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Australian PM Morrison’s ukulele jam criticised by band who wrote the song

New Zealand band Dragon called Scott Morrison’s rendition a ‘cynical move’ ahead of upcoming elections

Christian Schmollinger
Tuesday 15 February 2022 04:25 EST
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The prime minister played the 1977 song ‘April Sun in Cuba’
The prime minister played the 1977 song ‘April Sun in Cuba’ (YouTube)

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Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison may have thought strumming a ukulele version of a 1970s pop hit would be a light moment during a TV interview aired on Sunday as he prepares for national elections set to happen before May.

Instead, his 30-second take on the 1977 song “April Sun in Cuba” drew fire from the song’s creators, New Zealand band Dragon, who issued a statement calling his efforts a “cynical move” to use music to “humanise” himself ahead of the polls.

In the interview with the 60 Minutes news programme, Mr Morrison, sitting at the table having a meal with his family and the news presenter, strums through the first lines of the song’s chorus, saying he did not remember all the words, while his wife Jenny and two daughters add some backing vocals and laughter.

Mr Morrison’s use of the four-stringed guitar popular in Hawaii did not help matters as critics of the interview recalled an ill-advised trip to the US state in December 2019 that he had to return early from as bushfires raged across Australia.

“Maybe if his trip to Hawaii had not been cut short, he could have learnt the lyrics to the rest of the chorus,” Dragon said in their statement.

The band posted on Instagram a TikTok video of Mr Morrison playing the ukulele against a backdrop of burning forests with the caption, “Once again, Dragon are famous for all the wrong reasons.”

Australia must hold federal elections before 21 May and Mr Morrison’s Liberal Party is under pressure for their handling of the Omicron wave of the Covid-19 pandemic as cases and deaths soared.

Preliminary reports showed on Sunday the party had suffered an upset in by-elections in the state of New South Wales.

Reuters

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