers and entertainers doing the same, made the intimacy and humility on offer in their words and music, all the more powerful, and genuine. The only comparable event, in support of efforts to improve famine relief across the world in the mid-1980s through Live Aid, was a carnival of stadium rock and pop, that would be unthinkable in the coronavirus era.

Rounding off the night, the WHO chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, took the Twitter, describing the final quartet (led off of course, by Lady Gaga herself, and surprise guest Celine Dion), as “a beautiful finale to an important concert: One world, #TogetherAtHome, which brought solidarity, compassion, artistry and yes, humour, to millions of people, over many hours and time zones.”

Source: UN

Author: Saara Teirikko