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UK backs Blair for EU president, Kinnock says

• Kinnock says government will support former PM
• Tories say: ‘He should be let nowhere near the job’

Tony Blair is a leading contender to become the first president of the EU and has the full backing of the British government for the job, the new Europe minister, Lady Kinnock, announced today.

In 10 years as prime minister, Blair shunned the single currency, backed Bush over Brussels and went to war in Iraq. Many in Europe have never forgiven him.

But the long-held suspicion in European politics was confirmed when Lady Kinnock, the Europe minister in Strasbourg for the parliament’s opening session, said that although Blair had not formally declared his candidacy, it was “certainly” the government position to support him.

“I am sure they would not do it without asking him,” she said. “The UK government is supporting Tony Blair’s candidature for president of the council.”

It was the first definite statement on the matter. The Blair camp, in Jerusalem as he continues his current job as a Middle East envoy, was caught off guard. “Nothing has changed. The job doesn’t exist, so there is nothing to be a candidate for,” said a Blair spokesman.

The post will be created under the Lisbon treaty, streamlining the way the EU is run, if the Irish endorse it in a referendum in early October. Blair would be the first sitting president of the EU, appointed by European government chiefs for a minimum of 30 months and a maximum of five years.

If the Irish vote yes on 2 October, EU leaders are expected to decide who will get the top job at a summit at the end of October.

“Blair is seen by many as someone who has the strength of character, the stature,” said Kinnock.

“People know who he is and he would be someone who would have this role and step into it with a lot of respect and I think would be generally welcomed.”

British diplomats were also caught off-guard and cautioned that Kinnock’s remarks remained speculation.

“The reality is Lisbon has not entered into force,” said a diplomat. “Blair has yet to say whether he will stand.”

Downing Street went further than it had in confirming that Blair was the government’s candidate, if he wanted it, but indicated Kinnock had gone further than No 10 had wanted.

“What the prime minister supports is Tony Blair’s candidature for the president of the European council if Tony Blair decides that that is what he would like to do and as and when such a position exists.

“I’m not sure I would characterise it [Kinnock's remarks] as an announcement. I don’t think it is any surprise that the Europe minister in this government has said that we would support Tony Blair as a candidate.”

William Hague, the shadow foreign secretary, said the post would be “enormously damaging” for Europe. “Any holder is likely to try to centralise power for themselves in Brussels and dominate national foreign policies. In the hands of an operator as ambitious as Tony Blair, that is a near certainty. He should be let nowhere near the job.”

The founder of New Labour will almost certainly encounter stiff opposition, although he has few peers in Europe who could match him for international name recognition or contacts.

Fredrik Reinfeldt, the Swedish prime minister who took over the rotating presidency of the EU this month and who will chair the October summit, is known to be strongly opposed to a “President Blair”.

He told the Guardian todaythat he would not get into any discussion of names for the post, while a senior European diplomat said that the Europe president post would be “the absolute top subject” at the October summit.

José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, the Spanish PM who takes over the EU presidency after Reinfeldt in January, is also an opponent. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany is not believed to be keen. France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy, an early fan of Blair for the role, might calculate that it would be better to side with German and Spanish leaders than support the British.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Tata’s Jaguar to end X-Type car production, sack 300 employees

Tata-owned Jaguar has decided to end the production of its X-Type car by the end of 2009, which would result in 300 job cuts.
The carmaker announced on Wednesday that it would be seeking voluntary redundancies at its factory in Halewood, Merseyside, which is also to close for three weeks as part of an extended shutdown [...]

Tata’s Jaguar to end X-Type car production, sack 300 employees

Tata-owned Jaguar has decided to end the production of its X-Type car by the end of 2009, which would result in 300 job cuts.
The carmaker announced on Wednesday that it would be seeking voluntary redundancies at its factory in Halewood, Merseyside, which is also to close for three weeks as part of an extended shutdown [...]

Jason Rosenbaum: Why Can’t We Have Health Benefits as Good as Chuck Grassley?

Grassley told an Iowa citizen that if they wanted better health care they should get a job with John Deer (which recently laid off hundreds in Iowa) or with the federal government.

Michael Wolff: What Happened to Steve Rattner?

It is, so far, the strange case of Steven Rattner and his abrupt and unexplained exit from Washington and the Obama administration–but insiders assume that…

Obama’s job approval rating goes down: CBS Poll

Amid rising questions about US President Barack Obama’’s handling of the economy, his job approval rating has gone six points down in the past month, a new CBS News poll has found.
Obama’s current approval rating is 57 percent, down by 11 points from its peak of 68 percent in April, and six points from last [...]

Katrina : “a star misses her dad”

Katrina kaif has six sisters out which three are older and another three are younger. Even she has one brother who is professional skier and rock climber.
All the seven kids were raised with her mother who was a Harvard graduate and a successful lawyer but gave it all up in order to join [...]

Lyle says Montgomerie cheated

• 1985 Open champion angry at 2010 Ryder Cup snub
• Captaincy rival questions fellow Scot’s suitability

Sandy Lyle, whose withdrawal from last year’s Open after nine holes in driving rain is widely assumed to have scuppered his chances of becoming 2010 Ryder Cup captain, claimed yesterday that Colin Montgomerie eventually got the job despite being guilty of “a form of cheating”.

“That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles,” said the 51-year-old Scot, opening a can of worms that Montgomerie, and those who run European golf, hoped had long been closed. “You have Monty dropping the ball badly – that’s what you would call a form of cheating.

“If anything was going to be held against Monty, you would think, ‘Yeah, well that’s a case where he was breaking the rules.’ And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos.”

In the aftermath of his selection as captain this year Montgomerie had spoken emotionally about receiving the endorsement of the European Tour’s players committee – the same one that upbraided him four years ago over his conduct during the Indonesian Open, where he appeared to take an incorrect drop after a rain delay.

Lyle’s other comment was a reference to the 2002 Volvo Masters, when Montgomerie was asked by rules officials to look at footage which appeared to show his ball moving as he was about to address it. No penalty was imposed after the Scot confirmed to those officials he had not grounded his club and he went on to share the title with Bernhard Langer.

After the Indonesian Open incident, Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing by rules officials but subsequently he apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity. That was supposed to be that, although a small but dedicated band of naysayers will never forget or forgive.

Clearly Lyle is a paid-up member of that club, although his criticism of his fellow Scot will inevitably be viewed against the backdrop of the two men’s complicated personal relations. At one stage Montgomerie was Lyle’s most public supporter for the job of the Ryder Cup captain in 2010 – at least he was until he got the job himself. Since then, according to Lyle, the pair have had minimal contact. “I rang him a few times after the decision but didn’t hear back. Eventually I got a letter but I got the impression it was written by his manager,” he said.

Lyle, who won the 1985 Open at Royal St George’s and the 1987 Masters, is the only member of European golf’s so-called Big Five from the 80s and 90s who has never captained a Ryder Cup team. He had long campaigned for, and believed he would get, the job in Wales next year. Lyle then hinted he would gladly accept the job of vice-captain in 2010 if asked by Montgomerie, although that would now seem unlikely, to say the least.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lyle says Montgomerie cheated

• 1985 Open champion angry at 2010 Ryder Cup snub
• Captaincy rival questions fellow Scot’s suitability

Sandy Lyle, whose withdrawal from last year’s Open after nine holes in driving rain is widely assumed to have scuppered his chances of becoming 2010 Ryder Cup captain, claimed yesterday that Colin Montgomerie eventually got the job despite being guilty of “a form of cheating”.

“That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles,” said the 51-year-old Scot, opening a can of worms that Montgomerie, and those who run European golf, hoped had long been closed. “You have Monty dropping the ball badly – that’s what you would call a form of cheating.

“If anything was going to be held against Monty, you would think, ‘Yeah, well that’s a case where he was breaking the rules.’ And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos.”

In the aftermath of his selection as captain this year Montgomerie had spoken emotionally about receiving the endorsement of the European Tour’s players committee – the same one that upbraided him four years ago over his conduct during the Indonesian Open, where he appeared to take an incorrect drop after a rain delay.

Lyle’s other comment was a reference to the 2002 Volvo Masters, when Montgomerie was asked by rules officials to look at footage which appeared to show his ball moving as he was about to address it. No penalty was imposed after the Scot confirmed to those officials he had not grounded his club and he went on to share the title with Bernhard Langer.

After the Indonesian Open incident, Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing by rules officials but subsequently he apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity. That was supposed to be that, although a small but dedicated band of naysayers will never forget or forgive.

Clearly Lyle is a paid-up member of that club, although his criticism of his fellow Scot will inevitably be viewed against the backdrop of the two men’s complicated personal relations. At one stage Montgomerie was Lyle’s most public supporter for the job of the Ryder Cup captain in 2010 – at least he was until he got the job himself. Since then, according to Lyle, the pair have had minimal contact. “I rang him a few times after the decision but didn’t hear back. Eventually I got a letter but I got the impression it was written by his manager,” he said.

Lyle, who won the 1985 Open at Royal St George’s and the 1987 Masters, is the only member of European golf’s so-called Big Five from the 80s and 90s who has never captained a Ryder Cup team. He had long campaigned for, and believed he would get, the job in Wales next year. Lyle then hinted he would gladly accept the job of vice-captain in 2010 if asked by Montgomerie, although that would now seem unlikely, to say the least.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lyle says Montgomerie cheated

• 1985 Open champion angry at 2010 Ryder Cup snub
• Captaincy rival questions fellow Scot’s suitability

Sandy Lyle, whose withdrawal from last year’s Open after nine holes in driving rain is widely assumed to have scuppered his chances of becoming 2010 Ryder Cup captain, claimed yesterday that Colin Montgomerie eventually got the job despite being guilty of “a form of cheating”.

“That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles,” said the 51-year-old Scot, opening a can of worms that Montgomerie, and those who run European golf, hoped had long been closed. “You have Monty dropping the ball badly – that’s what you would call a form of cheating.

“If anything was going to be held against Monty, you would think, ‘Yeah, well that’s a case where he was breaking the rules.’ And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos.”

In the aftermath of his selection as captain this year Montgomerie had spoken emotionally about receiving the endorsement of the European Tour’s players committee – the same one that upbraided him four years ago over his conduct during the Indonesian Open, where he appeared to take an incorrect drop after a rain delay.

Lyle’s other comment was a reference to the 2002 Volvo Masters, when Montgomerie was asked by rules officials to look at footage which appeared to show his ball moving as he was about to address it. No penalty was imposed after the Scot confirmed to those officials he had not grounded his club and he went on to share the title with Bernhard Langer.

After the Indonesian Open incident, Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing by rules officials but subsequently he apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity. That was supposed to be that, although a small but dedicated band of naysayers will never forget or forgive.

Clearly Lyle is a paid-up member of that club, although his criticism of his fellow Scot will inevitably be viewed against the backdrop of the two men’s complicated personal relations. At one stage Montgomerie was Lyle’s most public supporter for the job of the Ryder Cup captain in 2010 – at least he was until he got the job himself. Since then, according to Lyle, the pair have had minimal contact. “I rang him a few times after the decision but didn’t hear back. Eventually I got a letter but I got the impression it was written by his manager,” he said.

Lyle, who won the 1985 Open at Royal St George’s and the 1987 Masters, is the only member of European golf’s so-called Big Five from the 80s and 90s who has never captained a Ryder Cup team. He had long campaigned for, and believed he would get, the job in Wales next year. Lyle then hinted he would gladly accept the job of vice-captain in 2010 if asked by Montgomerie, although that would now seem unlikely, to say the least.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lyle says Montgomerie cheated

• 1985 Open champion angry at 2010 Ryder Cup snub
• Captaincy rival questions fellow Scot’s suitability

Sandy Lyle, whose withdrawal from last year’s Open after nine holes in driving rain is widely assumed to have scuppered his chances of becoming 2010 Ryder Cup captain, claimed yesterday that Colin Montgomerie eventually got the job despite being guilty of “a form of cheating”.

“That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles,” said the 51-year-old Scot, opening a can of worms that Montgomerie, and those who run European golf, hoped had long been closed. “You have Monty dropping the ball badly – that’s what you would call a form of cheating.

“If anything was going to be held against Monty, you would think, ‘Yeah, well that’s a case where he was breaking the rules.’ And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos.”

In the aftermath of his selection as captain this year Montgomerie had spoken emotionally about receiving the endorsement of the European Tour’s players committee – the same one that upbraided him four years ago over his conduct during the Indonesian Open, where he appeared to take an incorrect drop after a rain delay.

Lyle’s other comment was a reference to the 2002 Volvo Masters, when Montgomerie was asked by rules officials to look at footage which appeared to show his ball moving as he was about to address it. No penalty was imposed after the Scot confirmed to those officials he had not grounded his club and he went on to share the title with Bernhard Langer.

After the Indonesian Open incident, Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing by rules officials but subsequently he apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity. That was supposed to be that, although a small but dedicated band of naysayers will never forget or forgive.

Clearly Lyle is a paid-up member of that club, although his criticism of his fellow Scot will inevitably be viewed against the backdrop of the two men’s complicated personal relations. At one stage Montgomerie was Lyle’s most public supporter for the job of the Ryder Cup captain in 2010 – at least he was until he got the job himself. Since then, according to Lyle, the pair have had minimal contact. “I rang him a few times after the decision but didn’t hear back. Eventually I got a letter but I got the impression it was written by his manager,” he said.

Lyle, who won the 1985 Open at Royal St George’s and the 1987 Masters, is the only member of European golf’s so-called Big Five from the 80s and 90s who has never captained a Ryder Cup team. He had long campaigned for, and believed he would get, the job in Wales next year. Lyle then hinted he would gladly accept the job of vice-captain in 2010 if asked by Montgomerie, although that would now seem unlikely, to say the least.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Lyle says Montgomerie cheated

• 1985 Open champion angry at 2010 Ryder Cup snub
• Captaincy rival questions fellow Scot’s suitability

Sandy Lyle, whose withdrawal from last year’s Open after nine holes in driving rain is widely assumed to have scuppered his chances of becoming 2010 Ryder Cup captain, claimed yesterday that Colin Montgomerie eventually got the job despite being guilty of “a form of cheating”.

“That is far worse than someone pulling out [of the Open] because of sore knuckles,” said the 51-year-old Scot, opening a can of worms that Montgomerie, and those who run European golf, hoped had long been closed. “You have Monty dropping the ball badly – that’s what you would call a form of cheating.

“If anything was going to be held against Monty, you would think, ‘Yeah, well that’s a case where he was breaking the rules.’ And there have been other times where he has been called in to see videos.”

In the aftermath of his selection as captain this year Montgomerie had spoken emotionally about receiving the endorsement of the European Tour’s players committee – the same one that upbraided him four years ago over his conduct during the Indonesian Open, where he appeared to take an incorrect drop after a rain delay.

Lyle’s other comment was a reference to the 2002 Volvo Masters, when Montgomerie was asked by rules officials to look at footage which appeared to show his ball moving as he was about to address it. No penalty was imposed after the Scot confirmed to those officials he had not grounded his club and he went on to share the title with Bernhard Langer.

After the Indonesian Open incident, Montgomerie was cleared of any wrong-doing by rules officials but subsequently he apologised for an “unwitting error” and donated his £24,000 prize money to charity. That was supposed to be that, although a small but dedicated band of naysayers will never forget or forgive.

Clearly Lyle is a paid-up member of that club, although his criticism of his fellow Scot will inevitably be viewed against the backdrop of the two men’s complicated personal relations. At one stage Montgomerie was Lyle’s most public supporter for the job of the Ryder Cup captain in 2010 – at least he was until he got the job himself. Since then, according to Lyle, the pair have had minimal contact. “I rang him a few times after the decision but didn’t hear back. Eventually I got a letter but I got the impression it was written by his manager,” he said.

Lyle, who won the 1985 Open at Royal St George’s and the 1987 Masters, is the only member of European golf’s so-called Big Five from the 80s and 90s who has never captained a Ryder Cup team. He had long campaigned for, and believed he would get, the job in Wales next year. Lyle then hinted he would gladly accept the job of vice-captain in 2010 if asked by Montgomerie, although that would now seem unlikely, to say the least.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Michael Sigman: Language Patrol

The most risible language contortions this side of Dick Cheney’s tortured definitions of “torture” surround mavericky Sarah Palin, whose regular butchering of the English language rivals that of George W. Bush.

P.G. Sittenfeld: From Lehman to Landscaping: A Laid-Off Banker, One Year Later

After losing my job, I watched Lehman’s stock price until the whole ship went under last fall. I needed a new source of income, so I moved to Dublin, Ohio to work for a lawn care company.

Moscow migrants

Millions of migrant workers live in Russia, with many of them coming from Central Asia, especially Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

train arriving in Dushanbe station

But since the onset of the global economic crisis many of them have lost their jobs.

This has led to a big reduction in the amount of money sent back to Central Asia. Tajikistan relies on such remittances for around one-third of its income, but the International Organisation for Migration says Tajik remittances could fall by up to 30% this year.

Martin Vennard has been speaking to Central Asians in Moscow about their situation.

Bakhtiyor, 22, Dushanbe, Tajikistan

"I’ve been working in Moscow for 18 months now. I do maintenance and building work in one of the city’s main parks, Kolomenskoye.

Bakhtiyor, 22, Dushanbe, Tajikistan

I share a two-roomed flat with up to five other migrant workers.

I earn about 18,000 roubles ($600) a month and send my parents about 15,000 roubles.

I do this job all year round, but it’s not too hard. The crisis hasn’t affected us yet, but there’s not a lot of work in Moscow at the moment. I’m glad I still have this job.

There are a lot of Central Asian people in Moscow and a lot of my friends have lost their jobs. Some of them have found other work, but some of them are still looking for jobs, while others have gone home to Tajikistan.

"

Tolik, 23, Kashkadarya region, southern Uzbekistan

"I’ve been in Moscow for three years, but have been unemployed for more than three months.

I lost my job at a car wash because of the economic crisis. I have lots of friends who have lost their jobs and gone home to Uzbekistan.

I used to earn the equivalent of about 25,000 roubles ($800) a month, two-thirds of which I sent home to my family.

Now I rely on my flatmate, who works as a street cleaner, for support.

I was a sportsman back in Uzbekistan. I was a regional karate champion and didn’t smoke or drink. But since I lost my job I’ve been drinking a lot of beer and vodka and smoking.

I want to go back home and resume my sports career. I sometimes watch my friends playing sport here in Moscow.

The separation from my fiancee, who is in Uzbekistan, has affected her health.

She calls me everyday and is missing me a lot.

"

Rasul, 23, Vakhsh, Tajikistan

"I’m out of work now after spending almost a month in hospital with appendicitis and an ulcer.

Rasul, 23, Vakhsh, Tajikistan

I used to work here in the park with Bakhtiyor and the others, but I now plan to go back to Tajikistan.

My wife and six-month-old daughter are living there.

Before coming to Moscow I played football a lot in Tajikistan because there aren’t many jobs available and what there are pay very badly.

It’s difficult to get a good job there.

I like Moscow a lot. There are many things to do here and I’ll miss it.

"

Bekzod, 22, Karshi, southern Uzbekistan

"I work here in Moscow as a street cleaner. I’ve been working for a local council for the last two years.

I live in a hostel with other migrant workers in southwest Moscow.

I earn up to 18,000 roubles ($600) a month in winter and was paid around 12,000 roubles a month in summer. I send home around 900 roubles to my family.

I don’t know how much we’ll be paid this summer because of the economic crisis. Normally I get paid less in the summer, because the job is much harder in the snow and ice.

"</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Andy Borowitz: Ensign Favors Stimulus of his Package

Senator John Ensign (R-Nev) broke with his fellow Republicans today, telling reporters in Washington that he favors additional stimulus of his package. “I misread my…

Sharon Glassman: What is Work? Finding Your True Career in Life’s Second Act

There are no second acts in American lives, the tragic ol’ F. Scott Fitzgerald quotation goes. Cut your whining! The new careerists say, for a…

Lee Stranahan: WATCH : Interview With Sarah Palin’s Former Speechwriter

He’s the man behind the magic but now he’s out of a job. Watch our exclusive interview with Palin wordsmith Dan Tubagoo….

George Harrison:
Let It Roll: Songs of George Harrison

By: Ron Hart

align=right src="http://images.jambase.com/bands/Wednesday/HarrisonRoll.jpg">

Over the last ten years, Capitol/EMI has been notorious for treating its reissue campaign of George Harrison‘s post-Beatles catalog like some kind of under-appreciated stepchild whose parents force ugly new clothes and disgusting new food onto.
First was the 30th Anniversary reissue of the Quiet One’s masterpiece, All Things Must Pass, from early 2001, considered by many to be the single greatest work by a Beatle outside of the band itself. In addition to the ghastly “colorization” of the original album artwork that would even make the people who tarnished It’s A Wonderful Life cringe, whoever engineered the remaster somehow buried the vocals and guitars even deeper in the mix than original producer Phil Spector had already done initially with his Wall of Sound recording style. Then, there was the label’s 2005 hatchet job on Harrison’s sublime 1971 double-live album chronicling his acclaimed Concert for Bangladesh. While the remastering job of the actual live cuts themselves was great, they cut out the majority of the breaks between songs, destroying the natural flow of the concert that made you feel as though you were right inside Madison Square Garden when listening to the original LP. And worst of all, Capitol finally got its way with the album artwork. After losing its original battle with Harrison over the cover concept – that stunning, iconic image of a malnourished refugee child sitting cross-legged in front of an empty bowl of food, which the suits thought was too depressing and would hurt album sales and then wound up becoming a bestseller and winning the Grammy for Album of the Year in 1973—the label went with the cover they had wanted all along, an image of Harrison from the accompanying concert film, for the reissue (and doing so after Harrison’s tragic demise due to cancer in November 2001, thus adding a whole new layer of sleaze to the whole predicament). Meanwhile, the label’s 2006 reissue of 1973′s Living In The Material World as well as the box set covering the albums released on the guitarist’s own Dark Horse imprint were modest campaigns that somewhat offered a reprieve for fans otherwise annoyed by the label handling of the Quiet One’s catalog thus far, in that it vastly improved upon the original issues in both sound quality and packaging (although some beefier bonus material would have been nice).

Now comes Let it Roll: Songs by George Harrison, a single-disc retrospective released by the EMI group on June 16 touting itself as the first-ever collection spanning the length of George’s career. Compiled largely by George’s widow Olivia Harrison and engineered by legendary Beatles producer George Martin’s son Giles Martin, who did such an outstanding job in 2007 mashing up classic Fabs tracks for the soundtrack to Cirque de Soleil’s Beatles-themed production Love at the Mirage in Las Vegas, the 19-track collection focuses primarily on Harrison’s biggest successes as a singles artist, something he was much stronger at as opposed to his former mates John Lennon and Paul McCartney, who exhibited supremacy creating both killer hit songs and outstanding full-length albums to back them up. Harrison, meanwhile, produced albums that basically consisted of one or two really great songs backed by a majority of filler material that was neither here nor there. True, Harrison did produce some gems in his solo career beyond All Things Must Pass, notably 1973′s Living In The Material World (which, to its credit, EMI did a masterful job reissuing back in 2006) and his 1987 comeback album, Cloud Nine. Not to mention 2002′s posthumous swan song Brainwashed and his pair of experimental solo albums he released while still with The Beatles, 1968′s Moog-tastic Electronic Sound and 1969′s Indian-flavored drone-fest Wonderwall Music, both of which remain woefully out of print at press time.

While there have been George Harrison compilations in the past, none have chronicled the span of his entire career. And though Let It Roll is not exactly a completist’s ideal set, as this collection could have easily been beefed up to anthology status given there are much stronger points in Harrison’s solo catalog than, say, Ringo Starr, but it certainly does an excellent job in gathering the guitarist’s sonic crème de la crème. Sequenced not by chronology but almost seemingly by vibe, the 19 tracks that ultimately made the cut here interweave as though they have existed side by side on the same long player for all these years. For instance, the segue between Brainwashed‘s “Rising Son” and Cloud Nine‘s phenomenal tribute to his old bandmates, “When We Was Fab,” flows one into the other so perfectly. The same can be said for the blending of “Blow Away” off Harrison’s eponymous 1979 effort into the thankfully-included “Cheer Down” from the Lethal Weapon 2 soundtrack, not to mention “Give Me Love (Give Me Peace On Earth)” going into Let It Roll‘s title track, “The Ballad of Sir Frankie Crisp,” originally featured on All Things Must Pass. And while stubbornly elitist Beatles fans (like this writer) might wonder why the likes of “Old Brown Shoe” and “Blue Jay Way” were excluded from the fray here, the inclusion of his big three from his Fab Four output – “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” “Something” and “Here Comes The Sun” – is imperative to any collection with GH’s name on it, and the fact that the versions came from the Bangladesh concert album seems more appropriate for this project. Another great inclusion on this set is Harrison’s rarely-spoken-of cover of Bob Dylan’s “I Don’t Want to Do It,” which was originally featured on the soundtrack to 1985′s comedic bomb Porky’s Revenge (which should give you a good clue as to why it was little heard).

Sure, one can rail against the powers that be who oversaw the creation and production of Let It Roll and their failure to include such glaring absences as “You” off his 1975 EMI swan song Extra Texture and “Crackerbox Palace” from 1976′s diamond-in-the-rough Thirty Three & 1/3 – his first release on Dark Horse. It’s understood there are only 80 minutes on a CD, but these omissions – not to mention the exclusions of such rarities as Harrison’s working version of Ringo Starr’s “It Don’t Come Easy” or “Bangla Desh,” the 1971 charity single that spearheaded the famed concert and has only appeared on album once via 1976′s The Best of George Harrison collection – could have made this very good single-disc set into an excellent double-disc compendium.

Nonetheless, any Beatles fan, be they casual or hardcore, would benefit from adding Let It Roll: Songs by George Harrison to their CD shelves, as it is gorgeously packaged in a tastefully designed digipak with a 28-page booklet loaded with great information and amazing photos, making it one of the finer justices given to any kind of Beatle-related reissue in recent years (don’t even get me started on the John Lennon stuff). A quality George Harrison best-of has been a long, long time coming, and one can only be grateful that EMI has finally done right by this amazing man and his cherished legacy.

JamBase | Honored
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Seven Great Questions to Ask at a Job Interview

Seven Great Questions to Ask at a Job Interview

If you are going for an interview as a prospective employee then you should do some research.  Read the job description and requirements carefully.  Browse the web site to see how the organization presents itself.  Search for news items and comments about the company on news sites and blogs.

For the interview itself you should dress smartly and appropriately.  It is important to have some questions prepared and here are a few that could really help:

1.  What exactly would my day-to-day responsibilities be? It is essential that you clearly understand your role and the tasks that you would be expected to undertake.  It is easy to make assumptions and get the wrong impression of what the work would be so it is vital for both sides that there is clarity in what is expected of you.  If the interviewer cannot give a clear answer then this is a worrying sign, so politely follow up with more questions.  Some people even ask to see exactly where they will sit.

2.  What are the opportunities for training and career advancement? This question serves two purposes.  It helps you to understand where the job might lead and what skills you might acquire.  It also signals that you are ambitious and thinking ahead.

3.  What is the biggest challenge facing the organization today? This sort of question takes the interview away from the detail and towards strategic issues.  It allows to you see and discuss the bigger picture.  It proves that you are interested in more than just the 9 to 5 aspects of the job.  It can lead to interesting discussions that can show you in a good light – especially if you have done some intelligent preparation.  If appropriate you can follow up this question with some questions about the objectives of the department and the manager who is interviewing you.

4.  When did you join? After the interviewer has asked a number of questions about you it can make a good change to ask a gentle question about them.  People often like talking about themselves and if you can get them talking about their progress in the company you can learn useful and interesting things.

5.  What are the criteria that you are looking for in the successful candidate for this position? The job advertisement may have listed what was wanted in a candidate but it is very useful to hear the criteria directly from the interviewer.  The more that you can discover about what they want and how they will make the decision the better placed you are to influence that decision.

6.  How do you feel that I measure up to your requirements for this position? This follows on naturally from the previous questions.  It may seem a little pushy but it is a perfectly fair thing to ask.  In sales parlance this is a ‘trial close’.  If they say that you are a good fit then you can ask whether there is any reason you might not be offered the job.  If they say that you are lacking in some key skill or attribute then you can move into objection handling mode and point out some relevant experience or a countervailing strength.

7.  Would you like to hear what I could do to really help your department? If you want the job then this is a great question to ask at the end of the interview.  Most interviewers will reply, ‘Yes.’  Drawing on what you have learnt in the conversation, you can give a short sales pitch on why you fit the criteria and why your strengths and ideas will siginficantly assist the boss to meet their objectives.  Make it short, direct and clear with the emphasis on the benefits for them of having you in the team.  At the end ask something like, ‘how does that sound?’

Many candidates take a passive role at the interview.  They competently answer the questions that are put to them but they never take the initiative by asking intelligent questions that steer the interview in a helpful direction.  If you are a proactive candidate who asks the sorts of questions given above then you will be seen as more dynamic and you will significantly increase your chances of being offered the job.


Paul Sloane is an author and speaker on leadership, innovation and lateral thinking. His most recent book is The Innovative Leader. He helps organizations improve innovation, creativity and leadership. He is the founder of Destination Innovation. He has written 15 books of lateral thinking puzzles and hosts the lateral puzzles forum.