While Kate Moss was seen having a good time at the Isle Of Wight bash, she was harbouring a secret worry amidst all the partying— her dad suffered a suspected heart attack.
The former estate agent had an alleged heart attack after Kate left for the festival and he spent the weekend in hospital.
The supermodel decided [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Isle of Wight’
Kate Moss’ secret worry during Isle Of Wight bash
Macca supports â€green†Isle of Wight Festival
Sir Paul McCartney has voiced support for this year’’s Isle of Wight Festival, which is encouraging reduction in carbon footprint after winning the Greener Festival Award last year.
The former Beatle is set to be the headline act at the show.
“I”m glad that winning the Greener Festival Award last year has helped to encourage them to [...]
The Hold Steady New Album Heaven Is Whenever 5/4
The Hold Steady’s Heaven Is Whenever Set For Release May 4
The Hold Steady |
The Hold Steady, lauded for the scope, depth, truth and heart they bring to chronicling the American rock myth, recently put the finishing touches on Heaven Is Whenever, their new album set for release May 4 on Vagrant Records. The album was produced by Dean Baltulonis, who engineered the band’s Almost Killed Me and produced Separation Sunday, and was recorded at Dreamland Recording Studios in Upstate NY and Wild Arctic Studios in Queens, NY, with mixing also happening at Wild Arctic.
Singer Craig Finn says Heaven Is Whenever is about “embracing suffering and understanding its place in a joyful life. The lyrics speak a lot about struggle and reward.” Piano and keys take a backseat to guitar on the new record, which also gets production help from guitarist Tad Kubler. “I really believe the album exposes new elements of the band that we hinted at on other records but weren’t able to fully realize until this one,” says Kubler. “Rather than just concentrate on changes in the instrumentation, we made changes to the song writing process.”
Recorded in several smaller sessions spread out over a long period of time, the songs on Heaven Is Whenever received the benefit of being tested on the band’s recent tours. There was also a makeshift recording booth set up on the back of their tour bus so songs and musical ideas could be documented as they developed. As Finn says this allowed them to “see what was working and what wasn’t. I believe this record benefits from us working at a more deliberate pace.”
Following the release of 2008′s critically acclaimed Stay Positive, which gave the band its highest Billboard chart position to date, The Hold Steady toured relentlessly, playing to some of their biggest audiences to date.
The Hold Steady is: Craig Finn, Tad Kubler, Galen Polivka, Bobby Drake
Heaven Is Whenever Track Listing:
1. The Sweet Part of the City
2. Soft in the Center
3. The Weekenders
4. The Smidge
5. Rock Problems
6. We Can Get Together
7. Hurricane J
8. Barely Breathing
9. Our Whole Lives
10. A Slight Discomfort
The Hold Steady Confirmed Tour Dates:
04/02/10 Fri Life The Place To Be Ardsley, NY
04/03/10 Sat Toad’s Place New Haven, CT
04/05/10 Mon Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT
04/06/10 Tue Pearl Street Nightclub Northampton, MA
04/07/10 Wed The Linda WAMC’s Performing Arts Studio Albany, NY
04/08/10 Thu Bearsville Theater Woodstock, NY
04/09/10 Fri Eleanor Rigby’s Jermyn, PA
04/10/10 Sat The Westcott Theater Syracuse, NY
04/12/10 Mon Club @ Water Street Rochester, NY
04/13/10 Tue Beachland Ballroom/Tavern Cleveland, OH
04/14/10 Wed Diesel Pittsburgh, PA
04/15/10 Thu 123 Pleasant St. Morgantown, WV
04/16/10 Fri Appalachian Brewing Company Harrisburg, PA
05/05/10 Wed El Rey Theatre Los Angeles, CA
05/06/10 Thu The Fillmore San Francisco, CA
05/29/10 Sat Sasquatch! Fest The Gorge George, WA
06/12/10 Sat Isle of Wight Festival @ Seaclose Park Newport, GB
06/14/10 Mon La Fleche d’Or Paris, FRA
06/21/10 Mon Melkweg Amsterdam, NL
06/22/10 Tue The Forum London, GB
06/26/10 Sat Academy 2 Manchester, GB
For more on The Hold Steady see our exclusive feature/interview here.
Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart enjoy ‘island getaway’
Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart celebrated New Year’’s at Ventnor, a seaside resort on an island off the coast of England and ended up drawing a huge crowd.
However, the ‘Twilight’ couple had to escape before local fans could mob them.
According to reports, Pattinson, 23, and Stewart, 19, posed for photos with a young female fan [...]
Experience Hendrix Tour 2010
EXPERIENCE HENDRIX TOUR LAUNCHES IN MARCH, 2010
ALL STAR LINEUP INCLUDES JOE SATRIANI, LIVING COLOUR, DAVID HIDALGO, MANY MORE
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Experience Hendrix, the fourth edition of the biennial concert tour that features an all star lineup of music greats paying homage to the music and legacy of Jimi Hendrix gets underway in early March of next year with special performances across the country.
Featured artists who will be performing music written and inspired by Hendrix include some of the best known and most respected artists in contemporary rock and blues, including Joe Satriani, Jonny Lang, Eric Johnson, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Brad Whitford (Aerosmith), Doyle Bramhall II, Ernie Isley, Living Colour, Chris Layton (Double Trouble), along with bassist Billy Cox.
Cox, who first befriended Hendrix when the two were in the 101st Airborne Division of U.S. Army, played in both the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Band of Gypsys and performed with Hendrix at such landmark festivals as Woodstock and the Isle of Wight. Cox commented, “It’s a thrill for me to play Jimi’s music for audiences now as it was in the 1960s. The Experience Hendrix tours have shown how timeless this music really is.” Joe Satriani remarked, “I finally get to pay tribute to my hero the right way, onstage with an amazing, once in a lifetime, lineup of musicians!”
Sacred Steel, featuring Robert Randolph, Susan Tedeschi, and David Hidalgo and Cesar Rosas of Los Lobos are also performing on selected Experience Tour dates.
Various combinations of these music greats will be performing Jimi’s signature songs, including “Purple Haze,” “Voodoo Child (Slight Return),” “The Wind Cries Mary,” “Little Wing,” and “Red House.” As has been the case with previous Experience Hendrix tour incarnations, special guests are expected to sit in at many of the dates, making the concerts all that much more memorable for both new and veteran Hendrix fans. Past special guests have included Paul Rodgers, Buddy Guy, and Carlos Santana.
Shepherd, a veteran of several Experience Hendrix tours remarked, “Jimi Hendrix’s music has really inspired to push the limits of my own music. He didn’t observe any boundaries musically. He was an amazing player and a tremendous showman so I incorporated some of his showmanship in what I do.” As far as having been part of the Experience Hendrix touring phenomenon, Shepherd noted, “It touches you on the inside and gets you fired up.”
The Experience Hendrix Tour is presented by Experience Hendrix, LLC, the Hendrix family-owned company founded by James A. “Al” Hendrix, Jimi’s father, entrusted with preserving and protecting the legacy of Jimi Hendrix. Earlier this year, Sony Music Entertainment’s Legacy Division and Experience Hendrix entered into a worldwide catalog licensing venture to make all of Jimi’s extraordinary music, including classic albums, never before heard archive recordings, and filmed concerts available through all forms of media.
Launching on the west coast, the month-long tour will bring the troupe of players, each a headliner in his or her own right, to concert venues in major U.S. markets including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Denver, Minneapolis, Chicago, St. Louis and Atlanta.
Experience Hendrix 2010 Tour Dates
03/05/10 Fri Gibson Amphitheatre Universal City, CA
03/06/10 Sat The Joint @ Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas, NV
03/07/10 Sun Mesa Arts Center – Ikeda Theater Mesa, AZ
03/09/10 Tue Table Mountain Casino Friant, CA
03/10/10 Wed The Warfield San Francisco, CA
03/12/10 Fri Silver Legacy Hotel Casino Reno, NV
03/14/10 Sun Paramount Theatre Denver, CO
03/16/10 Tue Uptown Theater Kansas City, MO
03/17/10 Wed Orpheum Theatre Minneapolis, MN
03/18/10 Thu The Chicago Theatre Chicago, IL
03/20/10 Sat Fabulous Fox Theatre St. Louis, MO
03/21/10 Sun Riverside Theater Milwaukee, WI
03/23/10 Tue Akron Civic Theater Akron, OH
03/24/10 Wed The Wellmont Theatre Montclair, NJ
03/25/10 Thu Count Basie Theatre Red Bank, NJ
03/27/10 Sat Fox Theatre Atlanta, GA
Isle Of Wight 2010: Jay-Z, Strokes, Blondie
ISLE OF WIGHT FESTIVAL DATES SET FOR JUNE 11-13, 2010
JAY-Z, THE STROKES, BLONDIE TO HEADLINE
Jay-Z |
The U.K.’s Isle of Wight Festival is back, to be held June 11-13, 2010, once again in beautiful Seaclose Park. Maintaining the tradition of featuring some of the biggest names in music, while taking pride in showcasing up and coming talent, festival organizers are excited to announce the 2010 lineup.
Headlining the main stage June 11 will be Jay-Z, followed by The Strokes on June 12, and concluding with Pink June 13. Also making a special appearance on Saturday, June 12 is Blondie
“Ever since I heard the first Strokes album, I’ve wanted them for the Isle of Wight,” explains Festival promoter John Giddings. “Jay-Z and Pink are two of the best live acts I have ever seen and the Blondie hits speak for themselves.”
Not to be forgotten, The Big Top kicks things off on Thursday, June 10 with Squeeze performing a campers only show. Saturday then sees the Top play host to electronic tandem Orbital.
Tickets go on sale Friday, December 4. For more ticket info and all things Isle of Wight, head to their site here.
The Low Anthem Tour Dates
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It’s been a banner year for The Low Anthem. In addition to being JamBase’s New Favorite Artist this month, the Rhode Island trio spent the greater part of the year touring with acts such as Elvis Perkins In Dearland, Joe Pug, Ray LaMontagne, Josh Ritter, and Langhorne Slim in support of their highly praised Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, the band is gearing up for yet another stretch on the road, this time with the Portland group Blind Pilot. This run of 21 club and theater dates begins October 15 and continues through November 12 and includes the band’s West coast debut. Additionally, The Low Anthem will return to NYC for a performance at the Bell House at the end of August and travel to Europe for a month-long tour in September, where they’ve already played to much enthusiasm at Glastonbury, sold out a show at Union Chapel in London, and received stellar reviews in Uncut, Q, Mojo, NME, The Guardian, and The Independent.
The very special Avon Cinema in Providence, RI is hosting the first October U.S. tour date. The Cinema is a beautiful old movie theatre, the perfect setting for the band’s anticipated homecoming show and largest performance in Providence to date. The band will also be playing a free show on Block Island, where they recorded Charlie Darwin.
The Low Anthem’s most recent tour has taken them through a number of prestigious festivals, including Bonnaroo, Glastonbury, Lollapalooza, and the recent 50th Anniversary of the Newport Folk Festival, where they had humble beginnings working as recycling crew. This time around they got to share the stage with some of their heroes, including Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Gilian Welch during a group sing-along.
THE LOW ANTHEM PRESS:
“Only a band since 2006, the depth of songwriting and ability to cross the dusty Americana landscape from such burdened acoustic folk songs like “To Ohio” to country barnburners, delicate three-part harmonies dripping with reverb, a Tom Waits cover, and soul-saving gospel without loosing continuity makes The Low Anthem worthy of all the hype they are sure to receive…” – JamBase
“Stately… Lyrics contemplating faith, loss, destruction and self-destruction.” – New York Times
“One of the breakthrough albums of 2009… A highly eventful journey into American songcraft, variously echoing Dylan, Springsteen, The Band, and Tom Waits.” – MOJO
“Really beautiful… The great music, it’s not what you play; it’s what you don’t play.” – Billy Bragg (PROJO)
THE LOW ANTHEM ON TOUR:
08.13 Chapel Hill, NC Local 506
08.14 Richmond, VA The Canal Club – Downstairs Lounge
08.15 Baltimore, MD Ottobar w/Langhorne Slim
08.16 Philadelphia, PA Philly Folk Festival
08.17 Pittsfield, MA Stage 2 – Word X Word Festival
08.18 Block Island, RI Captain Nick’s
08.27 Fall River, MA Narrows Center For the Arts
08.29 Plymouth, MA Plymouth Waterfront Festival
09.03 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne
09.04 Dublin, IRELAND Gaiety Theatre w/Ray LaMontagne
09.05 Stradbelly, IRELAND Electric Picnic Festival
09.06 Manchester, UK Deaf Institute
09.08 Newcastle, UK Cluny
09.09 Birmingham, UK Glee Club
09.10 Oxford, UK Bullingdon Arms
09.11 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival
09.12 Larmer Tree Gardens, UK End of the Road Festival
09.13 Isle of Wight Bestival
09.15 Munich, GERMANY Atomic Cafe
09.16 Milan, ITALY La Salumeria Della Musica
09.17 Zurich, SWITZERLAND El Lokal
09.18 Frankfurt, GERMANY Broftabrik
09.19 Koln, GERMANY Gebaude 9
09.20 Berlin, GERMANY Lido
09.21 Hamburg, GERMANY Knust
09.23 Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS De Duif
09.24 Brussels, BELGIUM Ancienne Belgique
09.25 Nijmegen, NETHERLANDS Doornroosje
09.26 Paris, FRANCE La Maroquinerie
10.02 Austin, TX Austin City Limits
10.15 Providence, RI Avon Cinema
10.17 Seattle, WA Chop Suey
10.18 Portland, OR Lola’s Room at the Crystal Ballroom
10.19 Eugene, OR WOW Hall*
10.21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall*
10.23 Los Angeles, CA Troubadour*
10.24 San Diego, CA Casbah*
10.25 Tucson, AZ Plush*
10.27 Austin, TX The Parish*
10.28 Dallas, TX Granada Theater*
10.29 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB*
10.30 Baton Rouge, LA Spanish Moon*
11.02 Tallahassee, FL Club Downunder*
11.03 Orlando, FL The Social*
11.04 Atlanta, GA The Earl*
11.05 Nashville, TN Mercy Lounge*
11.06 Asheville, NC University of North Carolina*
11.07 Norfolk, VA Attucks Theater*
11.09 Carrboro, NC Cats Cradle*
11.11 Washington, D.C. The Black Cat*
11.12 Boston, MA Paradise*
*with Blind Pilot
Winehouse, Fielder-Civil encouraged Ronnie Wood to break his booze ban
Amy Winehouse and her now ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil made rocker Ronnie Wood break his booze ban.
Fielder-Civil admits the former couple is partly to blame as they prompted him to start guzzle alcohol “like a tramp”, reports Contactmusic.
Fielder-Civil says, “Amy performed with the Stones at the Isle of Wight Festival in 2007. I asked Ronnie if [...]
Winehouse, Fielder-Civil encouraged Ronnie Wood to break his booze ban
Amy Winehouse and her now ex-husband Blake Fielder-Civil made rocker Ronnie Wood break his booze ban.
Fielder-Civil admits the former couple is partly to blame as they prompted him to start guzzle alcohol “like a tramp”, reports Contactmusic.
Fielder-Civil says, “Amy performed with the Stones at the Isle of Wight Festival in 2007. I asked Ronnie if [...]
What’s up in the Big Green tent?
Some suspect foul play in the last-minute cancellation of the Big Green Gathering, but the Vestas protest might get an unexpected boost instead
News broke over the weekend that the organisers of the Big Green Gathering had finally crumbled under ceaseless pressure and demands from the local council and police, and decided not to stage the event. Bills had soared and it was deemed unfeasible for the organisation to go ahead.
The reaction, as you’d expect, is one of frustration. “The BGG is basically a gathering for people wanting to build a better world,” said Andrew Martin of Veggies. “There are workshops on green energy, ethical living, consensus-based decision-making, protesting and campaigning. I’m sure that’s got something to do with why it’s been shut down.” Veggies is a vegan catering organisations which, like some of the other organisations who regularly take part in the BGG, raises funds for environmental campaigns, including the Climate Camp.
I can’t help but suspect that the closure of the event stems from both police heavy-handedness at protests, such as at the G20 demonstrations earlier this year, and a more specific aim of undermining Climate Camp, after the police were criticised for “counterproductive” tactics. Climate Camp will be signifcantly poorer as a result of this decision (I’ve heard a confirmed figure of between £10,000 – £15,000).
The whole thing really sticks in my throat. It’s hard to imagine a festival with a more positive aim than the Big Green Gathering, which grew out of Glastonbury’s famous Green Fields and became a festival in its own right in the nineties. The aim is celebratory, and the idea that something designed to inspire and regenerate should be choked out of existence by a bunch of narrow-minded policemen and kow-towing local councillors is profoundly depressing. I may not want to spend the weekend studying alternative sewage possibilities, but I’m grateful that somebody does.
But it may be that the police are shooting themselves in the feet with this approach. In the 1990s the Criminal Justice Act united a whole slew of campaigners and party-goers in opposition and helped boost the anti-roads movement. Shutting down the BGG could potentially have the same effect.
Messages are already flying around the internet suggesting that instead of going to the BGG, people head down to join the protests outside the Vestas factory on the Isle of Wight. If just a few people take up the suggestion, the police have created a whole new headache for themselves.
Wind power boosted by £1bn loans
Figures from Greenpeace show Conservative-run councils blocking three times as many wind farms as they approve
The government will today demonstrate its willingness to exert influence over Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group by announcing £1bn of lending to wind farm developers whose schemes have been becalmed by a lack of cash.
The initiative comes as Greenpeace unveils new figures showing that local councils run by the Conservative party block more than three times as many wind farms as they approve. Labour-controlled councils meanwhile approved marginally more projects than they turned down between December 2005 and November 2008, according to the campaign group.
Both issues are important because Vestas, the UK’s only major wind turbine maker, is threatening to close its manufacturing plant on the Isle of Wight this week blaming some of its woes on “faceless nimbies” and a lack of a vibrant domestic market.
Ed Miliband, the energy and climate change secretary, will argue that the £1bn of loans organised through the partly state-owned banks and the European Investment Bank (EIB) will kick-start 1 gigawatt of onshore wind schemes delayed by the credit crunch – enough to power 2 million homes. The government does not want the loans to be seen as a specific attempt to save the Vestas plant, which is at the centre of a sit-in by workers.
“Earlier this month we laid out a transition plan to a low-carbon economy that included a massive expansion of green wind energy,” Miliband will say. “The resources we are announcing back up our plans with clear actions to ensure we deliver. The money for the development of offshore wind manufacturing will help us generate green jobs on top of our success as the leading country in the world for the generation of offshore wind.
“Alongside these proposals, we are reforming planning laws, finding new ways of working with local communities and are determined to persuade people that we need a significant increase in onshore wind as part of the UK’s future energy mix.”
The £1bn cash arranged by the government is part of the additional £4bn of EIB lending to support UK energy projects announced in the spring budget. The government has been urged by environmentalists and thinktanks to use the state equity stakes in banks – gained when they had to be bailed out last autumn – to push them towards green projects.
But the loans are unlikely to change the decision of Vestas to close its manufacturing plant at Newport on the Isle of Wight. The Danish group exports the turbines from there to the US, but the blades are unsuitable for the UK market and America will in future be served from a new production line in Colorado.
Vestas was considering investing in a new type of blade for the UK market but said the credit crunch, soft pound and endless delays in planning projects had made this uncommercial.
Greenpeace claimed last night that its study of publicly available information provided to the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) showed that Tory councils approved 44.7 megawatts of onshore wind schemes but blocked 158.2MW. Labour-controlled councils approved 68.3MW and rejected 62.6MW.
“One of the reasons Britain’s green industrial revolution is yet to take off is the lack of domestic demand for wind turbines, and a key reason for that has been the attitude of many Conservative councils,” said John Sauven, Greenpeace’s executive director. “They need to be offered incentives to stop blocking wind developments, while David Cameron could make a difference straight away by making a crystal-clear commitment that a Tory Britain would meet the target to generate 20% of our energy from renewables by 2020.”
Vestas has insisted it will take no decision on the future of Newport and another facility at Southampton until the end of this month, when a formal consultation with its 600 staff ends. But the government seems resigned to the closure.
A research and development base at Newport will keep going and Vestas is expected to be one of the beneficiaries when a £10m R&D fund is distributed by the DECC, perhaps as early as this week. A second £10m fund will be launched by Miliband today and Vestas will also be eligible for funding from that.
Wealthy elderly turn backs on seaside havens
Newly retired move to cultural cities or the shires
God’s waiting rooms are undergoing a transformation. For decades, many of Britain’s coastal towns have been synonymous with blue rinses, bingo and tea dances. Places such as Bournemouth, Eastbourne and Worthing have been seen as retirement havens for generations of pensioners, keen to take the sea air just as their Victorian predecessors used to.
But according to an analysis of demographic data, many of today’s wealthier pensioners are turning their backs on traditional retirement destinations with a “grey influx” into upmarket towns and cities in some of the UK’s most sought-after inland locations – such as in the Cotswolds, and parts of Hampshire and Kent.
The shift is driven by an increase in the number of people reaching retirement age, coupled with rising levels of wealth. In 1945, life expectancy at birth for men and women was 63 and 68 respectively. In 2009 it is 78 and 82.
The dramatic increase in the number of over-65s means that by 2019 there will be 2.4 million more than today. But the traditional coastal retirement resorts, which grew to meet burgeoning demand from the postwar middle classes, have not been able to accommodate the demographic shift.
Research from Experian, the consumer research and credit rating agency, charts the trend. Changes to its giant Mosaic database – which divides the UK population into socioeconomic and lifestyle groups – show a much larger proportion of older people moving to the most desirable parts of the country, often funding this by selling their mortgage-free homes. And where coastal destinations were once the vogue, many are now looking to inland market towns, historic cities and major cultural destinations.
“People want to spend more of their retirement in the country, in areas of attractive scenery,” said Richard Webber, visiting professor of geography at University College London, who helped develop Mosaic. “And they are choosing to live a long way from London and other major population centres.”
Webber said around half of those reaching retirement age choose to carry on living in their own home, or at least in the same area. But of those with above-average wealth, around 60 per cent choose to live somewhere else. Half of these now select less traditional retirement destinations.
“A lot more older people want to retire to places of historic importance, places that have orchestras and festivals,” said Webber. “They’re looking at historic market towns and cities, places like Bath and Cheltenham, cathedral cities and university towns where there are beautiful buildings.”
The new pensioners
As a result of its extensive social mapping of the UK, Experian has identified five new types of retiree.
Beachcombers
This group reflects the growing trend for the middle-class retired to select smaller communities, many on the coast or a river, rather than larger resorts. Popular destinations: Barnstaple, Newport (Isle of Wight), Carmarthen, Inverness, Kendal, Newton Abbot.
Balcony downsizers
Higher-status retired people in their 70s and 80s, who live in privately owned or leasehold apartments in purpose-built blocks of flats suitable for those too fragile to cope with the upkeep of houses and gardens. Popular destinations: Worthing, Boscombe, Edinburgh, Southend-on-Sea, Barnet, Kingston upon Thames.
Golden retirement
People with accumulated assets, who pick prestigious retirement communities. They lead busy social lives, drive and garden. Popular destinations: Exeter, Southampton, Poole, Chichester, Norwich, Canterbury and Ipswich.
Bungalow quietude
Retirees with modest pensions, living in older-style bungalows, often in less well-off areas unattractive to younger families. Popular destinations: Blackpool, Rhyl, Scarborough, Plymouth, Nottingham, Peterborough, Newcastle upon Tyne, Lincoln, Leicester.
Country-loving elders
People on comfortable incomes living in former farms or older-style properties in quiet villages and market towns. Popular destinations: Truro, King’s Lynn, Hereford, Carlisle, Shrewsbury.
Vestas is too vital to lose
The government must now put our money where its mouth was in the energy white paper and support the renewables industry
The chorus of red-green dissent over the proposed closure of Britain’s sole major wind turbine manufacturing plant perfectly indicates just how spectacularly this Labour government has failed both workers and the environment. In microcosm, the situation in the Isle of Wight demonstrates the extent to which ministers have ignored calls to promote the renewables industry – squandering opportunity after opportunity to create or protect jobs in fledgling green industries, as well as to meet the UK’s greenhouse gas reduction targets.
But it also illustrates the creative way in which the unions and the green movement are recognising that they share a common agenda based on an understanding that green politics can deliver both jobs and social justice.
After the NHS and the council, Vestas is the largest employer on the Isle of Wight. The loss of 600 jobs during a time of economic recession will have a devastating effect on the community. But it is clear to all involved that the decision to close the factory has a wider significance beyond the island’s economy, and those workers currently occupying the plant in a valiant attempt to preserve their futures.
The decision to close the plant goes to the very heart of the critical challenge of our time: the need to address the economic and energy crises in a way which also tackles climate change head-on. It brings us right back to the Green New Deal, an innovative plan to restructure the economy through a billion-pound package for investing in green jobs – in renewables and energy efficiency – to dramatically reduce carbon emissions and cut householders’ fuel bills.
In the wake of its white paper on energy, expectations were high that the government might be offering companies like Vestas a real reason to maintain UK operations and thus protect UK jobs, through a more favourable policy environment and long-term investment plans, combined with any necessary loans or guarantees. But the rhetoric on renewable energy has yet to be matched with swift and tangible policy changes to ensure, for example, that the wind turbines we will need to build for a greener and more sustainable future make use of parts created in UK factories – not by workers thousands of miles away.
We are undoubtedly entering a period of public spending cuts. And by all means, let us cut the mindless spending of the previous decade of turbo-consumerism, as well as gratuitous spending on the military, renewal of the Trident weapons system, unnecessary ID card schemes or endless road-building. But we must replace this with targeted investment in the energy efficiency and renewable energy infrastructure we so urgently need to enable us to make a swift transition to a steady-state, zero carbon economy.
Thanks to years of government neglect, the wind energy industry suffers from a significant lack of demand in the UK and Europe. In the face of weighty pressure from the powerful “dirty” energy lobby – coal, gas and nuclear – the government has lacked the courage to give clear signals to encourage sustainable and profitable investment in the fledgling green industries.
The renewable industry has also suffered the consequences of an unwieldy and inconsistent planning system. Only an urgent reform of the UK’s planning system that would put environmental sustainability at its heart can ensure that renewable energy developments can prosper. Where there are pressures for conflicting environmental benefits, such as the need to exploit renewable energy opportunities while also seeking to protect the UK’s rural landscapes, we need improved dialogue and firmer planning regulations to ensure that green spaces, green belts and biodiverse brownfield sites are protected – while at the same time providing space for the renewable energy industry to grow.
The proposed Isle of Wight closure isn’t just a huge blow for the 600 skilled British workers set to lose their jobs. It threatens any attempt the UK makes to position itself at the forefront of global technological efforts to create a greener and more sustainable future. The renewables sector – and the public at large – need something more substantial than intentions laid out in white papers. Ministers could make a positive start by proving to Vestas, and other renewable energy players, that it is seriously committed to providing security for future investment, to a major overhaul in policy and planning, and to the crucial fight against climate change.
Reds and greens fight Vestas closure
A unique “red and green” army of trade union and environmental campaigners was on the march in an attempt to save from closure Britain’s only major wind turbine manufacturing plant.
Up to 500 people are expected outside the Vestas plant at Newport on the Isle of Wight tomorrow night where 25 workers are engaged in a sit-in, while further demonstrations are being planned simultaneously outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change in London.
Greenpeace said the Vestas dispute promised a historic change from a situation where the labour movement and environment activists have found themselves on different sides of the fence, with one wanting to shut down polluting industries and the other defending jobs.
“Although we have always tried to highlight the employment opportunities that could flow from a low-carbon economy, historically there has been animosity between the two sides. If we can build this new alliance and break down those perceived barriers then there all sorts of exciting opportunities,” said John Sauven, UK executive director of Greenpeace.
The RMT transport union endorsed the Vestas dispute as a springboard for closer co-operation, with its general secretary, Bob Crow – better known for addressing striking London Underground workers – visiting the wind plant today. He said: “There is an interesting coalition growing around Vestas that builds on issues where we have common cause such as public transport, which is really green transport. But this is a unique situation [on the Isle of Wight] involving globalisation, recession and the kind of low-carbon manufacturing jobs that everyone can relate to.”
The growing protests are embarrassing the energy and climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, who last week promised that thousands of new jobs would come from a new, low-carbon economy and now finds himself on the defensive over a decision by a cash-rich company to close a plant directly involved in renewable energy.
Miliband said he had been trying hard to help avoid job losses. “They [Vestas] are keeping a protoype facility at the factory and we are currently considering an application from them for government help to test and develop offshore wind blades in a facility which would employ 150 people on the Isle of Wight initially and potentially more later,” he said.
In April, Vestas announced plans to shut the manufacturing side of the Isle of Wight business with the potential loss of 600 jobs, saying it could produce blades cheaper in America.
Reds and greens fight Vestas closure
A unique “red and green” army of trade union and environmental campaigners was on the march in an attempt to save from closure Britain’s only major wind turbine manufacturing plant.
Up to 500 people are expected outside the Vestas plant at Newport on the Isle of Wight tomorrow night where 25 workers are engaged in a sit-in, while further demonstrations are being planned simultaneously outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change in London.
Greenpeace said the Vestas dispute promised a historic change from a situation where the labour movement and environment activists have found themselves on different sides of the fence, with one wanting to shut down polluting industries and the other defending jobs.
“Although we have always tried to highlight the employment opportunities that could flow from a low-carbon economy, historically there has been animosity between the two sides. If we can build this new alliance and break down those perceived barriers then there all sorts of exciting opportunities,” said John Sauven, UK executive director of Greenpeace.
The RMT transport union endorsed the Vestas dispute as a springboard for closer co-operation, with its general secretary, Bob Crow – better known for addressing striking London Underground workers – visiting the wind plant today. He said: “There is an interesting coalition growing around Vestas that builds on issues where we have common cause such as public transport, which is really green transport. But this is a unique situation [on the Isle of Wight] involving globalisation, recession and the kind of low-carbon manufacturing jobs that everyone can relate to.”
The growing protests are embarrassing the energy and climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, who last week promised that thousands of new jobs would come from a new, low-carbon economy and now finds himself on the defensive over a decision by a cash-rich company to close a plant directly involved in renewable energy.
Miliband said he had been trying hard to help avoid job losses. “They [Vestas] are keeping a protoype facility at the factory and we are currently considering an application from them for government help to test and develop offshore wind blades in a facility which would employ 150 people on the Isle of Wight initially and potentially more later,” he said.
In April, Vestas announced plans to shut the manufacturing side of the Isle of Wight business with the potential loss of 600 jobs, saying it could produce blades cheaper in America.
Crustacean nation: the crab pasty
If you’re heading to the British seaside in the next few weeks, you may find yourself converted to the crab pasty cause
If you followed last week’s post on crab damaging, you’re probably staring at something that looks like the aftermath of Lt Ripley’s meeting with a facehugger and saying to yourself, OK, what next? Well, I promised you a couple of suggestions for crabmeat but this one is a little more than just a recipe. It’s more like a call to arms.
In spite of years of trying, we’ve been pretty much unable to agree on a national dish. Sunday lunch has been suggested but we’re never going to get anyone to agree about the Yorkshire puddings. You could assemble a reasonably watertight argument for the fried breakfast but then some fool would include baked beans and reasonable people would want them killed. Somebody’s suggested chicken tikka masala but I’m not going to stand for that – our nation’s cuisine is represented by something 99% of the population ‘cook’ by piercing the film with a fag end and nuking it ’til it pings? No thank you. Instead, I’d like to make the case for the crab pasty.
At the moment I only know two places in the UK you can get one of these beauties. The first is quite a journey (how far you have to travel depends on where you live, of course – but it’s still quite a journey). Head to the Isle of Wight – an idyll separated from the mainland by a mere half a mile of water and about 60 years – and meander the circuitous and poorly signposted tracks to Ventnor. There’s about 70 yards of blighted prom, a couple of ice-cream shacks and an old couple on a bench that died on the way back from casting their votes for Attlee. They’ve been left to mummify because that’s what people are like in Ventor – they mind their own business. You might be forgiven for thinking that here, you’d reached the remotest part of the country. But you’d be wrong.
About a mile west of the ‘town’, accessible only by means of a stiff hike along the prom, is Steephill Cove, a picturesque inlet comprising a couple of houses and some beach shacks. Here, by long tradition, families of ‘longshoremen’ fish lines of crab pots in return for protecting and maintaining the beach. The Cawes family have been longshoremen for generations, and every morning they boil up a mountain of fresh crab which they bake into turnover pasties and serve from a hatch in their kitchen, straight into the hands of the gasping crab lovers queuing outside.
Can you imagine? This is happening here, in our country. If I told you it was Italy there’d be a solid line of Volvos from here to the Adriatic coast and the locals would slap an appellation on the damn things faster than you could say Champagne(TM). But no. It’s Ventnor. Hell, you could be there in a matter of hours.
I’m told that the other place you can get a crab pasty is one Rick Stein’s patisserie in Padstow. That’s as it should be from our foremost fish booster – but dammit, it’s not good enough.
We have fantastic crabs right round our coast. You just have to chuck a pot in the sea and they come leaping out, begging to be eaten. Anyone can knock up pastry. Four-year-olds with rudimentary Play-Doh skills can form a pasty. This is not, as they say, rocket science or even molecular gastronomy, and I swear, once you have eaten one of these things, you will ignore whatever fish and chips, Cornish pasties, kippers, winkles, laver bread, stottie, barmbrack, chacky pig or Hindle wakes you’ve previously sworn by. You will fling these impostors from you with petulant force and take to the streets, praising the crab pasty with ‘British cheers and loud’.
The recipe, such as it is, is so blindingly simple, so utterly right, that it almost constitutes a meme.
Roll some pastry. Cut a circle. Put some crabmeat on one side, season, fold over the top and bake until nicely browned.
The Cawes family, from what I’ve been able to divine with a joy-addled palate, add sweated shredded leeks and maybe some turmeric, and use puff pastry. Rick Stein adds a dab of clotted cream and perhaps some vermouth. I use a thread of saffron in mine.
But this is the whole point. Whether with shortcrust, added potato, white pepper, mace, more brown meat, more white, a shot of Pernod or a twist of tarragon, the variations are as endless as the regions of our nation. We can maintain our bitter local rivalries, our hard-won, treasured prejudices, our ridiculous internecine bitchery while uniting behind a dish that tastes phenomenal whatever you do to it and is utterly unique to us.
Before you head off for your credit crunch British seaside holiday this year, print out this post. As soon as you’ve dropped the cases in the B&B and the kids have stopped vomiting, proceed directly to the prom and hand it to the first slop-merchant in the nearest caravan, stall or shopfront. If there’s any justice in the world they will slap their heads in wonder at the blinding simplicity of the idea. They’ll embrace it as the Wonder of the Age and devote the rest of their lives to the creation of a better, more wonderfully delicious, more British crab pasty.




LCD Soundsystem
The Hold Steady
Jay-Z



Vestas is too vital to lose
The government must now put our money where its mouth was in the energy white paper and support the renewables industry
The chorus of red-green dissent over the proposed closure of Britain’s sole major wind turbine manufacturing plant perfectly indicates just how spectacularly this Labour government has failed both workers and the environment. In microcosm, the situation in the Isle of Wight demonstrates the extent to which ministers have ignored calls to promote the renewables industry – squandering opportunity after opportunity to create or protect jobs in fledgling green industries, as well as to meet the UK’s greenhouse gas reduction targets.
But it also illustrates the creative way in which the unions and the green movement are recognising that they share a common agenda based on an understanding that green politics can deliver both jobs and social justice.
After the NHS and the council, Vestas is the largest employer on the Isle of Wight. The loss of 600 jobs during a time of economic recession will have a devastating effect on the community. But it is clear to all involved that the decision to close the factory has a wider significance beyond the island’s economy, and those workers currently occupying the plant in a valiant attempt to preserve their futures.
The decision to close the plant goes to the very heart of the critical challenge of our time: the need to address the economic and energy crises in a way which also tackles climate change head-on. It brings us right back to the Green New Deal, an innovative plan to restructure the economy through a billion-pound package for investing in green jobs – in renewables and energy efficiency – to dramatically reduce carbon emissions and cut householders’ fuel bills.
In the wake of its white paper on energy, expectations were high that the government might be offering companies like Vestas a real reason to maintain UK operations and thus protect UK jobs, through a more favourable policy environment and long-term investment plans, combined with any necessary loans or guarantees. But the rhetoric on renewable energy has yet to be matched with swift and tangible policy changes to ensure, for example, that the wind turbines we will need to build for a greener and more sustainable future make use of parts created in UK factories – not by workers thousands of miles away.
We are undoubtedly entering a period of public spending cuts. And by all means, let us cut the mindless spending of the previous decade of turbo-consumerism, as well as gratuitous spending on the military, renewal of the Trident weapons system, unnecessary ID card schemes or endless road-building. But we must replace this with targeted investment in the energy efficiency and renewable energy infrastructure we so urgently need to enable us to make a swift transition to a steady-state, zero carbon economy.
Thanks to years of government neglect, the wind energy industry suffers from a significant lack of demand in the UK and Europe. In the face of weighty pressure from the powerful “dirty” energy lobby – coal, gas and nuclear – the government has lacked the courage to give clear signals to encourage sustainable and profitable investment in the fledgling green industries.
The renewable industry has also suffered the consequences of an unwieldy and inconsistent planning system. Only an urgent reform of the UK’s planning system that would put environmental sustainability at its heart can ensure that renewable energy developments can prosper. Where there are pressures for conflicting environmental benefits, such as the need to exploit renewable energy opportunities while also seeking to protect the UK’s rural landscapes, we need improved dialogue and firmer planning regulations to ensure that green spaces, green belts and biodiverse brownfield sites are protected – while at the same time providing space for the renewable energy industry to grow.
The proposed Isle of Wight closure isn’t just a huge blow for the 600 skilled British workers set to lose their jobs. It threatens any attempt the UK makes to position itself at the forefront of global technological efforts to create a greener and more sustainable future. The renewables sector – and the public at large – need something more substantial than intentions laid out in white papers. Ministers could make a positive start by proving to Vestas, and other renewable energy players, that it is seriously committed to providing security for future investment, to a major overhaul in policy and planning, and to the crucial fight against climate change.