RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘Copenhagen’

Grateful Dead: Europe Â’72 Tour Box Set

INDIVIDUALLY NUMBERED, LIMITED EDITION COLLECTION

AVAILABLE EXCLUSIVELY AT DEAD.NET AND SHIPS IN SEPTEMBER


sketch of new box set

Grateful Dead slipped the
shores of America and crossed the pond for its first-ever major European tour in April 1972. The legendary 22-
show run spawned Europe ’72, a live triple album that remains one of the band’s best-selling and most
beloved releases. A tour this momentous deserves a boxed set of historic proportions and Dead.net has stamped your passport to relive every note from the European tour
with Europe ’72: The Complete Recordings, an individually numbered, limited edition collection
that includes more than 60 discs with over 70 hours of music featuring every show from what is arguably the
Grateful Dead’s greatest tour. The box set ships in September.

Europe ’72: The Complete Recordings is housed in a replica steamer trunk reminiscent of the ones
prevalently used at the time. The travel
chest contains tour memorabilia, a coffee-table book with never-before-seen photos, and a comprehensive essay
by noted Dead author Blair Jackson. Each performance will also be accompanied by an essay specific to
the show written by top Dead scholars including David Gans, Gary Lambert, Nicholas Meriwether, and
Steve Silberman.

Jeffrey Norman, the primary mixer of the Dead’s archival multi-track material for the past 15 years, is
mixing each
show from the original 16-track recordings.

Due to ship in September, the boxed set is available exclusively from Dead.net, which is taking orders now. The
price of the collection is $450, which works out to the remarkably low price of about $20 for each show, or roughly
the cost of a transatlantic flight from New York City to London in 1972 (price of time machine not included).

The first 3,000 fans to order will have
their copy personalized with a name requested by the purchaser. Once the 3,000 order goal is reached by April 1,
Dead.net will continue to take orders through the summer but will limit production of the collection to a maximum
of 7,200 pieces, all of which will be individually numbered. Orders will no longer be taken at some date (to be
determined) later in the summer.

The tour offers a snapshot of a band at the top of its game, still ascending in the wake of three straight hit albums—
Workingman’s Dead, American Beauty, and the live Grateful Dead (“Skull & Roses”). It had been a
year since
the lineup had gone to its single-drummer configuration, six months since Keith Godchaux had been
broken in as the group’s exceptional pianist, and this marked the first tour to feature Donna Godchaux as
a member of the touring band.

There was a ton of new, unreleased material that came into the repertoire in the fall of ’71 and during the spring of
’72, including “Tennessee Jed,” “Jack Straw,” “Mexicali Blues,” “Comes A Time,” “Ramble On Rose,” “One More
Saturday Night,” “Black-Throated Wind,” “Looks Like Rain” and Pigpen‘s “Chinatown Shuffle,” “The Stranger
(Two
Souls In Communion)” and “Mr. Charlie.” (Sadly, this was Pigpen’s final tour.) All those future classics were
interspersed with songs from the aforementioned “hit” albums—such as “Uncle John’s Band,” “Casey Jones,” “Sugar
Magnolia,” “Bertha,” and “Not Fade Away”—and then were topped off by loads of big jamming numbers—the Europe
’72 tour produced spectacular versions of “Dark Star,” “The Other One,” “Playing in the Band,” “Truckin’,” “China Cat
Sunflower” > “I Know You Rider,” “Good Lovin’,” “Lovelight,” and even the early Pig chestnut “Caution.”

GRATEFUL DEAD EUROPE 1972 TOUR DATES

All shows included in their entirety

April 7 Wembley Empire Pool, Wembley

April 8 Wembley Empire Pool, Wembley

April 11 Newcastle City Hall, Newcastle

April 14 Tivolis Koncertsal, Copenhagen

April 16 Aarhus University, Aarhus

April 17 Tivolis Koncertsal, Copenhagen

April 21 Beat Club, Bremen

April 24 Rheinhalle, Dusseldorf

April 26 Jahrhundert Halle, Frankfurt

April 29 Musikhalle, Hamburg

May 3 Olympia Theatre, Paris

May 4 Olympia Theatre, Paris

May 7 Bickershaw Festival, Wigan

May 10 Concertgebouw, Amsterdam

May 11 Rotterdam Civic Hall, Rotterdam

May 13 Lille Fairgrounds, Lille

May 16 Theatre Hall, Luxembourg

May 18 Kongressaal – Deutsches Museum, Munich

May 23 Strand Lyceum, London

May 24 Strand Lyceum, London

May 25 Strand Lyceum, London

May 26 Strand Lyceum, London


The Twilight Singers: Euro Tour & US In-Stores

EUROPEAN TOUR & TWO US IN-STORES
IN SUPPORT OF NEW ALBUM DYNAMITE
STEPS


The Twilight Singers

The Twilight Singers will
embark on their first European tour in five years beginning March 18 in London at the Electric Ballroom. Tickets for
most shows go on sale on this week. Dates are still being added and more will be announced in the coming
weeks.

The band will celebrate the launch of their forthcoming album Dynamite Steps (Out in the US on
February 15 and worldwide on February 14) by performing two special shows at Amoeba Music in Los Angeles (Feb
15) and the San Francisco Amoeba Music store (Feb 17) the week of release. These will be the first ever in store
performances for the group.

The following week, The Twilight Singers will return to Jimmy Kimmel Live on February 23rd to perform their
latest single “On The Corner” The song is currently available as a free download at the Sub Pop Records website here.

The Twilight Singers 2011 European Tour

3/18/11 London – Electric Ballroom
3/19/11 Glasgow – Arches
3/20/11 Manchester – Moho Live
3/21/11 Brighton – Komedia Theatre

3/23/11 Cologne – Luxor

3/25/11 Oslo – Parkteatret
3/26/11 Stockholm – Debaser

3/27/11 Copenhagen – Vega Jr
3/28/11 Berlin – Festsaal Kreuzberg
3/30/11 Brussels – Ancienne Belgique
3/31/11 Paris – La Fleche D’Or
4/01/11 Amsterdam – Paradiso

4/02/11 Lucerne – Schuur

4/09/11 Vienna – Meet Factory
4/10/11 Warsaw – Stodola
4/12/11 Helsinki – Tavastia

4/14/11 Thessaloniki – Principal Theater
4/15/11 Athens – Gagarin Club

4/16/11 Tel Aviv – Reading3
4/17/11 Tel Aviv – Reading3

The Twilight Singers
Tour Dates

::
The Twilight Singers News
::
The Twilight Singers
Concert
Reviews


Climate-change diplomacy: Back from the brink

The UN climate conference achieved some results, albeit modest ones

WATCHING a man being rolled over by a bulldozer, reflected a negotiator at the Cancun climate conference in the small hours of the morning, is unpleasant. The man in question was Pablo Solon, the head of Bolivia’s delegation to the UN talks. The bulldozer was the other 193 countries’ determination to get a deal, even if only a modest one.

In a rancorous all-night debate in 2009 Bolivia and a handful of others had kept the “Copenhagen accord” put together by heads of government from being fully adopted as part of the UN’s climate negotiations. But at the final session of the 2010 conference, standing alone, Mr Solon was unable to repeat that feat. The principle of consensus on which the conference runs does not give one country the right to veto the will of all the others, ruled Patricia Espinosa, Mexico’s foreign secretary and the conference’s chair. Delegates stood and cheered. The bulldozer rolled. …

Judas Priest: Farewell Tour

ROCK WITH THE PRIEST ONE LAST TIME


Judas Priest

After storming the world for nearly 40 years and taking their very special brand of heavy metal to all four corners of
the planet, Judas Priest,
one of the most influential heavy metal bands of all time, have announced this will be their final world tour.

However, the mighty Priest will be going out strong as they rock the planet starting in 2011 on the massive “Epitaph
Tour” – hitting all the major cities throughout the world they will be playing the songs that helped make the name
Judas Priest synonymous with heavy metal.

The band will be starting their world tour in Europe. Check out the confirmed dates below, and stay tuned as more
dates are announced.

TOUR DATES

9th June Sweden Rock Festival, Sweden
11th June Sauna Festival, Finland
17th June Copenhell Festival, Copenhagen, Denmark
19th June Hellfest, Nantes, France
22nd June Gods of Metal Festival, Milan, Italy
25th June Graspop Festival, Belgium

23rd July HIgh Voltage Festival, London, UK

5th August Wacken Festival, Germany

Judas Priest
Tour Dates

::
Judas Priest News
::
Judas Priest
Concert
Reviews


Danish actor who inspired Belgian cartoonist to create ‘Tintin’ dies

Danish actor Palle Huld, who is apparently the inspiration behind Belgian cartoonist’s creation ‘Tintin’, has died at the age of 98. Huld died on November 26 in a retirement home in Copenhagen. The cause of death has not been mentioned. In 1928, he won a competition organised by Danish newspaper that wanted to send a [...]

Helmet: European Tour

TOUR STARTS NOVEMBER 17 IN THE NETHERLANDS


Helmet

Helmet is heading overseas on November 17 for a month-long European tour encompassing 11 countries
and 26 dates. They’ll be armed with a set list including their classics and material from the new full-length album
Seeing Eye Dog (indie label Work SongTopSpin).

The European dates kick off in the Netherlands and will take Helmet– vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Page
Hamilton
, drummer Kyle Stevenson, guitarist Dan Beeman and bassist Dave
Case
–to some of the largest cites including Copenhagen, Munich, Paris and London before concluding
December 17 in Glasgow, Scotland. The band is also planning another U.S. run for March 2011. The dates for that
trek will be
announced soon.

EUROPEAN TOUR DATES:

Wed 11/17 Arnhem, Netherlands Luxor
Thu 11/18 Den Bosch, Netherlands W2

Fri 11/19 Bielefeld, Germany Forum
Sat 11/20 Hamburg, Germany Knust
Mon 11/22 Aarhus, Denmark Voxhall
Tue 11/23 Copenhagen, Denmark Vega Jr.
Wed 11/24 Berlin, Germany So36
Fri 11/26 Munich, Germany Feierwerk
Sat 11/27 Vienna, Austria Szene

Sun 11/28 Budapest, Hungary Durer Kert

Mon 11/29 Basel, Switzerland Sommercasino

Tue 11/30 Zurich, Switzerland Abart
Wed 12/1 Amalgame, Switzerland Yverdon
Fri 12/3 Ravenna, Italy Bronson
Sat 12/4 Turin, Italy Spazio
Sun 12/5 Annecy Le Brise, France Glace

Mon 12/6 Strasbourg, France La Laiterie

Wed 12/8 Stuttgart, Germany Roehre
Thu 12/9 Cologne, Germany Werkstatt

Fri 12/10 Paris, France Elysee Montmarte

Sat 12/11 Orleans, France Astro Lab

Sun 12/12 Tourcoing, France Le Grand Mix
Tue 12/14 Ghent, Belgium Vooruit
Wed 12/15 London, England La Scala
Thu 12/16 Manchester, England Club Academy
Fri 12/17 Glasgow, Scotland Cathouse

Helmet
Tour Dates

::
Helmet News
::
Helmet
Concert
Reviews


Montenegro given EU candidate status

The European Commission has approved the granting of EU candidate country status to Montenegro, stated European Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele. Fuele, at a press conference in Brussels, said that Montenegro would begin accession talks when it met the necessary political conditions set out by the Copenhagen criteria which relate to the rule of law and stable institutions.

Running Down Miles’ Voodoo

By: Ron Hart

Bitches Brew 40th Anniversary
Collector’s Edition

2010 marks the 40th anniversary of the release of Bitches Brew, an album long considered to be one of the pivotal turning points in the history of jazz. Change was indeed in the air when Miles Davis initially incorporated electronic elements into 1968′s Miles in the Sky and 1969′s Filles De Kilimanjaro. However, when he created an album with an all-electric ensemble with In A Silent Way (also released in ’69), it was met with a staggering combination of awe and angst by both jazz and rock critics, particularly because they really didn’t know what to make of the album’s experimental nature, which was billed as Davis’s debut foray into the then still-emerging fusion movement, as well as his first collaboration with longtime producer Teo Macero.

However, when Bitches Brew was released in April of 1970, Miles had fully immersed himself into the rhythmic propulsion of the psychedelic funk and rock sounds popularized by the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Santana, James Brown and Sly and the Family Stone, most of which he was introduced to by his ex-wife, R&B sex kitten Betty Mabry-Davis, whose inspiration is all over the record. Putting together a veritable supergroup of collaborators including Wayne Shorter on soprano saxophone, keyboardists Chick Corea and the late Joe Zawinul, bassists Dave Holland and Harvey Brooks, drummers Lenny White and Jack DeJohnette, clarinetist Bennie Maupin, conga players Don Alias and Juma “Jim Riley” Santos and guitarist John McLaughlin, Miles crafted a double album that took the explorations of the outer perimeters of exposition, development and recapitulation featured on In A Silent Way and sent them even further into the freak zone, incorporating such special effects as tape looping, electro-acoustic reverberation and frequency filtering spurred by Macero’s fascination with the musique concrète movement of the late 1940s and the works of Edgar Varese and Karlheinz Stockhausen, only propelled by an acid jungle groove that would eventually become Miles’ calling card in the early-to-mid 70s on albums like (A Tribute to) Jack Johnson, Live-Evil, On The Corner, Big Fun and Get Up With It.

The end results were nothing short of a sonic revolution across the jazz landscape equal to what The Beatles were doing to the pop idiom with Revolver, Sgt. Pepper and The White Album, creating even more of a furor at the time with stuffy-shirted critics who clung to their copies of Birth of the Cool and Kind of Blue as if they were bracing themselves for a hurricane of Katrina proportions.

Original gatefold album art

In honor of this legendary album’s historic 40-year milestone, Legacy Recordings has released a gorgeous anniversary Collector’s Edition of Bitches Brew. Similar to the monster celebration for the 50th anniversary of Kind of Blue the label released in the fall of 2008, this version contains two CDs containing the original six tracks plus six more bonus cuts, a third disc containing a previously unreleased live performance of the Miles/Keith Jarrett/Chick Corea/Dave Holland/Jack DeJohnette/Airto Moreira/Gary Bartz lineup from an August 1970 concert at Tanglewood, a DVD of another unissued show from Copenhagen in November 1969 featuring the Davis/Shorter/Corea/Holland/DeJohnette quintet, plus the original album on 180-gram vinyl housed in a gorgeous double-LP replication.

JamBase was lucky enough to catch up with two key members of the Brew crew, Messrs John McLaughlin and Lenny White – both of whom would take the fusion genre to new heights of innovation with their respective groups Mahavishnu Orchestra and Return to Forever – to discuss their roles in the making of this monumental masterstroke.

John, tell us about the first time you ever met Miles Davis and how you came to join his electric ensemble for In A Silent Way?

John McLaughlin: I met Miles on the first day I arrived in NYC from London. It was during the first few days of January 1969. I’d been invited to join Lifetime with Tony Williams and Larry Young. However, since Tony was doing his final week with Miles before leaving and devoting himself exclusively to Lifetime, that week was at Club Baron in Harlem – long since disappeared. Even though we’d never met, Miles knew about me since he was losing Tony as his drummer, and was naturally curious about what he was planning. We met that night at the club, and the following day I was with Tony at Miles’ house, and out of the blue Miles said to me, “We’re recording tomorrow. Bring your guitar to the studio.” That was it.

Lenny, when did you first meet Miles and how did you come to join the band for Bitches Brew?

Lenny White by Susan J. Weiand

Lenny White: The first time I met Miles was at The Village Gate. I took the subway from Queens into the Village and went to see Miles. I heard he called my house the same day but I had left to go see him. Miles dressed in back asked me, “Can you play fast?” I said yes and he said “When?” and I said, “Whenever I’m asked.” He then said to be down here every night this week. I got a call to be at his house on 77th St. for a rehearsal. Jack, Chick, Wayne and Dave were there and we rehearsed the beginning statement of “Bitches Brew.”

How much input did you have in the blueprints of Bitches Brew? What were your thoughts on how this new form of electric jazz could be taken to the next level?

McLaughlin: By the time Miles was ready for Bitches Brew, I’d gotten to him very well. Right after the In A Silent Way sessions he kind of took me under his wing and was inviting me to play concerts with him even though I was with Tony and Lifetime. He’d become fascinated with guitar – he loved guitar and eventually got one for himself (I played it on On the Corner). I would go over to his house several times a week and he’d ask me about this or that riff, what would I do thythmically with such and such a chord, things like that. By Bitches Brew, he was moving ahead of everyone else (like always) into the world of fusion.

White: Miles said to me, “Jack will play the beat. I want you to play all around it, like a spice in a big brew.” So, I wanted it to sound like one drummer with eight hands.

Do you have a favorite story stemming from the Bitches Brew sessions?

John McLaughlin

McLaughlin: I have a better story for Jack Johnson, but what maybe was one of the nicest things was that Miles invited sitar player Balakrishna and tabla player Badal Roy, both of whom I’d introduced to Miles.

White: Yeah, I learned a great lesson on the very first day. I had been playing all kinds of music, and R&B and funky stuff was a big part of what I did along with playing jazz. On “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” he wanted a straight, simple funk groove. We had done a few takes that I thought were great but he wanted something simple. I played what I thought he wanted; more like Tony was playing and it wasn’t what he wanted. Don Alias, who played percussion, said, “Miles, I have a beat,” so he got on my drums and played this real simple beat. Miles loved it and I wound up playing percussion instead of drums on that track. The lesson I learned was don’t pot-think yourself by doing what you think somebody wants. Ask and find out what is needed.

Lenny, being so young going into the Bitches Brew sessions, was it intimidating to be in the room with all of these established cats?

White: It was scary. This was my first real recording session and it was with my idol. Everybody was cool, especially Miles.

What kinds of music were you listening to personally that may have influenced the direction of Bitches Brew?

original cover

White: We all were listening to Tony Williams, but along with Tony and Elvin [Jones], I was listening to Clyde Stubberfield and Jabo Starks with James Brown’s band and John Bonham.

McLaughlin: At that time I was listening to the heroes of my youth – Miles, Coltrane, Bill Evans, etc. – but also I was listening to Bartok, Webern, Jimi Hendrix, Sly & the Family Stone, The Beatles and The Eagles, amongst others. I guess they all played a greater or lesser role. An anecdote about Jimi: One day I was with Miles at his house and I was telling him about Jimi and what he’d done with the electric guitar. Miles had never seen Jimi play so I looked in the Village Voice and found out that the Monterey Pop Festival movie was playing in the Village. So, I took Miles down to see the movie. It was great to see Miles watch Jimi, especially when he burns his guitar. All Miles could say was, “Damn, damn…”

Any truth to the rumor that Miles and Jimi were in talks to record and/or jam together?

White: As far as I know, this was definitely talked about, even to the point that Tony Williams and Larry Young did record a jam with Jimi. One of my big regrets is Miles asking me if I wanted to play with Jimi, and I said no because I wanted to play with [Miles].

Did Miles have a favorite Jimi Hendrix song or album that was crucial in inspiring the Bitches Brew sound?

White: I know he loved “Machine Gun” and around that time the version we were all listening to was from the Band of Gypsys recording.

What is your personal favorite track on Bitches Brew and why?

Lenny White by Lynn Goldsmith

White: “Spanish Key” because it was the first song of the second day after my big mistake with the direction on “Miles Runs The Voodoo Down” and I no longer had any fear. I went into it all the way.

John, how did your name become the title of a song on the album, and why was it that Miles didn’t play on “John McLaughlin”?

McLaughlin: This was and remains to this day a mystery to me. I was kind of shocked when I saw the album. We, most times, never knew the titles during Miles’ recordings. I really don’t know the why of anything about his decision to give the tune my name.

How much did the music you created with Tony Williams and Larry Young in Emergency come into play with your role in the Bitches Brew sessions?

McLaughlin: Playing with Tony and Lifetime was a different creative environment for me. Tony encouraged me from the start to write music for Lifetime. Miles never did this, and I was very happy with this situation, too. Miles would pick my brain for riffs and stuff like that and then adapt it in his inimitable way. This was a really deep learning process for me. I should say that a tremendous amount of Mahavishnu music was born during my tenure with Lifetime. Miles has had a profound impact on me since I discovered him in 1958, and even more so when I had the opportunity to play with him. It really is impossible to quantify or qualify the degree of influence Miles had on me, musically and personally. It’s just enormous.

Lenny, how much of an influence did your time in Miles’ electric ensemble have on your work in Return to Forever, Azteca and Twennynine?

White: It didn’t just shape my attitude in playing in those music projects it changed EVERYBODY’S attitude. After this you were obligated to take chances, try new directions.

In listening to new music now in 2010, where do you most hear the influence of Bitches Brew

White: I hear the influence in the jam bands. I think they have taken the spirit of what we did and brought it to a present day audience.

JamBase | Steeped
Go See Live Music!


VMware Adds Automation to Cloud IT Services

vCloud Request Manager adds automation via workflows to the provisioning process of vCloud Director. – As it previewed in September at VMworld 2010 in San Francisco,
VMware now has added new cloud computing products and services to its
catalog, making the announcements at VMworld Europe in Copenhagen on
Oct. 13.

Not only that, but the company also is making it easier for customers
to pay for v…


Oct. 13, 1884: Greenwich Resolves Subprime Meridian Crisis

1884: Geographers and astronomers adopt Greenwich as the Prime Meridian, the international standard for zero degrees longitude.
The late 19th century was an era of standardization. With the Second Industrial Revolution stimulating world trade, the Treaty of the Meter established the International System of weights and measures in 1875. With railroads linking together entire continents, nations [...]

Quest Software Updates Backup/Recovery Package for SMBs

vRanger 5.0 enables backup and restoration of multiple VMs at the same time, with no limitations. – Quest Software, which is beginning to make its presence felt in the storage backup and disaster recovery service business, announced Oct. 12 at VMworld Europe in Copenhagen that it has released a new version of its vRanger software package for SMBs.

vRanger Standard Edition 5.0 integrates with ex…


World Music Expo: Womex 2010

OCTOBER 27-31 IN COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

It’s an all-day, all-night dance and listening party, where old hands and grand dames share space with wild
newcomers. It’s a business platform where people from remote villages and well-heeled megalopolises meet and
discuss how to sustain musical diversity. It’s the best place to launch a successful career, whether you’re a striking
traditional singer from Afghanistan or the best rock guitarist in Zanzibar.

It’s WOMEX, the world’s premier world music expo
and music event (October 27-31, 2010 in Copenhagen,
Denmark). This year, in addition to hearing sounds from across the planet, participants will get a chance to build
new approaches to “world music,” a term coined at the end of the eighties in the UK to help market music from
outside the Western world, now about creating musical infrastructure to support artists and audiences everywhere.

WOMEX has brought Saharan desert rockers Tinariwen, Cape Verdean diva Cesaria Evora, Brazilian bohemian Seu Jorge, and countless others to global stardom. This year’s showcase festival highlights
everyone from La Reunion’s soulful Creole blues poet Danyèl Waro to the hip electro-cumbia of Colombia’s
Bomba Estereo and the hard-core Bavarian brass of LaBrassBanda. Virtuoso hurdy-gurdy from
Austria (Matthias Loibner) may follow 10,000-year-old Chinese jew’s harp tunes (Wang Li) and
the resonant funk of the Senegalese hoddu (Malick Pathe Sow & Maoba). Anything goes—as long as it
excels.

“The jury always tries to put together a program that is broad in styles and traditions,
that reflects electronic and acoustic approaches,” WOMEX Director of Music Programming Alexander
Walter
notes. “We keep an eye on having bigger and smaller bands. Only by being this open and diverse can
cover the radically different interests and tastes of the delegates that come to the event.”


Western growth to be constrained for years to come: Tharman

Economic growth in the western world will be constrained “for several years to come” and rapid growth in emerging markets will not be enough to offset “headwinds against growth” in the west, Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said today.


“To create a new basis for growth we need low taxes, flexible labor markets and social safety nets that are fiscally sustainable,” he said in a speech in Copenhagen.

“Fiscal entrenchment is a necessity across the western world,” he said. “Financial deleveraging has a long way to go.”
 

{jcomments on}

Singapore aims for manufacturing at 20-25% of GDP: Tharman

Singapore aims to keep its manufacturing sector contributing between 20 and 25 percent of gross domestic product in the long term, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said today in an interview in Copenhagen.


“It means moving up the value curve towards more R&D and design-intensive activities,” Shanmugaratnam said, adding that the target was “very ambitious,” although the city-state is close to the 25 percent level currently.

“Singapore is a very good place for prototyping, particularly for companies aiming at Asian markets,” he said. “Singapore provides the safety for intellectual property.”

{jcomments on} 

 

Consultancy firms: Free thinking

Why expensive consultancy firms are giving away more research

IN THE run-up to the climate-change conference in Copenhagen last year, a curvy graph was passed around by policymakers and NGOs. It showed various options for cutting carbon-dioxide emissions. At one end of the chart were simple efficiency improvements which would both cut CO2 and save money; at the other end were costly technologies like nuclear power and carbon capture. Climate-watchers found the graph useful for demonstrating how many money-saving or cheap technologies there were. As one veteran put it, “We all speak McKinsey’s language now.” The graph was indeed put together not by a tree-hugging NGO, but by the for-profit consultancy.

All consulting firms seek to provide what they annoyingly call “thought leadership”. McKinsey’s rival, the Boston Consulting Group (BCG), became well known in part by distributing its ideas freely. Consultancies now put out short opinionated papers as well as data-laden reports such as BCG’s recent one on wind power in China or PricewaterhouseCooper’s on electronic health records. Fiona Czerniawska of Sourceforconsulting.com says the number of such reports from the top 25 firms has quintupled since 2004. Free reports are expensive to produce: Tom Rodenhauser of Kennedy Information, a firm that monitors consultancies, reckons they cost up to 5% of gross revenues. Are they worth it? …

Cycling in cities: Shifting up a gear

Rent-a-bike projects are cropping up in unlikely places

THIN air, thick smog and bad drivers make Mexico City hard going for cyclists. But a new fleet of 1,200 smart red “Ecobici” pay-as-you-go rental bikes, at 85 docking stations, marks the most ambitious recent addition to a global trend of municipally endorsed cycling. Since February 7,000 people have signed up, and between them they have taken more than 200,000 trips.

A low-tech scheme started in the French town of La Rochelle in 1974. Copenhagen launched the first big automated project in 1995. German cities, including Berlin, have tried versions paid for by mobile phone. But the most successful is the “Velib” in Paris, with 20,000 bikes available for users with swipe-cards. In London the transport authority and Barclays Bank will launch a 6,000-bike programme on July 30th. Users can pay at one of the 400 docking stations, or use a key with a chip. …

The green suits

The economics of biodiversity and business

While climate scientists lament the fact that their flagship compendia, such as the IPCC reports, come under endless attack, scientists working on other environmental issues would love such high-profile pronouncements, even if they came with a similar cost. IPCC-envy was one of the rationales for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, published in 2005, and it is the main impetus behind the current development of an Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. When the equally inelegantly named TEEB process (it stands for The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity) was set up at the G8+5 meeting in Potsdam in 2007 its political patrons had a clear model in mind. They hoped that just as Lord Stern’s review of the economics of climate change, published in 2006, firmed resolve for action among governments and helped set in motion the processes that led to last year’s Copenhagen climate conference, so this new report should encourage a more serious global approach to the costs that damaged and dysfunctional ecosystems impose on people.

It’s worth noting that this approach implicitly assumes, as do many people, that the point of the IPCC and such endeavours is to find reasons for action, rather than dispassionately to assess the issue. Another caveat is that, as far as the climate is concerned, big and well publicised reports have manifestly not delivered the goods in terms of what UN negotiators call “environmental integrity”—producing actions that really do reduce emissions. But that does not mean that the TEEB process is either propagandistic or pointless. Treating the services provided by ecosystems as part of the economy is a good idea, and the various ways in which their value can be sustained, or even enhanced, deserve study. …

Independent Climate Change E-Mail Review Exonerates, Chides Scientists

Climate change scientists were cleared of any wrongdoing regarding the manipulation of data in roughly 1,000 e-mails leaked before the Copenhagen Summit, but the report also admonished scientists for "unhelpful" behavior in the face of calls for greater transparency. – A report following the leak of a slew of private e-mails
from scientists concerning climate change largely exonerated those
involved from allegations of propagating false data, but also rebuked
scientists for not being open enough with their research. In November
2009, approximately 1,000 e-mail…


The controversies in climate science : Science behind closed doors

Two new reports say the science of climate change is fine, but that some scientists and the institutions they work in need to change their attitudes

THE winter of 2009 was a rough time for climate science. In November, in the run-up to the Copenhagen climate conference, over 1,000 private e-mails from and to researchers at the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), a part of the University of East Anglia (UEA) in Britain, appeared on the internet, presumably after being stolen. At the same time a controversy was bubbling up in India over a claim in the 2007 assessment report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that the Himalayas could lose all their glaciers in 25 years, which was wrong. These events seemed to provide evidence of embarrassing incompetence, at the very least.

Explanations were demanded and committees were formed to deliver them. This week two of those committees reported. For the CRU and what became known as “climategate”, an independent panel was created by UEA and chaired by Muir Russell, a former vice-chancellor of the University of Glasgow. The Dutch environmental-assessment agency was asked to look for other errors in the regional analyses of the IPCC’s report. Both the reports conclude that the science of climate is sound and that the professional characters of the scientists involved are unimpeached. But they raise important issues about how to do science in such an argumentative area and under new levels of scrutiny, especially from a largely hostile and sometimes expert blogosphere. …

Climate talks continued: Son of Copenhagen

The new round of negotiations led to only incremental progress

“WHY”, asked a Chinese negotiator, “is this working-group facing so much difficulty in showing a minimal semblance of being alive?” It was a fair question at the end of two weeks of climate discussions in Bonn. The talks led to some progress in some areas, but bogged down in almost all others. There is a moment in such negotiations when you come up against a nagging problem: many countries that are committed to act on climate change will seek to avoid really doing so for at least as long as other parties are under no such commitment—if not longer.

The meeting, which took place in Bonn from May 31st to June 11th, was the first big negotiating session held under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) since the rushed, inconclusive and, to most, disappointing end of the Copenhagen conference last December. It produced some of the little that was expected. Many countries made a genuine attempt to set a new and equable tone for discussion and debate. The Copenhagen Accord, agreed to by a few dozen heads of government, for instance, has an uncertain status. The negotiators agreed to have aspects of the accord, such as a high-level advisory group on finance, dealt with under the UNFCCC. …