On This Day

On This Day in 1990, Australian Rock Band Midnight Oil Staged a Protest Concert Following the Exxon Oil Spill

On May 30, 1990, Australian rock band Midnight Oil staged a protest concert directly in front of the Exxon building in New York City. The guerrilla set was launched as a direct response to the Exxon Valdez oil spill that occurred the previous year and destroyed much of Prince William Sound in Alaska.

That particular oil spill was a huge deal in the early 1990s. Especially because the company itself didnโ€™t accept responsibility for the disaster. For those who are unfamiliar, the oil spill took place when one of Exxonโ€™s oil tankers crashed into a reef. It leaked what we now believe is about 11 million gallons of crude oil directly into the ocean, as well as the Alaskan coastline.

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โ€œWe can’t treat the world like a garbage dump, and there’s more to life than profit and loss,โ€ Peter Garrett, the bandโ€™s frontman, famously said of the incident.

Midnight Oilโ€™s Exxon Concert Went Down in History

The band was angered by the blatant destruction of Alaskaโ€™s coastline and the surrounding ocean waters. So, the โ€œBeds Are Burningโ€ hitmakers decided to show up at Exxonโ€™s building on this day in 1990. They showed up with music equipment and a large banner that read โ€œMidnight Oil Makes You Dance, Exxon Oil Makes Us Sick.โ€ The band pulled up on the back of a truck and shredded through an eight-song set. Passersby, as well as Exxon employees, got to experience the madness around lunchtime.

The band performed songs like โ€œRiver Runs Redโ€ and a cover of โ€œInstant Karmaโ€ by John Lennon. The whole debacle would make international news.

According to the bandโ€™s keyboardist Jim Moginie in a print interview with Blurt Magazine, the day was โ€œcompletely chaotic.โ€ It wasn’t meant to be, considering the band planned the whole thing as precisely as possible. Allegedly, the police wanted to shut the whole thing down due to backed-up traffic. However, the bandโ€™s label (Sony) negotiated with the New York City mayorโ€™s office and the NYPD to keep the space open for the band.

โ€œWe played ‘Instant Karma’ for the first time, which summed up matters pretty well about the oil spill,โ€ Mogine continued. โ€œIt felt good to make the point that needed to be made about Exxon. It was only afterwards [that] I realized the event was front-page news all around the world. Iโ€™m so glad it was filmed and recorded. Everybody heard about it in the mainstream media world. So in that sense it put us in front of more people.โ€

Photo by Gie Knaeps/Getty Images

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