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Tag Archives: Adele

Never Saying ‘Hello’ to Adelle Again

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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Adele, Adelle, Adelle Collins, domestic violence, family violence, Gabba, Howard League for Penal Reform, intimate partner violence, King, Lover, Magician, Moore and Gillette, Warrior, White Ribbon Day

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Adele’s coming to Australia! I have a very personal story about the singer. In February 2015 I was woken in the middle of the night by a text from a friend overseas saying something like ‘our beautiful Adelle has been murdered.’ Straight away I had that sinking feeling – my mind running – it was probably a celebrity stalker and here was another wonderful musical talent wrenched from us too soon. Desperate for details I reached for my ipad, similarly easily accessible from my bed, and did a quick Google search. Nothing. I texted my friend back who, realising I was a bit non compos mentis at 2.00 am, told me it was someone who worked for me…well not just someone but the PA in my previous job. I had jumped to the wrong conclusion at that ungodly hour. The news then went from tragic to absolutely dreadful in that one moment of clarification.

I just bought Adele tickets this week for her concert at the Gabba and this Friday coincidentally happens to be White Ribbon Day. It’s strange how life throws up these confluences of otherwise disconnected events. Every time I see Adele on TV I recall that moment in bed when relief turned to anguish. Adelle like the singer, only spelt differently, was indeed beautiful in person and inside. She was great at her job and had this kind of Celtic sunny disposition (her parents were Irish) that meant that people who came into contact with her felt all the better for it. She really did have that positive mindset that many of us aspire to but few achieve with the sort of effortless grace of Adelle. She had bumps along the way in the all too short a path that was her life but she never burdened you with these, instead choosing to concentrate on the positives, especially her two children (a boy and girl) and spending time with family and friends. She loved to socialise and party and most of all dance.

Adelle was a victim of what is becoming increasingly known as intimate partner violence. Her’s though proved to be fatal. Stabbed many times, her ex-partner chose to bring this precious life, this mother of two beautiful children, to an abrupt and very violent end. To try and work out why a man would do such a thing a despicable thing is at once inexplicable, a waste of time and an absolute necessity.

Family, domestic or intimate partner violence is a scourge and shames us as a society especially as men who overwhelmingly are the main perpetrators (although men can be susceptible too). So far this year 68 women have died as a result of domestic violence. As a man I always felt helpless to change these statistics. More recently, particularly since my return from India, I feel that there is quite a lot we can do that will assist. Gandhi said ‘As human beings, our greatness lies not so much in being able to remake the world – that is the myth of the atomic age – as in being able to remake ourselves.’ That is to say great things can come from small changes. So it’s the little things I do that can make a dent into the scourge that is domestic violence; be it this blog, keeping Adelle’s memory alive each year, remembering her in an open public form where predominately men attend and becoming a male champion of change.

I talk to my 20 year old son about such issues. For all too many of us the shame that is violence against women elicits the same visceral, pre frontal cortex responses from us that perhaps is the underlying cause of the violence in the first place. ‘Lock them up and throw away the key’ is the often heard refrain. On reflection I don’t think this is helpful. Education and prevention are much better than post event punishment. I don’t think we reduce violence rates through oaths or punitive sentences. Exhortations through television advertising imploring us to not hit women to me misses the mark. Those who are not pre-disposed to violence against women can take an empty pledge and the rates do not decrease. Those who do hit their women or children are unlikely to take an oath or change behaviour merely because they saw an advertisement asking them to stop.

What possesses a man to check his partner’s facebook page, email, text messages and call logs every day? What possesses a man to tell his wife what to wear and who she can see? I don’t know and I’m not sure many people do. That’s my point. We need research and understanding around the issues of violence against women to try and address how to solve it. As the Howard League for Penal Reform would tell you, harsh sentencing for crimes does not reduce crime rates. Things do not improve by removing ei incumbit probatio qui dicit, non qui negat. The need for a more mindful approach has never been more pressing. I suspect funding applications to the Australian Research Council in this area don’t get much luck as this is a topic our conservative leaning social policy shies away from. As the world gets more socially conservative we are unlikely to see much in the way of real research in this space. The leader of the free world, for example, has set the bar intolerably low in terms of how men should treat women.

It’s true that many young men have lost their way and the creation of a ‘little man with an axe’ inside may well be the result of this. While women are being scaffolded now through school and careers to break the ‘glass ceiling’ (nothing wrong with that), it would appear there is an increasingly large cohort of young men who could do with similar assistance. The school curriculum in Australia is feminised and delivered in the main by women. Role models for young men, outside of ethically dubious sportsmen, are few and far between. Genetically embedded with the warrior mindset, young men need assistance in how to nurture and grow the noble warrior mindset. Perhaps men need to work on the four primary archetypes of King, Warrior, Magician and Lover to rediscover the true male worth? The Moore and Gillette book is a good place to start. But who is teaching this stuff and who is researching its real value? Not very many. So we juice our young men up through mindless de-sensitising video games and provide no outlet for expression in a group not overly-endowed with communication skills. And we are shocked and shamed when domestic violence occurs! I’m not excusing violence – I never would. What I find hard to accept though is the lack of willingness by Governments, not for profits, researchers and society in general to go deeper and really try to understand what is brewing beneath the surface of these men who feel so lacking in control that they have to exert it through physical and psychological means with their nearest and dearest.

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In a moment of rage, after a cycle of stalking and intimate partner violence, Adelle was murdered at her house early one Saturday morning. Mercifully the children were staying with their biological father. Not only was a beautiful person wrenched from us too soon but two traumatised motherless children were left behind. To truly honour Adelle’s memory, and the many others like her, we must strive to end this violence through proper research and understanding. The sentencing of the accused should not be the final chapter of the book, but merely the beginning. To not do so is to continue to allow the statistics to pile up through inaction. I’m not signing a pledge. Rather I’m giving serious consideration to how I might become a champion of change in this space. Not a white ribbon walker, but someone who does something meaningful that can help reverse these dreadful crimes, or assist women who have suffered to get back on their feet. As I watch the Adele concert on March the 4th at the Gabba I’m sure that the spirit of Adelle will be close to those who knew her. Though I won’t ever hear her say ‘Hello’ again I have a feeling some brightness might emerge from this gloom to light the way… just like Adelle’s smile used to…just like Adele’s music does.

 

Re-Booting My Attitude to #censusfail

21 Sunday Aug 2016

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#censusfail, 2016 Census, ABS, Adele, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Census 2016, Dr Watson, English Premier League, EPL, Gaussian distribution, Holmes and Watson, normal distribution, Optus, Scott Ludlam, Sherlock Holmes, Singtel, Telstra, Ticketek

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Recently we had the national census debacle, quickly badged on Twitter as #censusfail. How cruel and biting Twitter can be brought about by the need for brevity. There was an ominous feeling in the air the day of the census with the task presaged by fears of data loss, privacy concerns and overly long data retention. The census became a political football well before the day we were supposed to complete it. Scott Ludlam, Greens Senator, was a prime mover in the scaremongering and there was encouragement for the public not to file a census return, or at the very least to not fill it out completely. Strange given how much many of the naysayers freely share on their Facebook page. Foolhardy too given this is the data upon which our nation plans.

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What the census was for Australia was an opportunity to demonstrate that at a national level we could pull off a digital solution. We are, after all, in transition from resource country and on a pivot to a creative and innovative one. Innovation nowadays is synonymous with technology especially digital technology so it was in some way a test to see how far along our transformation of the economy we have come. Not very far if the experience of the night was anything to go by. The facts of the census day are now forever emblazoned in our nation’s history filed under the ‘cock-ups’ section. However for my international readership let me give you a potted history. National census day set down for 9th August where most people were down to log-in to the government’s census website and fill out the form. Things go well until about 7pm and the system crashes. Takes a number of days to get it up and running again with a myriad of excuses and absurd assertions made in between time. Egg on face for government, necks on the line in the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) and Sherlock out at the moment looking for IBM’s Watson who seemed to go missing on the night. Pretty much egg on face all round.

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So the first point of concern is we failed at the first hurdle when it came to providing a bug-free hassle-free experience in loading our data on-line. This does not bode well for transforming our economy into one of a highly digital and innovative nature. Secondly the thinking under-pinning the census completion seemed to completely flawed from a statistical perspective. This is extremely worrying given the Australian Bureau of Statistics had carriage of the census project. As I understand it the ABS had established a hot rate capability of 1 million hits per hour. With 24 hours to fill it out and 15 million citizens due to complete it this would appear to have enough margin to take the traffic. The only flaw here is that on-line completion would never be a flat-rate across the day but would rather cluster around certain periods. One would expect that the real pattern would look something like an errrr…normal distribution (aka bell shaped curve or Gaussian distribution). The irony here is that the normal distribution is meat and two veg to a statistician. I don’t think the technology therefore was necessarily at fault but rather our lack of understanding of basic statistics and the patterns of on-line behaviour of the general populace. Very concerning indeed. If we can’t read basic data how can we hope to deal with big data?

I found the concerns about a hack (the initial excuse for the site imploding) hard to fathom. We seem overly eager to blame a hack with its inherent overseas bogeymen sentiments all too often nowadays. If we want to be a smart nation then maybe putting some of our apparent intellectual and academic heft into suitable encryption to fend off such hacks would be a good first project to get underway. The underlying presumption in blaming the overseas hacks, most often sheeted back to the Chinese Government, is that in the spy versus spy thrust and counter-thrust of espionage etc. is that we aren’t winning the battle. If the overseas hackers are better than us what hope for our  economy transitioning into a digital tour de force when a few Chinese students in Beijing can bring down our census website?

What did emerge on the night of the census site meltdown was a pretty funny Twitter exchange as lots of people vented their frustration. Much of it in good humour I must admit and I did my best to add my own pithy contribution. I commented at work that if it was Ticketek selling the much anticipated Adele tickets for a tour in 2017 you could bet your bottom dollar that they would get it right. Where commerce is involved the private sector just gets it right. Aren’t I a clever chap!

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Well imagine my surprise to find that Optus – a very commercially focused and a tech-savvy subsidiary of equally tech-savvy Singtel – cocked up the launch of its much vaunted English Premier League (EPL) coverage in a way that makes the census look like a momentary buffering blip. So IT stuff ups are not the sole domain of a ‘hapless’ public sector after all. This notion of the private does best and the public lags well behind seems to emanate from a particularly dualistic mindset (subject of a future blog). We need to transform our social and technological policy thinking from one of the government hasn’t got a clue, to one where we appreciate the complexity of both the technology and stakeholder components in equal measure.

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While schadenfreude is great to feed a voracious twitter it is essentially a self-defeating emotion that posits no solution. It’s a lazy approach to any issue. The smarts are in the solution not just the problem identification. We need to take a collective deep breath and accept that the best endeavours are being put into IT projects both large and small. The private sector has no monopoly on IT functioning smoothly – Telstra can attest to that. Let’s just hope Ticketek have their servers well and truly denial of service proof for the upcoming Adele concert tickets.

 

Listing to Great Music

04 Monday Jan 2016

Posted by Burning Manager in Uncategorized

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25, Adele, Alison Goldfrapp, Amy, Amy Winehouse, Dusty in Memphis, Dusty Springfield, Elton John, Fairytale of New York, Florence and the Machine, Goldfrapp, Hannah Reid, High Fidelity, Joss Stone, Kirsty MacColl, Lists, Mary Coughlan, Nick Hornby, Sade Adu, Sinead O'Connor, Siouxsie and the Banchees, Siouxsie Sioux, The Pogues

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Christmas time is a time for making lists. Not a time for serious blogs about the world of work – that’s for sure. Whether it be shopping lists for family and friends or a draft set of new year’s resolutions we, especially men, find comfort in writing things down. It’s been common business practice since time immemorial. On my list this year for my wife was 25, the new album by Adele. We listened to it on Boxing Day and I found it sounded quite familiar and not necessarily because we are all so familiar with Adele’s back catalogue of 19 and 21. So in true Nick Hornby style (a la High Fidelity) I found myself creating a bit of a list – Greatest UK female singers. It’s tempting, of course, to not rank too highly those who have just burst onto the scene, because longevity is a very real measure in the music business, but pure raw talent must count for something and with three monumental albums to her name Adele does qualify in the pre-qualification list. So here goes – my attempt to put together ten of the greatest UK & Ireland female singers of the popular music era with a bit of a rationale for why I think they warrant being here.

Dusty Springfield a tragic life story but Dusty (Mary O’Brien) is the greatest British female singer of the modern generation and arguably, for me, only second on the world stage behind Aretha Franklin. Adele’s voice is very similar and it is no coincidence that Adele’s look is very ‘Dusty’. They both have a lovely tone in their voice that conveys layers of emotion. As the song builds though their voices, at the top end, separate with Adele kicking through to full power where Dusty takes it towards the fragile and it is this tension between the fragility and the emotion that makes her without compare. Listen to Dusty in Memphis one of the greatest recordings of all time to judge for yourself.

Kirsty MacColl was tragically killed in an accident in Mexico in 2000. Contracted to Stiff Records she found herself without a label when they went bankrupt in 1986 but used this time to record with the likes of Robert Plant, The Smiths, Alison Moyet, Shriekback, Simple Minds, Talking Heads, Big Country, and The Wonder Stuff,. Her collaboration with The Pogues on Fairytale of New York in 1987 is the stuff of legend and it remains the best Christmas song of all time. Refusing to be pigeon-holed, her wonderful tonal qualities and her flexibility make her stand out from the pack. Check this out.

Mary Coughlan has a jazz based tradition and is a mesmerising performer. Her voice is beyond compare and if we look at the emotions that all the singers in this list put on display, none can match that of Coughlin. Where Winehouse rips her skin to reveal flesh, Coughlin squeezes lemon juice on it. Her tradition is Irish and this shines through with her soulfulness and at times cynicism, as well as her activism. I saw her in concert in 2002 at the Jazz Café in Camden and I recall being spellbound by a performance of such depth and emotion that I knew I was watching a legend. If you watch one clip in this entire list make it this one.

Sade Adu (Sade) was born in Nigeria but grew up in the UK. Her breathy songs with tinges of jazz and soul celebrate a timelessness and Diamond Life, her breakthrough album, sounds as fresh today as it did when first released in 1984. She won’t get the party rocking but as the party-goers drift away and you are left with the core friends this is the album to slap on the turntable.

Amy Winehouse Without Winehouse there arguably would not have been the likes of Adele or the myriad of others that have followed. Our family has had a personal connection with Amy that I won’t go into here (see photo from my recent trip to London), but regardless of that, she is still for mine the one who has led the way in the most recent years. Talented to a fault with the self-destruct button, like so many artists, always clearly on show. Where others, including Adele, sing with emotion and reveal their soul, Winehouse rips her skin off and reveals the flesh beneath. She is raw and urgent and we will never see the likes of her again. Tragically taken too soon.

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Adele has only three albums to her name (compared to say Elton John’s 10 in 7 years) but is such a phenomenon that her recent CD (yes she went ‘old school’ for the release) carries only her face on the cover and the CD itself just carries the number 25 as the means by which it can be recognised. Her authenticity and non-diva approach, with heart on the sleeve lyrics and powerful voice already has her ranking as one of the great female singers – ever.

Joss Stone I can forgive Joss Stone for her flirtation with the often bland potpourri of RnB. When she’s in her element doing soul and blues her voice is right up there. Precocious talent that is a livewire in concert and the fact that so many old hands like jamming with her (Etheridge, Beck etc) it is clear she has street cred. Like a good red will only improve with age. This clip from 2010 shows her talent at its best.

Sinead O’Connor has suffered with bi-polar, or not, depending on who you listen to and it is fair to say that social media seems obsessed with her and, at times, her with it. Putting that aside, to watch her in concert is to see a consummate performer who is at once both shy and a master of her craft. Her song lyrics are raw and emotional and her album How About I Be Me (And You be You) is a fine example of how she blends her life and her music and lyrics together for such a potent brew.

Siouxsie Sioux (Siouxsie and the Banchees) the younger generation might be surprised on reprising clips of Siouxsie that the outfits and stagecraft of Lady Gaga have been done before. Siouxsie Sioux was at the forefront of the new wave movement of the 1970s with some punkish backnotes. As a lead singer in an era populated by strong male leads she led the way for women and her songs have been covered by many artists not the least Jeff Buckley. Great voice, great presence and an enduring legend.

Hannah Reid (London Grammar). There is something very ethereal about Reid’s voice. Primarily the voice is an instrument and Reid emphasises this with her vocal mastery more than most. Her voice completely complements the synth and guitar based sound of the band. On stage she is in total flow and I like this in an artist. There may not have been a London Grammar without a Florence and the Machine but I prefer Reid’s voice by just a smidgeon to relegate Flo to the almost but not quite list. Check out London Grammar’s Montreux Jazz Festival set in 2014.

Many others warrant being on this list e.g. Christine McVie (Fleetwood Mac), Florence Welsh (Florence and the Machine), Alison Goldfrapp (Goldfrapp), Beverley Knight, Annie Lennox (Eurthymics), Alison Moyet, Julia Fordham, Joan Armatrading, Linda Thompson, Beth Orton etc.

The beauty of lists, as Hornby reminds us, is the thought that goes into constructing them. In some ways this is more important than the list itself. There are no right or wrong answers, of course, and the same goes with management. Often there is no absolutely right way to do something. Time spent contemplating the best approach, what’s top of the list, is time well spent regardless of what approach you end up adopting.

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