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Lucinda Williams: 30th Ann Tour

Lucinda Williams Announces 30th Anniversary Tour

Three Night Stands In NYC & Chicago To Feature Sets From Select Periods Of her Career



Lucinda Williams

Three-time Grammy Award-winner Lucinda Williams announces a series of special performances to
celebrate her 30th anniversary as a recording artist.

The 30th Anniversary Tour begins on September 18 with a very special show at
First Avenue in Minneapolis, MN. On October 3, 4 & 5 Williams will play a
three-night stand at New York’s The Fillmore at Irving Plaza, and will hit
Chicago a week later for another three-night stand at the Park West on
October 13, 14 & 15. The first set of the three-night runs will feature
selections from specific periods of Williams’ career. The opening
night will feature songs from 1979-1989, in which she recorded Ramblin’,
Happy Woman Blues and Lucinda Williams. The second night will cover music
from 1992-2001, when Williams recorded Sweet Old World, and Grammy
Award-winners Car Wheels On A Gravel Road and Essence. On the final night of each run, Williams will perform music from 2004 to present, in which she
recorded World Without Tears, West and her latest acclaimed album Little
Honey
. Following each opening set will be a full second set of songs from
throughout Williams celebrated career.

Williams will also be performing a two night stand in Toronto on October
10 & 11. The first night, selections from Ramblin’, Happy Woman Blues,
Lucinda Williams, Essence and World Without Tears will be performed over two sets. The second night will feature two sets of music from Sweet Old World,
Car Wheels, West and Little Honey. Additional multi-night shows will be
added in early 2010.

During the 30th Anniversary Tour, Williams will make one night stops in many
other cities where she will be performing one long set of songs from her
entire catalogue, accompanied by her band Buick 6.

Lucinda Williams Tour Dates

08/18/09 Tue Greek Theatre Los Angeles, CA

08/29/09 Sat Harrah’s Casino Stateline, NV

08/30/09 Sun Outside Lands Festival San Francisco, CA

09/18/09 Fri First Avenue Minneapolis, MN

09/22/09 Tue Pabst Theater Milwaukee, WI

09/23/09 Wed Bluebird Bloomington, IN

09/25/09 Fri Carolina Theatre Greensboro, NC

09/26/09 Sat Charlottesville Pavilion Charlottesville, VA

09/27/09 Sun Town Point Park Norfolk, VA

09/29/09 Tue Rams Head Live Baltimore, MD

09/30/09 Wed Grand Opera House Wilmington, DE

10/03/09 Sat The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/04/09 Sun The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/05/09 Mon The Fillmore at Irving Plaza New York, NY

10/07/09 Wed Lupo’s Heartbreak Hotel Providence, RI

10/08/09 Thu Bardavon 1869 Opera House Poughkeepsie, NY

10/10/09 Sat Queen Elizabeth Theatre Toronto, ON

10/11/09 Sun Queen Elizabeth Theatre Toronto, ON

10/13/09 Tue Park West Chicago, IL

10/14/09 Wed Park West Chicago, IL

10/15/09 Thu Park West Chicago, IL

10/17/09 Sat The Pageant St. Louis, MO



Living Colour: New Album & Tour

Living Colour Announce North American Tour

New Album The Chair In The Doorway Set For Release September 15


Living Colour

Living Colour has announced North American tour dates in support of the new album The Chair In The Doorway. The 28-date run will be bookended by performances at the Highline Ballroom in New York City, as they appear August 11 opening for The Roots, at their weekly Tuesday night jam session, and then again on October 30 for their own headline performance.

The Chair In The Doorway, set for release September 15, was recorded at Sono Studios just outside of Prague in the Czech Republic. Renowned producer Count (Galactic, Lyrics Born, No Doubt) was onboard to helm the sessions, while Ron St. Germain (U2, Mos Def, Muse) mixed the album. The 11-track collection is Living Colour’s most personal collection of songs yet with razor sharp lyrical observations and kinetic jams that seamlessly weave elements of metal, funk and soul. Vernon Reid described the album as, “an unintentional concept record about life and how we are all in this thing together.”

Living Colour Tour Dates:


08/11/09 Mon Highline Ballroom New York, NY

08/14/09 Fri Patronaat Haarlem, NL

09/01/09 Tue Birchmere Alexandria, VA

09/02/09 Wed Bottle & Cork Dewey Beach, DE

09/03/09 Thu World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA

09/04/09 Fri The Crazy Donkey Farmingdale, NY

09/06/09 Sun Infinity Music Hall & Bistso Norfolk, CT

09/08/09 Tue Tupelo Music Hall Londonderry, NH

09/09/09 Wed Fairfield Theatre Stage One Fairfield, CT

09/10/09 Thu Johnny D’s Somerville, MA

09/11/09 Fri Mexicali Live Teaneck, NJ

09/12/09 Sat Rams Head On Stage Annapolis, MD

09/14/09 Mon The Loft Atlanta, GA

09/15/09 Tue House of Blues Orlando, FL

09/16/09 Wed Jannus Landing St. Petersburg, FL

09/18/09 Fri Emo’s Alternative Lounge Austin, TX

09/19/09 Sat Granada Theater Dallas, TX

09/20/09 Sun Warehouse Live Houston, TX

09/23/09 Wed Canes Bar and Grill San Diego, CA

09/24/09 Thu Key Club West Hollywood, CA

09/25/09 Fri The Regency Ballroom San Francisco, CA

09/26/09 Sat Berbati’s Pan Portland, OR

09/27/09 Sun Studio Seven Seattle, WA

09/30/09 Wed Fine Line Music Cafe Minneapolis, MN

10/02/09 Fri Magic Bag Ferndale, MI

10/03/09 Sat Lee’s Palace Toronto, ON

10/04/09 Sun Double Door Chicago, IL

10/05/09 Mon Grog Shop Cleveland, OH

10/16/09 Fri Circo Voador Rio De Janeiro, BR

10/30/09 Fri Highline Ballroom New York, NY



Train robber Biggs awaits release

Ronnie Biggs

Great Train Robber Ronnie Biggs is preparing for his formal release from prison after being granted freedom on compassionate grounds.

Biggs is severely ill with pneumonia and Justice Secretary Jack Straw approved his release on Thursday after being told he is not likely to recover.

The Ministry of Justice is expected to sign-off Biggs’s licence conditions later, granting his formal release.

The 79-year-old – in a Norfolk hospital – is said to be "over the moon".

Biggs’s son Michael told the BBC he was "absolutely delighted" Mr Straw had reversed his decision on his father’s parole, which he had refused last month.

Speaking outside Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital on Thursday night, Michael Biggs said common sense had "prevailed".

"I’ve just been able to spend some time with my father and he, in his own words, it took him a long time using a spelling board, but he is over the moon," he said.

"We are very hopeful that my father will be able to survive the next few days.

"I’m just very hopeful that my father can have another few months ahead of him in his life"


Biggs’s son Michael

How the robbery unfolded

Profile: Ronnie Biggs

Send your comments

Michael Biggs

"My father, at present, is not capable of walking, is not capable of reading, writing, speaking – he cannot eat or drink."

Last month, Mr Straw said the 79-year-old should not be granted parole as he remained "wholly unrepentant" about his involvement in the 1963 robbery of a mail train.

However, on Thursday Mr Straw said: "The medical evidence clearly shows that Mr Biggs is very ill and that his condition has deteriorated recently, culminating in his readmission to hospital.

"His condition is not expected to improve. It is for that reason that I am granting Mr Biggs compassionate release on medical grounds."

The inmate of Norwich Prison, who was serving a 30-year sentence, was taken to hospital in June suffering from a chest infection and was readmitted on Tuesday.

Michael Biggs explained his father was "completely incapable of re-offending".

"He has rehabilitated himself inside and outside of prison," he said.

"All I can say is we are extremely happy at the moment.

"I’m just very hopeful that my father can have another few months ahead of him in his life."

The decision means Biggs will spend his 80th birthday on Saturday as a free man, although his condition means he will be unable to celebrate his release.

Timeline: Ronnie Biggs

In pictures: Life on the run

Who were the robbers

Ronnie Biggs

The three Prison Service staff who remained watching him overnight will be withdrawn later, once the licence for his release is finalised.

If his condition were to improve, Biggs would be transferred to a nursing home in Barnet, north London, near his son’s home.

Biggs, originally from Lambeth, south London, was a member of a 15-strong gang which attacked the Glasgow to London mail train at Ledburn, Buckinghamshire, in August 1963, and made off with £2.6m in used banknotes.

The train’s driver Jack Mills suffered head injuries during the robbery.

Biggs was given a 30-year sentence, but after 15 months he escaped from Wandsworth prison, in south-west London, by climbing a 30ft wall and fleeing in a furniture van.

He was on the run for more than 30 years, living in Australia and Brazil, before returning to the UK voluntarily in 2001 in search of medical treatment.

He was sent to Belmarsh high-security prison on his return before being moved to a specialist medical unit at Norwich prison.


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

James Denselow: Crossing into the Red Zone

Living for a few days as an Afghan villager or international soldier would show Western civilians the realities of war. The paradox of Afghanistan, columnist…

Cameron hails ‘historic’ win for Tories in Norwich North

Public has had enough of Gordon Brown, says Tory leader as he congratulates his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith

David Cameron today hailed the Tories’ byelection victory in Norwich North as a “historic” result for his party and insisted it showed that the public had “had enough” of Gordon Brown.

On his seventh visit to the constituency since the contest began, the Tory leader heaped praise on his newest MP, 27-year-old Chloe Smith, for turning a Labour majority of 5,000 into a majority of more than 7,000 for the Conservatives.

“This in a seat that has been controlled by Labour for 45 of the last 60 years,” he said.

Cameron added: “We have seen an absolutely historic victory in Norwich North. It shows this country has had enough of Gordon Brown’s dividing lies. This country has had enough of misleading claims about opponents. This country has had enough about misleading claims about Tory cuts.”

Cameron spoke after his party inflicted a humiliating byelection defeat on the prime minister.

In the first electoral test in a Westminster seat since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked the House of Commons, Smith won the Norfolk seat with a majority of 7,348 and became the youngest MP in the Commons.

Labour’s defeat, in a seat held comfortably by the party since 1997, is the fifth byelection blow Brown has suffered since he took over at No 10.

If the result was repeated across the country in a general election, the Tories would be swept to power with a Commons majority of 218.

The Tories would have 434 MPs, with Labour on 107, the Liberal Democrats 79, and others 30.

Responding to the news, the prime minister admitted it was a disappointing result but said no party could take a “great deal of cheer” from it because all three of the main parties had lost votes.

“The Conservative vote went down, the Liberal vote went down; only the fringe parties saw their votes going up,” he said.

“I think it’s a lesson that we have all got to observe. We have got to clean up Westminster politics and we are doing that. But we have got to keep our eye on what is important to people and that is the economic recovery.

“We’ve got to deal with all problems that arise. That includes swine flu, where we’re acting in a calm, organised and ordered way to deal with the problem and help people in every part of the country.”

Cameron visited the constituency six times during the campaign, which was triggered by the resignation of Labour’s Ian Gibson following the MPs’ expenses scandal. The popular MP had a 5,459 majority at the last election in 2005.

Following today’s count, Smith won with a total 13,591 votes. Labour’s Chris Ostrowski, who missed the final days of campaigning due to swine flu, received 6,243 votes and the Liberal Democrat candidate April Pond came third with 4,803 votes.

The UK Independence party pipped the Greens to fourth place by 4,068 votes to 3,350.

The 16.49% swing from Labour to the Conservatives at Norwich North was just short of the 17.61% at last year’s Crewe and Nantwich byelection.

Turnout was 45.88% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09%.

Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, who stood down as an MP after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand for the party at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.

In her acceptance speech, Smith paid tribute to her predecessor, saying he was a “strong, independent” voice. She pledged to represent the people of Norwich North with the same honesty and conviction as he had.

“I will be a tireless champion for local people,” she said. “You have invested great responsibility in me. It will be an honour to serve you and I will not let you down.”

Ben Bradshaw, the culture secretary, insisted that the party had been right to take tough action against MPs over their expenses despite today’s result.

Jo Swinson, the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat MP had held the unofficial title of “baby of the house” until today.

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


Labour fears third place in Norwich North byelection

Tories look on course to overturn 5,459 majority, with Labour locked in battle with Lib Dems for second place

Gordon Brown was today bracing himself for the possibility that Labour could be pushed into a humiliating third place in the Norwich North byelection.

As counting began in the first election since the MPs’ expenses scandal rocked Westminster, the Conservatives look on course to overturn the 5,459 majority won in 2005 by Ian Gibson, with Labour locked in a battle with the Liberal Democrats for second place.

David Cameron has visited the constituency six times during the campaign, underlining the opposition’s determination to snatch the seat for its candidate, Chloe Smith.

The election in the Norfolk seat, comfortably held by Labour since 1997, was caused by the resignation of Ian Gibson. But with turnout at 45% – down almost a third on the 2005 general election figure of 61.09% – Labour supporters are thought to have stayed at home in protest against the party’s treatment of Gibson, a popular local figure.

Gibson quit after Labour ruled that he would not be allowed to stand at the next election because he had used parliamentary expenses to fund a flat that he subsequently sold to his daughter at a discount.

Some voters told the party they would not vote for his would-be replacement, 28-year-old Chris Ostrowski, who is recovering from swine flu, because of the way Gibson was treated.

One Labour insider said: “The Conservatives are trying to play down what is happening but I think the reality is that Labour is in a fight with the Lib Dems for second place.

“The turnout has been poor in traditional Labour areas and I think the reality is that the Tories have taken the seat.”

Green sources also said the Conservatives were set for victory.

But a Green party spokesman said: “We are still confident of claiming our best result in a byelection.”

The Tories were confident that Smith, 27, would win, but were downplaying comparisons with the Crewe and Nantwich byelection last year, when the party overturned a Labour majority of more than 7,000, winning by 7,860 with a swing of 17.6%.

“Norwich North is different because, as a result of expenses, the voters are angry with all parties,” one senior Tory said.

Brown acknowledged Labour could suffer at the ballot box and attempted to focus the blame for any poor performance on the “unique” circumstances of the election.

“We are the only political party that has taken as dramatic action as suspending people from the membership of the parliamentary Labour party, and we have done that in a number of cases where we thought that what has happened has been unacceptable,” he said at his Downing Street press conference on Wednesday.

“I hope people who are Labour voters will come out and vote Labour, but I think people do understand the uniqueness of this byelection resulting from the parliamentary events that came before.”

But senior Labour MP Tony Wright accused Brown of making an error by punishing Gibson in an effort to appear “tough” on MPs caught up in the expenses scandal.

Wright, the chairman of the Commons public administration committee and a friend of Gibson’s, told BBC2′s Newsnight: “I do think he was badly treated. I think there were people in the House of Commons who did far worse things than he did.

“I think he was a victim of a moment when all the parties, and all the party leaders, were falling over each other to show how tough they were being.

“One of the fascinating paradoxes of this election is that, if Ian had been standing, a victim of the expenses scandal in this first election since we had the expenses row, he would have walked it by a mile.

“This is another election where people want to kick the politicians and they will kick, particularly, the politicians in power.

“This is different from when you come to a general election, which we will have in about 10 months’ time, where people have to choose a government.”

To compound Labour’s difficulties, its candidate, Chris Ostrowski, was forced to abandon the campaign trail in the run-up to polling day after collapsing with a bout of swine flu and being taken to hospital. He is staying away from the count but his wife is expected to be there in his place. The Liberal Democrats, who were well behind the Tories in 2005, claimed the byelection would be a Tory-Lib Dem contest and that Labour could come third behind their candidate, April Pond.

If either Ostrowski or Smith wins the seat, they will become the youngest MP at Westminster.

The unofficial title of “baby of the house” is currently held by the 29-year-old Liberal Democrat Jo Swinson.

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


Learning to live without the net

Man in a park using a laptop

Bill Thompson feels the pain of the digitally dispossessed.

I have just endured a week of limited connectivity and it has given me a salutary lesson in what life is like for the digitally dispossessed here in the UK and around the world.

I have been driven to searching for open wireless access points so that I can download my e-mail, sometimes wandering the beach looking for elusive 3G signals just to get my Facebook status updated.

It was my own fault, of course. I spent a few days on the Norfolk coast with my son and some of his friends in a wifi-less cottage in an area that had poor 3G coverage, though I was probably less frustrated with lack of connectivity than he was, as he wanted to keep in touch with his mates back home while I was mostly on holiday.

Then I spent the weekend at the lovely Latitude Festival in deepest Suffolk, there to represent Writers’ Centre Norwich as we had supported some of the poets in the Poetry Tent.

No wireless there, at least none that I could get connected to – there did seem to be a private network for the tech crew to use – and the phone networks were clearly swamped as text messages were taking two or three hours to be delivered while my 3G dongle repeatedly failed to connect.

Photos of the beach sat on my hard drive because I didn’t have the bandwidth to upload them to Flickr, while my ambitious plans to deluge the world with AudioBoos from Latitude came to naught after the first one took twenty minutes to upload over the slowest phone connection I have experienced for at least five years.

In between the Norfolk beach and the muddy fields of Latitude I had my third experience of life offline when I came into London to chair a conference organised by Arts Council England for arts organisations that want to explore the potential of new technologies to reach audiences or just work more effectively.

Network crash

"The real benefits of the online revolution will only come when net access is seamless, pervasive and guaranteed."

Bill Thompson

Bill Thompson

The conference took place in the Lilian Baylis Theatre at Sadler’s Wells, a wonderful space that works really well for conferences because the acoustics and lighting are designed for performance. Most conference centres are so soulless and dispiriting it takes all your energy to stand up at the lectern, so it was a pleasant contrast to be in an inspiring space.

We had wifi access inside the theatre as the conference included tutorials on social networks and online engagement, and the audience were encouraged to contribute questions online so they could be displayed on the screen behind the speakers.

Unfortunately the wifi stopped working about half-way through the first session of the day, and those of us with smartphones and laptop dongles were forced to resort to slower 3G connections.

It appeared that we had overwhelmed the capacity of the wireless network that the venue had set up for us. I talked to the IT support engineer and he asked me how many of us were trying to connect, and I told him I estimated that thirty to forty people were using laptops and probably the same number had wifi-enabled smartphones.

Wider lesson

After he had recovered from the shock he explained that the wifi router they had installed could only support twenty simultaneous connections and had crashed when we all tried to log on.

He was very efficient once he realised the problem and sorted out a second network and higher-capacity kit by lunchtime, but it was interesting that twenty network connections were originally seen as adequate to support one hundred and fifty people at a conference about technology.

I go to many technology events now where the ratio of online devices to people is greater than one, as many of us have a laptop and a phone or two, and conference organisers are going to have to adapt pretty fast to this new reality or they will quickly lose custom.

But I think there’s a wider lesson here.

Finding myself intermittently online this week was a mild inconvenience for me, and I managed to get connected when I needed to so that urgent business could be dealt with.

However slow, unreliable connections are a fact of life for millions of people in the UK, and most of the world’s internet-using population, and experiencing it again myself made me realise that the real benefits of the online revolution will only come when net access is seamless, pervasive and guaranteed.

Slow down

Digital Britain logo, DCMS

The rhythm of my life now depends on easy and fast online access in the way that the driving beat of drummer Suren de Saram supports the frenetic guitar sound of Bombay Bicycle Club – one of the best acts at Latitude, by the way.

I have grown accustomed to being able to respond quickly and easily to people, to having much of the world’s information at my fingertips, to being able to share my thoughts and observations with my online friends and those who have chosen to listen as I think out loud.

Without it I slow down. Things get lost or forgotten, ideas go nowhere and trains of thought are shuffled into the sidings and are neglected. An unreliable network is worse than no network at all, and forces me to limit my imagination to those things that don’t rely on being online all the time.

Although the recent Digital Britain report was criticised for proposing that we should aim to offer universal access to a relatively slow 2Mbps (megabits per second) network connection by 2012, on reflection I think that a reliable and pervasive two megabits might be enough to kick-start the next stage of the network revolution, because it will allow everyone to begin to embed online access into their lives.

Once we do that, then the demand for faster access will grow, but it will also be possible for commercial operators to see the benefits on offering next generation access, creating a virtuous circle that will benefit us all.

Being offline has been a learning experience, but it’s nice to be home to my twenty megabits. I just hope that there’s some connectivity at the Port Eliot festival, where I’ll be next weekend!

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.


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

UK’s swine flu death toll reaches 30

15-year-old girl in ‘hotspot’ Glasgow latest victim

Britain’s death toll from swine flu reached 30 today when a 15-year-old girl from Glasgow was confirmed as the latest victim of the pandemic, which has claimed the lives of more than 700 people worldwide.

The teenager, who is not being named at her family’s request, died a week after being admitted to the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Glasgow. Like most of the previous victims, she had other underlying medical conditions.

The girl is the fourth fatality from Glasgow, which is one of the UK’s swine flu “hotspots”. Her death raises fresh fears that the virus, while relatively mild for most people, can be more dangerous for children.

Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish health secretary, said: “The tragic death of this young girl is devastating for her family and friends, and I’d like to express my sincere condolences. As we have seen in previous cases, this patient was suffering from underlying health conditions and her death should not cause alarm among the general population.”

The first person outside the Americas to die from swine flu was also a Scot from the Glasgow area, a pregnant mother of three, Jacqui Fleming. She died on 14 June, soon after giving birth prematurely to her fourth son. He later died from unrelated complications.

Meanwhile, the London schoolgirl widely reported to have been killed by swine flu, Chloe Buckley, actually died from septic shock linked to her tonsilitis, it was revealed today.

Dr Simon Tanner, regional director of public health for London, said: “A postmortem has concluded that six-year-old Chloe Buckley died of septic shock on 9 July as a result of a tonsilitis infection caused by the streptococcus A bacterium. Chloe was also found to have the swine flu H1N1 virus.”

However, swine flu was “a significant contributory factor” in the death earlier this month of Bedfordshire GP Dr Michael Day, the coroner’s final report has found. The 64-year-old doctor also suffered a blood clot to his lung and had heart disease and high blood pressure.

The global death toll from swine flu has more than trebled in the last month, World Health Organisation figures show. More than 700 people worldwide have now died after contracting the virus, the WHO said today, a big increase on the 231 deaths announced on 22 June and the 429 fatalities confirmed on 6 July.

WHO spokeswoman Aphaluck Bhatiasevi said school closures were possible measures countries may want to adopt to try to slow the virus’s spread.

Some church leaders in the UK and abroad have decided to stop offering communion wine during services, fearing that it could cause the virus to spread. In New Zealand, the Roman Catholic church has banned priests from placing communion wafers on the tongues of worshippers, while Chilean authorities last night prompted protests after they suspended a northern religious celebration.

New figures due out tomorrow from the Royal College of GPs will show a huge rise in the number of people in England who are contacting their GP with symptoms of influenza-like illness. Labour’s candidate in the Norwich North by-election, Chris Ostrowski, is being treated for suspected swine flu in Norfolk and Norwich hospital.

People whose holiday plans are ruined by swine flu will still need a GP’s certificate for proof of illness before claiming from travel insurance, the insurance industry insisted today. Talks between the Association of British Insurers (ABI) and the Department of Health (DH) are ongoing.

The ABI has been studying website and hotline guidance due to be made available this week through the government’s new National Pandemic Flu Service.

When launched it will effectively enable any caller or internet user to self-diagnose and request Tamiflu. Such a prescription will be not sufficient proof of illness, however, an ABI spokeswoman confirmed today.

The new service is intended to take pressure off GPs and allow them to treat more urgent cases while letting those with swine flu receive antiviral drugs. But the hotlines will be staffed mainly by people who are not medically qualified.

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


Labour candidate treated for swine flu

Chris Ostrowski, who is standing for Labour in the Norwich North byelection, taken to hospital 48 hours before polling day

Labour’s candidate in this week’s Norwich North byelection is being treated for suspected swine flu, the party said today.

A spokesman for the Norwich North Labour campaign said: “We can confirm that Chris Ostrowski is being treated for a suspected case of swine flu.

“This was confirmed by doctors at the Norfolk and Norwich hospital after Chris felt unwell and was taken there earlier today. He collapsed at home and was taken to hospital by ambulance.

“Chris is receiving world class care from an excellent team of doctors, nurses and staff. Clearly, our priority is to ensure that nobody falls ill from swine flu unnecessarily and we will follow the medical advice and take every precaution necessary.”

Labour is widely expected to lose Thursday’s contest, caused by the resignation of sitting MP Ian Gibson after the party’s expenses panel excluded him from standing at the next election.

The Tory candidate, Chloe Smith, is the favourite to take the seat, overturning Labour’s 5,459 majority from the 2005 poll.

Smith said in a statement: “I’m extremely sorry to hear that Chris has been taken ill this morning. One of my campaign team had a suspected case of swine flu two weeks ago so I know just how horrible it can be.

“I’d like to send Chris my best wishes and I hope he will make a speedy recovery.”

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


Michael Vick Released From Federal Custody, Wants To Resume Football Career (VIDEO)

By LARRY O’DELL, Associated Press Writer

HAMPTON, Va. – Suspended NFL star Michael Vick ended his federal dogfighting sentence Monday, freeing him to lobby for a return to the field.

Vick’s attorney Lawrence Woodward told The Associated Pres…

Australian Navy In NY Harbor (PHOTOS)

TEXT FROM AP, SLIDESHOW COMPILED BY HUFFINGTON POST FROM AP IMAGES.

NEW YORK (AP) — The United States and Australia are celebrating a friendship at sea that has lasted more than 100 years.

On Sunday, two Australian warships arrived in New …

Snail Racing Championship Held: Ready… Set… Slow!

COMPETITORS gathered from around the globe for the world snail racing championships.

People in Congham, Norfolk, have been racing the shell-dwellers at their annual fete for 25 years.

Teenage soldier dies in Afghanistan

‘This is my way forward,’ Ben Ford told his mother as he signed up for army

It was their youth that shocked: boy soldiers, barely adults at just 18, yet now returning from the war in Afghanistan in flag-draped coffins. The recent toll – 16 in less than three weeks, almost one-third of them 18-year-olds – this week unleashed an unprecedented emotional response at the loss of such young lives in a conflict that began when they were still children.

But today one mother still stands by her decision to allow her “baby” to go to war, even though he would never come back. “Yes, they do look like boys,” said Jane Ford, fingering his cap, belt and the bullet casing saved from the gun salute at her own son’s funeral. “But ask any of the guys who are 18 and who are out there now. They class themselves as men. Certainly, Ben did.”

Such sentiment about age detracts from the true heroics of sons like hers, Private Ben Ford, the first of the six 18-year-olds this conflict has claimed.

He fought, and died, an equal. So she hates the way his life is now condensed into that bald statistic – “the first 18-year-old to die” and, as he was until this month, “the youngest”.

“It is as if his life is now defined by how and when he died, rather than the way he lived it,” she said.

“And Ben being so young, it has a sting, too. Others judge you. People have said to me, ‘Fancy letting him go’. Fingers point, like you’re a bad mum for letting him go. I didn’t let him go. I let him do what he really wanted to do.

“So, you do feel stigmatised. And the other mothers of 18-year-olds who have died, they may feel the same. But if theirs were anything like my lad, you couldn’t have stopped them”.

Trooper Joshua Hammond (died July 1), Private Robert Laws (died July 4), and Riflemen William Aldridge, James Backhouse and Joseph Murphy (died July 10), have all made that final journey along Wootton Bassett’s high street this month, drawing more teenagers than ever to the streets of this Wiltshire town to pay tribute to their schoolboy heroes during their repatriations.

Campaigner

But with the youthfulness of the mourners comes a jolting realisation. These young men were just 10 years old when the attack on New York’s Twin Towers precipitated the chain of events that has now torn apart so many homes in villages, towns and cities across the world. Jane Ford finds it chilling. “You can’t quite believe that what happened in New York, what happened in London with 7/7, would come here, right into our home in Chesterfield.”

Ben was just 12 and a pupil at Newbold Green comprehensive when 9/11 happened. “He was sat there,” she said, gesturing toward a leather chair in the sitting room of their semi in Chesterfield’s Newbold area. “He was fascinated with the plane flying into the building.”

His sister Emma, then 10, was screaming at him to switch channels but he refused. “He was asking me what terrorists do. I said ‘Blow things up, like you’ve just seen’. He went very quiet, and that night, unusually, he didn’t want to go out and play with his mates,” she said.

Ben was a “Woofer”. At 16 he joined the Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters. But he died a Mercian, his beloved regiment, to his disgust, having been amalgamated two days before his death, caused when his Wimik Land Rover was blown up in Lashkar Gah, Helmand, on September 5 2007.

“Civvie Street wasn’t for Ben,” said Jane, a former credit controller at a paint company. She and his father, Trevor, a maintenance team leader with Sheffield city council, didn’t know which to fear most — if he joined up, or if he didn’t.

Pasted into his remembrance book is a photograph of him, aged 18 months, peeking out of a sandbag wall at a military museum in Norfolk. The caption reads: “The British Army’s youngest recruit”. He screamed when they left. “We visited three times. He loved that place,” said Jane.

The path that led Ben to the army is all too familiar. The pits had gone, and industries moved away from this Derbyshire market town. Chesterfield’s terraced rows and estates have proved fertile recruiting ground.

The wages, the glamour, the girls – “he has piercing blue eyes which the girls love,” said his mother, lapsing momentarily into the present tense – all created a buzz to being a Woofer. He made inquiries with four mates, though only two actually enlisted.

College was not an option. Ben’s disdain for education was evident even at nursery. When confronted with the nursery vocabulary of “piggy-wiggy” and “woof-woof”, Ben pronounced his teacher “stupid”.

Though at Newbold Church of England junior he was consistently near the top of his class, it was all to fall apart after he started at his comprehensive. By 15, he was playing truant regularly. “They can’t teach me anything, Mum”, he moaned.

“I have no idea how he spent his days. I know he wasn’t out thieving, or hanging out with druggies. I think he probably came home and watched TV.”

He quit school as soon as he could. Two and half days working for a landscaping firm, (“it’s for the brain dead”), followed by two hours as a packer with a local toiletries firm (he walked out over a dispute), was the sum total of his paid employment. Only at his funeral, when his family and girlfriend, Natasha Petts, were joined by more than 200 mourners, did his parents learn of another Ben. An elderly neighbour recounted how he picked up her paper each day, fetched in her milk and put the kettle on for her. A lonely old man told how he dropped by for chats and to make him a sandwich.

Then, in April 2005, he announced to his mother, “I’ve done something”, before leading her to the army recruitment office. “They greeted him, so he’d obviously been in once or twice before,” she said. Waiting for her were his papers, ready for her signature. He must have noticed the flicker of doubt that crossed her face. “Don’t argue with me, Mum,” he pleaded. “This is my way forward. I can’t do anything else. This will be my life now.” She signed. He was 16.

“I had one or two people say to me, ‘You’re never going to let him join up, are you? It’s not a good idea’. But when they are so headstrong, you’ve got no choice,” she explained.

His certificate of enlistment jostles for wall space with photographs, including two of him in action, taken 36 hours before his death. How can she bear them, knowing he had just 36 hours to live? “It’s pride at seeing him in action. You can’t dwell on how he died,” said Jane, now a campaigner trying to shame the government into promising more money to better equip troops like Ben.

“If all you are going to do is wallow in how and when he died, then you’re in danger of forgetting who you’ve lost.”

Ben was not a letter writer. A weekly phone call was the most Jane could expect when he was posted to Afghanistan. He wanted to protect her, so chat was about his great tan, and could she send him some “top shelfer” magazines in the next parcel? But he always promised her he would come home.

“On TV, when they break the news, they are always in full uniform, aren’t they? And they take their caps off,” said Jane. Her two men were in suits. But she knew, instinctively.

Headstrong

When he was repatriated, his coffin was the last of four to be unloaded. It goes in order of rank, then age. “And, mentally, you’re repatriating your baby. But, in reality, you don’t bring anything home with you that day, because he’s taken to a hospital in Oxford, for a postmortem. I couldn’t watch it this week. I knew exactly what those mothers were going through.”

She brings down a suitcase. Inside are Ben’s cap, belt, the bullet casing from his funeral, his Afghan medal, his Nato medal, and two union flags, one of which covered his coffin during repatriation, the other his coffin at his funeral.

“We bought the case specially. I didn’t want to store them in a box. You know, from a box to a box,” she said. “It’s the first time I’ve looked at them since he died,” and her eyes filled up.

“People say they’re too young at 18. But you really can’t compare them to an ordinary 18-year-old. They’ve been through so much already. They’re men. And they’re 110% brave,” she said. And think not just of those who have died, she said, “but the many, many more who have suffered appalling injuries”.

Then she sighs. Ben’s sister, Emma, 17, enrolled at Army Training College on what would have been his 19th birthday, two weeks after his death. As a clerk with the Adjutant Corps, she can in future be posted as a “female searcher”.

On the list of preferences she has ticked the boxes “Infantry” and “Out of England”.

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Live – The Open

Live scoring console from opengolf.com (external site)

LATEST ACTION (all times BST)

To get involved use 606 or text us your views & comments on 81111. (Not all contributions can be used)

By Sam Lyon

0727: Ross Fisher, one under at the start of play, pings his three iron comfortably onto the fairway – he again is paired with Mike Weir and Ben Curtis, and this threesome were the lowest-scoring group of Thursday after Weir ended three under and Curtis five under. The Canadian and American follow Fisher’s lead and a fair few folks will be following this group today, for sure.0722: Ever wondered what it’s like to cover an event like the Open Check out our sport editor’s blog with Philip Bernie, who admits"the Open is one of the most complicated outside broadcasts we do at the BBC",and you also have your chance to have your say.From Anon via text on 81111: "Re: 0647 – Here’s something to tell the grandchildren – it didn’t used to be unusual to see Tom Watson at five under after the first round of the Open." 0717: Nice reception for three-time Open champion Nick Faldo as he gets his round going with a tee shot straight down the middle of the fairway at the first.From GDW via text on 81111: "Sam, looking at the leaderboard, who is Kuboya and where did he appear from with -5 Did he play in the dark All the women in my life still asleep. Magic." From Chris in Norfolk via text on 81111: "You’re right Sam, I am wiping the sleep from my eyes. Although I’m now on my way for 36 holes on my day off! Good stuff."0706: The weather might not be as sedate as yesterday, but that is not stopping the birdies roll in this morning. Ireland’s David Higgins and Welshman Rhys Davies both pick up a shot at the opening hole, as does James Driscoll. However, Damien McGrane, Daniel Gaunt, Matt Kuchar and"jobbing builder"Jeremy Kavanagh have all dropped a shot – as if anybody needed reminding that this Turnberry course can bite you on the backside if you take liberties.0701: I can also report, via Twitter, that Ian Poulter did not hit "one shot I was happy with","drama queen"Colin Montgomerie refused to give interviews, and Paul Casey finished his day with a "fantastic banoffee pie", recommended to him by Colombian Camillo Villegas. Any of you lot on Twitter I must say I’ve joined, but find updating strangers on the banality of my life rather pointless and depressing. Perhaps I’m not embracing it enough!0659: A quick summation ofyesterday’s playfor those that missed it, then. Five-time Open champion Tom Watson fired a sensational 65 and looked like being the oldest leader of this Championship after the first round ever at the age of 59 for much of the day until Miguel Angel Jimenez sunk a 65-footer at the last to complete a 64. Elsewhere, 2003 champion Ben Curtis and Japan’s Kenichi Kuboya – the latter courtesy of three birdies and an eagle in his final four holes – sit alongside Watson, with Lee Westwood, Paul Casey, Anthony Wall, Graeme McDowell and David Howell leading the British challenge on two under.BBC Sport’s Ken Brown on Twitter: "If Thursday is anything to go by, the most difficult hole on the course is the par four 16th, with the easiest being the par five 7th. Watch out for those holes today."0651: A steady enough start for the opening group of the day, with Damien McGrane and Matt Kuchar bagging pars at the first and Tim Stewart taking a birdie three.0647: Oh and, forgive me, I forgot to remind you to get involved via your mobile telephone devices using the SMS function to 81111. I realise that at this hour you’re possibly wiping the sleep out of your eyes, your children’s porridge off your tie and the smell of the bus or train out of your hair, but why not brighten your Friday morning by getting published on the BBC Sport website. It’ll be something to tell the grandchildren, right0642: A few players to keep an eye on before our TV coverage kicks off on BBC Two, the Red Button and this website (UK users only) at 0900 BST – Sandy Lyle will take time out fromhis spat with Colin Montgomerieto get his second round going at 0703, Open legend Nick Faldo is off at 0714, Ben Curtis, alongside English hope Ross Fisher, is the first of those at the top of the leaderboard to get started at 0725 and all eyes will also be on Rory McIlroy’s group, which includes Retief Goosen and Anthony Kim, when they tee off at 0820. And that’s just a sample. What a field this is.

Rain

0631: Ireland’s Damien McGrane, American Matt Kuchar and Tim Stewart of Australia get the second round under way – and let me tell you, the bright, windless conditions of yesterday are long gone already. The rain has stopped momentarily, but it’s going to get worse apparently. Expect plenty of glances skyward today.BBC Five Live’s Jay Townsend on Twitter: "It is a rainy morning here at the Open, doing the Breakfast show and then out with Padraig Harrington this morning. Waterproofs are a MUST today."0625: "The lady was defenceless, but she’s going to bare her teeth." That was the assessment oflong-time first-round leader Tom Watsonon this Turnberry course on Thursday, and it makes you think ‘how many players are going to rue not taking advantage of conditions more benign than a kitten wrapped in cotton wool in that first round’Miguel Angel Jimenez leads the Open,a lot of the pre-tournament favourites are yet to make their move, and the weather is forecast to turn more uncomfortable than a dinner for two between Monty and Sandy – a truly fascinating day’s play in round two lay in store…


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

Green light given for four ecotowns

Towns to tackle Britain’s housing shortage while minimising damage to the environment by showcasing energy efficient homes and green transport

The government today gave the go-ahead for the construction of four eco-towns, offering 10,000 homes overall, which, it hopes, will showcase environmentally friendly living in the UK.

The settlements, to be built by 2016, will include the latest in energy efficiency measures, streets with charging points for electric cars and numerous cycle routes as well as easy access to public transport.

The locations are Whitehill Borden in Hampshire, the China Clay Community at St Austell, Cornwall, Rackheath in Norfolk and north-west Bicester, in Oxfordshire. Each site will be allocated a share of £60m for their “green” infrastructure.

The towns are designed to tackle Britain’s housing shortage while minimising damage to the environment – more than a quarter of the UK’s CO2 emissions come from energy use in houses.

Launching the initiative Gordon Brown said earlier today: “Eco-towns will help to relieve the shortage of affordable homes to rent and buy, and minimise the effects of climate change on a major scale. They will provide modern homes with lower energy bills, energy efficient offices and brand-new schools, community centres and services.”

But eco-towns have been criticised ever since Brown announced his plan to build up to 100,000 homes in five green towns, soon after succeeding Tony Blair as prime minister in 2007.

The Campaign to Protect Rural England wanted the government to scale back the programme to one or two showcase towns, arguing that officials should concentrate on refurbishing existing properties and redeveloping derelict brownfield sites as well as bring 800,000 empty homes in England back to use.

The eco-towns will still require planning permission and could face opposition from residents anxious about the impact on rural areas.

The housing minister John Healey said: “I recognise that the proposals can raise strong opinions, but climate change threatens us all and with our commitment to the eco-towns we are taking steps to meet this challenge and help build more affordable housing.”

He said Britain was leading the world in designing zero-carbon buildings. “One in three of Britain’s homes in 2050 will be built between now and then, so we have to set clear, green, standards for the future. I am confirming that all new homes from 2016 will have to meet a tough zero-carbon standard, so they are cleaner, greener and cheaper to run.”

In addition to the four eco-towns, a further two, Rossington, in South Yorkshire and North-East Elsenham, Essex, are on the cards for the scheme’s second wave. The government wants up to 10 eco-towns completed or under way by 2020.

Friends of the Earth’s executive director, Andy Atkins, welcomed the plans. But he said: “The bigger challenge is to ensure that all new housing is built to the highest environmental standards. Ministers must ensure that all the two million homes that they plan to build across the country are truly green and help meet UK targets for tackling climate change.”

Grant Shapps, the Tories’ housing spokesperson and MP for Welwyn Hatfield, dismissed eco-towns as a gimmick. “Underneath the thick layers of greenwash many of these schemes are unsustainable, unviable and unpopular, but Gordon Brown wants to impose them from Whitehall irrespective of local opinion.”

John Alker, of the UK Green Building Council, said that although eco-towns had had a rough ride, the idea behind them was sound. “The current economic climate is very challenging for new house building in the short-term, but zero carbon homes, sustainable transport, a robust local economy and access to green space are all vital ingredients of new places fit for the 21st century.

He added: “The eco-towns brand has taken a battering, but if these developments go through the interrogation of a proper planning process, are linked to existing communities, have local support and are built to the very highest environmental standards, then it can only be a good thing. Building green homes on a large scale … will also reduce the green cost premium and help provide a blueprint for the homes of the future.”

Inside an eco town…

• Community-scale heat sources, possibly using combined heat and power plants
• Charging points for electric cars
• All homes within 10 minutes walk of frequent public transport and everyday services
• Parks, playgrounds and gardens to make up 40% of towns
• Individual homes must achieve 70% carbon savings above current building regulations in terms of heating, hot water and lighting
• Zero-carbon buildings including shops, restaurants and schools
• Ensuring a minimum of one job per house can be reached by walking, cycling or public transport to reduce dependence on the car
• Car journeys to make up less than half of all journeys
• Locating homes within ten minutes walk of frequent public transport and everyday neighbourhood services
• Homes fitted with smart meters and solar and wind generation. Residents will be able to control the heat and ventilation of their homes at the touch of a button and sell their surplus energy into the grid

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Norwich ponders a Green future in byelection

On the doorsteps of Norwich, voters are sick to death of government sleaze. So every prospective MP tiptoeing towards them, from the Conservatives to the Greens, claims to represent a clean break from corrupt Westminster.

But in the Norwich North byelection next week, the first test for nervous political parties after the expenses scandal, the only person who seems certain to win if they stood is their Labour MP, Ian Gibson, who resigned after his party deselected him over his expenses.

“Dr Ian Gibson was just about the best MP in the country,” said one voter. “He had time for everybody.”

“If Ian Gibson went independent, I’d vote for him,” said David Lewis. “The Labour party has dropped a big one here.” Peggy Lewis added: “It’s scandalous how he’s been treated.”

Gibson, a respected backbencher, was bitterly disappointed when Labour’s expenses disciplinary committee barred him from standing at the next election for selling the London flat he part-funded from his second home allowance to his daughter at below-market rates.

But Gibson will not stand as an independent against his party. Instead, the race for Norwich North is the clearest demonstration yet of a new era multi-party politics. The Conservatives are favourites to recapture a seat they lost in 1997 but the election is a four-way fight and could be a political watershed for the Green party, which has built up a uniquely strong base in Norwich.

The Greens have 13 city councillors and won seven Norwich seats – from Labour and the Liberal Democrats – in the June county council elections. They took a 25% share of the Norwich vote in the European election and, with so many parties standing, including the maverick Norfolk-born independent Craig Murray, 25% could be enough to win Norwich North.

“We’ve never had a strong local base or councillors when fighting a byelection before,” said the Green candidate, Rupert Read, a city councillor and philosophy lecturer. “Now the public and the media have got reasons to take us seriously, who knows what will happen?”

The Greens will not say they can win, and more than half of the electorate in Norwich North live in strongly Conservative suburbs beyond the city boundaries, but Caroline Lucas, the MEP and leader of the Greens, said: “There is a very strong sense of disillusionment with all of the three main parties and that is something that can play well for us. People want to vote for something that is more positive and progressive, a vote for the future rather than a vote for the grey parties of the past.”

In Norwich’s Victorian streets, most voters back the Greens – to their faces, anyway. “We’ve had enough of all the other ones so maybe we’ll give you a try,” Joanne Shrimpling told Read.

Martin Smith has voted Labour in the past and felt the party stuck “a few knives in the back” of Gibson. So he will vote Green this time. “It is important to have some pressure groups in Westminster,” he said.

Gibson refused to endorse the Greens but said: “I’m still a member of the Labour party but very uneasy about the way I’ve been treated. The Green party are developing, they know they’ve got a lot of support and the other parties better take notice because they work hard, they are young and they are keen. I’ve no doubt that Norwich could fall to them in the future.”

The Greens may be helped by the well-funded Ukip, who will take votes from the Tories and are already putting billboards up across the city promising a “clean start”. But the Greens may end up doing the Conservatives a bigger favour, according to Norman Lamb, the Liberal Democrat MP for North Norfolk. “The risk is that they let the Tories in by dividing non-Tory voters,” said Lamb. He argued that the Lib Dem candidate, April Pond, was a free-thinking politician in the mould of Gibson. “The fascinating thing is Labour have chosen a guy from London and the Conservatives have someone who is quite Westminster-centric and we’ve got a local businesswoman who is Norfolk to the core. Given the seat is used to an independent-minded MP, she is a natural successor to Ian.”

Labour hopes that by choosing Chris Ostrowski – a 28-year-old John Lewis employee with ties to Norwich from his university days – it can shrug off the controversy over the treatment of Gibson, who had a 5,459 majority, and hold the seat. Charles Clarke, the Labour MP for Norwich South, said: “There is anger at the way Ian Gibson has been treated by Labour but the party is very determined to do its very best to win the byelection and it has got a very strong candidate to do so.”

Three centre-left parties competing for votes and little enthusiasm for the BNP has left the Tory byelection frontrunner, Chloe Smith, 27, a Norfolk-born business consultant who has been campaigning in the constituency for 18 months, needing a 5.9% swing.

“I’ve been talking to as many residents as I can about what matters in Norwich,” she said. “We need a strong local MP who can be a champion for the things that are important for Norwich but it’s also an opportunity to send a message to Gordon Brown by voting Conservative and looking for a strong but fresh face to be their MP.”

She has benefited from two visits from David Cameron already, although the Tory leader blotted his copybook with his German accent during one trip.

Even Smith paid tribute to the “strength” of Gibson – disgraced in Labour’s eyes but currently the most popular man in Norwich.

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I needed music ‘cos I had none

Record stacks at the I&A

Young people don’t want to break the law, says Bill Thompson

"The latest report on young people’s online music-finding habits from consumer research company The Leading Question has attracted a fair amount of coverage for its headline finding that UK teenagers use of file sharing services has dropped by a third.

The Speakerbox survey polled 1000 young people, so it’s a reasonable survey – although of course there’s a margin of error in any survey and a significant likelihood that the interpretation of the results will be driven by the predispositions of those reading them, demonstrating yet again what the philosopher of science Thomas Kuhn calls "theory-dependent observation".

Music industry pollsters will inevitably look for a silver lining in the cloud of consumer behaviour, and a focus on the growth of legal services is to be expected.

But even with that caveat in mind, there has clearly been a shift in behaviour as more young people find licensed ways to listen to the music they want, watching YouTube videos, streaming songs through MySpace and Spotify, and generally using legal avenues to find and enjoy the music of new bands like Florence and the Machine.

Rigorous statistics

Not having access to the full Speakerbox report, as I’m writing this while on holiday in Norfolk, I carried out my own unrepresentative survey of three 16-year-old boys who happened to be sitting on a nearby sofa playing Soulcalibur IV.

I can exclusively reveal that 67% of teenagers use Spotify but that a whopping 100% still download material illegally if that’s the only way they can get it, and that ripping the soundtrack from YouTube videos to put onto your phone or MP3 player is growing in popularity, with 67% of 16-year-olds having taken up the practice in the last six months.

"I turned to the file sharing networks because the music I wanted to listen to was either completely unavailable or so locked up with restrictive terms as to be effectively inaccessible"

Bill Thompson

Bill Thompson

These findings fit rather well with more statistically reliable surveys in that they show a continuing desire for music among young people, despite the obvious interests and attractions of gaming and other activities. They also show that teenagers are aware of and able to take advantage of legal services when they are available.

This should not surprise us, since the only reason that we all started to use file sharing and other unlicensed ways of getting music was because the services that the record companies provided were unwieldy, expensive, limited and intrusive. They were riddled with absurd and inconvenient copy protection measures like the software that Sony-BMG put on music CDs in 2005, which secretly installed itself on users’ computers and could not be uninstalled automatically.

In common with millions of others, I turned to the file sharing networks because the music I wanted to listen to was either completely unavailable or so locked up with restrictive terms as to be effectively inaccessible. And I indulged heavily in other behaviour the record industry body BPI wishes to remain illegal by buying CDs and ripping them onto my computer so I could load them onto my iPod.

Of course I’ve also spent thousands of pounds on vinyl, CDs and downloads over the years, and will probably continue to do so as my love of music is undiminished with age. I really enjoyed hearing Vampire Weekend at the recent Blur concert at Hyde Park, and can’t wait to see The Editors play at the Latitude Festival next week.

Role of tape

The network revolution poses the most significant challenge the record industry has faced since the phonograph was invented, and it has been shown wanting in almost every respect.

Last month Geoff Taylor, chief executive of BPI, wrote a column for the BBC News website in which he admitted that the industry had made a mistake ten years ago when they sued the Napster file-sharing service out of existence, but that was just one error among many.

I remember speaking at a record industry conference in 1994 and telling the assembled executives that the day of the CD was over and that they should prepare for digital distribution. They didn’t take me seriously, perhaps believing that there was no way the internet of the time could ever be used to deliver music.

Dot Cotton and an mp3 player

Five years later Napster showed them how it could be done and they shut it down. Two years after that, in 2001, Apple opened the iTunes Music Store and showed them how to do it legally and profitably, but they still failed to see the real potential and insisted on copy controls and other restrictions.

And only now, 15 years after the web began to transform the world, are the senior executives for the big record labels acting as if they really appreciate just how deep the change in consumer behaviour, brought about by the affordances of these new technologies, is going to be.

Unfortunately it might be too late. Behind the shift to licensed music services there is another change that should give the music industry pause: young people seem happy to stream their music, relying on access to the network to ensure they can get the songs they want, when they want it. While my generation was stuck on owning music on vinyl or CD, today’s young listeners seem not even to feel the pressure to have a local copy of the file.

It took the record companies fifteen years to realise that their business wasn’t shifting physical units of singles or albums to retailers. They won’t have nearly that long to adapt to the new world in which the money comes not from selling files but from simply making music available for anyone to listen to, anywhere and on any device.

I certainly don’t rate their chances of getting it right in time.

"

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p


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

The Avett Brothers: Album Due 9/29 & Huge Tour

THE AVETT BROTHERS I AND LOVE AND YOU IN STORES SEPTEMBER 29

NPR MUSIC EXCLUSIVE FIRST LISTEN BEGINS SEPTEMBER 22

The Avett Brothers

North Carolina-based rock band, The Avett Brothers, are gearing up for the release of their highly anticipated American Recordings/Columbia Records debut, I and Love and You, which hits stores on Tuesday, September 29, 2009. I and Love and You was recorded in Malibu, California and produced by multi-Grammy Award winning producer, Rick Rubin. The thirteen songs that make up this new record defy pigeonholing and can best be described as an amalgam of rock, folk, pop and country. The band has spent years touring, recording, performing and perfecting this blend of music styles with their signature lyrics and vocals. I and Love and You will also be available at participating Starbucks company-operated locations in the U.S. and Canada and wherever music is sold.

In addition beginning Tuesday, September 22, 2009, NPR Music will host an Exclusive First Listen of I and Love and You on their website, www.npr.org/firstlisten, where fans will be able to get a sneak peak of the new album a week prior to release. NPR Music’s distinctive Exclusive First Listen series recently showcased new music from such innovators as Wilco, Moby, Bjork and Neko Case.

The story of The Avett Brothers has been told by word of mouth until now. Come witness what thousands have been loyally following and speaking about for years…

THE AVETT BROTHERS ON TOUR:

7/09 Norfolk, VA Harrison Opera House

7/10 Richmond, VA The National

7/11 Roanoke, VA Roanoke Performing Arts Theatre

7/12 Louisville, KY The Riverfront Belvedere

7/16 Saint Augustine, FL St. Augustine Amphitheatre

7/17 Lake Buena Vista, FL House of Blues

7/18 Tampa, FL The Cuban Club

7/19 Fort Lauderdale, FL Parker Playhouse

7/24 North Myrtle Beach, SC House of Blues

7/25 North Myrtle Beach, SC House of Blues

7/30 Buffalo, NY Lafayette Square

7/31 Syracuse, NY The Westcott

8/01 Newport, RI Fort Adams State Park (Newport Folk Festival)

8/02 Northampton, MA Calvin Theater

8/04 Dewey Beach, DE Bottle & Cork

8/08 Charlotte, NC Bojangles Coliseum

8/14 Ozark, AR Mulberry Mountain (Festival)

8/15 Kansas City, MO The Crossroads

8/16 Omaha, NE Sokol Auditorium/Underground

8/19 Telluride, CO Sunset Plaza @ Mountain Village

8/20 Steamboat Springs, CO Summer Concert Series (Howelson Hills Amp)

8/21 Boulder, CO Boulder Theater

8/22 Denver, CO Ogden Theatre

8/25 Salt Lake City, UT Red Butte Garden

8/26 Boise, ID Knitting Factory Concert House

8/28 Seattle, WA Paramount Theatre

8/29 Jacksonville, OR Britt Festival

8/30 San Francisco, CA Outside Lands Music Festival

9/01 Arcata, CA HSU Van Duzer Theater

9/03 Reno, NV Grand Sierra Theater

9/04 Camp Mather, CA Strawberry Music Festival

9/05 Los Angeles, CA Orpheum Theatre

9/17 North Charleston, SC North Charleston P.A.C.

9/18 Augusta, GA Westobou Festival/Riverwalk

9/19 Tallahassee, FL The Moon

9/20 Tuscaloosa, AL Bama Theatre

9/22 Oxford, MS The Lyric Oxford

9/24 Memphis, TN Minglewood Hall

9/25 Little Rock, AR Robinson Center Music Hall

9/26 Tulsa, OK Cain’s Ballroom

9/27 Dallas, TX Granada Theater

9/29 Baton Rouge, LA Baton Rouge River Center Theatre

10/1 New Orleans, LA House of Blues

10/2 Austin, TX Austin City Limits

10/3 Midwest City, OK Rose State PAC

10/5 Murray, KY Lovett Auditorium Center

10/15 Baltimore, MD Rams Head Live

10/16 Philadelphia, PA Electric Factory

10/17 New York, NY Terminal 5

10/18 Boston, MA House of Blues

10/20 Iowa City, IA The Englert Theatre

10/21 Madison, WI Barrymore Theatre

10/22 Urbana, IL Canopy Club

10/29 Huntington, WV Keith Albee Theatre

10/30 Louisville, KY Louisville Palace

10/31 Nashville, TN Ryman Auditorium