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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Canberra pianist, scientist and philanthropist a rare breed

Youโ€™ve probably heard of science in the pub but how about birds and blues, a monthly piano session with local musician and CSIRO scientist of 18 years, Dr Leo Joseph.

To clarify, this is not science show, but rather a casual, free gig at Smithโ€™s Alternative performed by a man who simply loves birds and music.

If you wander in during a lunchtime, Leo takes you on an American blues journey through his well-worn piano songbook and at the end, holds out a jar to collect donations for the rare golden-shouldered parrot.

Over the course of two hours, his appreciative audience unwittingly gets a lesson in blues history and ornithology.

โ€œYour average attendee at one of my blues piano gigs probably is not a member of Birdlife Australia or not someone who gets newsletters about the golden-shouldered parrot,โ€ Leo says. โ€œPeople get into it, it seems. I hope, or I wonder, if people go home and look up these birds.โ€

Leoโ€™s love of music came first, birds a close second. He jokes that he became interested in birds at age 12 and he โ€œregrets the lost yearsโ€.

His motivation to play free gigs at Smiths came from his desire to play solo (Leo usually plays with his band, Key Grip).  

โ€œI get a taste of what itโ€™s like to play solo, without the safety net of the band,โ€ he says. โ€œI do make mistakes and forget things but I have a friendly audience. Then I decided to do a bit more for the birds and I thought, I donโ€™t want to take money for this, so I suggested that people donate.โ€

Since 2020-21, Leoโ€™s raised a few hundred dollars for the critically-endangered night parrot and, more recently, heโ€™s taking donations for the Artemis Nature Fund (which protects the golden-shouldered parrot) and so far has raised $1000.

โ€œArtemis Nature Fund gets more random donations from Canberra than from anywhere else,โ€ Leo says. โ€œYou can put that down to the well-educated concerns of the populus of Canberra or you can put it down to Leoโ€™s humble little blues piano gig, spreading the word.โ€

Leoโ€™s passion for ornithology never stops. He says most scientists are โ€œalways looking at birds or plants or insects, not just Monday to Friday, nine to fiveโ€.

โ€œMy brain is always tuned to bird calls. Itโ€™s not about my work, itโ€™s about the birds, itโ€™s about the music.โ€

Leo Joseph plays at Smiths Alternative on the third Saturday of every month from 12.30pm.

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