Coming up on Rock Legacy this week...

You know, I am very enthusiastic about Rock Legacy. It is attracting the kind of people I always hoped it would; musicians who are happy to give time and thought to the pieces we do. True to its remit, the majority of the material is from first hand sources. Fans and historians alike will be able to reference it.

This week I shall be sharing a major interview with Nick Magnus. Nick is well known to the Prog Rock cognoscenti. Nick is best known for his long-term collaboration with Steve Hackett, but has also delivered some stunning solo albums along the way. Earlier, he was a founder member of The Enid. He is an ace when it comes to understanding and breathing life and soul into silicon chip music paraphenalia.

I am indebted to readers for pointing me in the right direction when it comes to subjects. I must single out Smoking Hot, who insisted that I check out Chantel McGregor. Also Dave Clemo, a very accomplished musician in his own right, whose latest material will be explored soon. He tipped me off about Nicki Gillis, who should be in touch soon about her UK tour.

Also coming up, an exclusive demo by Carl Wayne, sadly no longer with us, but well known to fans of The Move. This is one for the vaults and certainly a must have for fans.

If you haven't already done so, check out my interview with Tom McGuinness and read guest writer Raymond Benson on The Canterbury Scene.

I am also delighted, and somewhat relieved, to have completed phase one of The Mike Hurst Story. It's 20,000 words and you can access it on the "Producers" tab.

Readers are encouraged to tell me about their favourite bands and people, and if I like them too, I will do my best to contact them and do a piece.

I'm Spartacus and it's Ryan Giggs

nobody in particular
To draw a football analogy, Bloggers 5, Ambulance Chasers 0. The law has come into further disprepute over the super injunction fiasco. Not content to chase public bodies for ludicrous amounts of compensation (which they always settle out of court) for allowing their employees to use a stapler without proper training, Messrs Sue, Grabbit and Runne have of late mined a deep vein of cash in the form of super injunctions. These have been taken out by, as far as I can tell, utter nobodies. Had these nonentities gone to Max Clifford for maximum exposure, poor Max would not have been able to match the amount of chatter that the name Ryan Giggs has generated. Apart from the fact that he is an octogenarian in terms of a football career I knew little of the man, and could not have cared less who he was playing away with. In the bubble of mediocrity and sychophancy in which he lives, Mr Giggs somehow felt that his reputation should come before freedom of speech, particularly the freedom that is taken away by people with money.

So yes, I am Spartacus and I name Ryan Giggs as the utter git who has attempted to gag the free press.

Line up folks and join the chorus.

(PS, I live in Scotland.)

Parliament's Climate of Fraud

Years ago I worked for several well known businesses. Before that I worked for a large Government Department on contract. I submitted expense claims that probably amounted to well over a hundred contracts. Not once did I cheat. Read that again. Not once did I cheat. The majority of the claims were for black cabs, for which, in those days, we did not have to produce receipts. You simply sent in your bill and your cab fare. As far as I know, nobody else cheated either. I guess you might say I was old-fashioned, but the idea of cheating the tax-payer was well off the agenda. I could have doubled my income had I done so, and believe me, I had plenty of reason to do it.

What did not exist, in that department, in those days, was an ethos of fraud.

A couple of decades later I was unfortunate enough to work for a railway company. The situation was quite the reverse. Almost everybody stole from the company, including my boss, who departed, with a clean sheet, when he was eventually found out. Almost on day one I was advised on how to steal from the system.

So, there does not have to be a climate of fraud in any corporation. The extent to which it occurs is premised on whether those in charge will do anything about it, and of course, if everybody is at it, those who choose to be honest can get a rough ride. I reported a colleague who tried to get me to steal, during my first week there. He was "questioned" by my corrupt boss and eventually moved with a promotion. I would probably have kept quiet, but I was pressured to defraud and that was a bridge too far.

Well, if I can do it, how come our MPs cannot? It is clear there was a climate of laxity at best, and at worst, an encouragement to steal. Theft is for people who are weak, for people who are essentially sociopathic. So it is all the more worrying that our Parliament was complicit in mass fraud, and it took a newspaper to reveal it and get something done.

Today we see the jailing of a former Labour Minister. The judge's summing up is damning:

Passing sentence, Mr Justice Saunders said Morley was guilty of "blatant dishonesty" and had "thrown away his good name and character."

He said: "I am satisfied from the nature of the mortgage transactions and the correspondence that the excessive claims were made deliberately and are not explicable even in part by oversight."(Telegraph)

Elliot Morley simply failed to apply normal standards of morality to his job. What is much worse is that there are still many who, for reasons that are inexplicable, have not been arrested and charged, most of them are Labour. It is clear that the Labour goverment had 13 years to address this issue and ignored it right up until election time, making sure that any prosecutions would arise after the vote.

I am aware of some Labour politicians who were never involved. Sadly, they have chosen to stay very quiet over the issue, probably because of party loyalty. It makes you wonder if there was ever one man or woman among them who had the guts to speak out. Apparently not.

Elliot Morley
Today there are one or two more cases pending, though not necessarily over expenses. The ground swell of public opinion is anger, not disbelief. But the public wants blood. A jail sentence, in these cases seems to me mis-placed. Those found guilty have terminated their political aspirations with extreme prejudice. They should of course be made to pay back every penny, and they should be made to do community work, out of doors, in a high vis jacket, with the words "thief" on them. These people need to be taught a lesson, not accommodated in a cushy open nick for a few months.

Will anything like this ever happen again in our Government? Evil shape-shifts. Wickedness is a rat run. The authorities have plugged one hole, but there will be many others. I behoves the Government to be vigilant, swift and moral.

Chris Huhne - How long will he last?

There is little doubt in my mind that stories like the Chris Huhne saga are subject to the controls and whims of Fleet Street. Remember that Mark Oaten was exposed shortly after he decided to run for leadership of the Lib Dems. The implication is that of course they knew what he was up to but were prepared to keep a lid on it until Oaten got too big for his boots. It is also curious that David Laws has been given an easy time of it. I have been unable to find out exactly which "six breaches" of Parliamentary standards he was guilty of. Fleet Street is reluctant to go for him it seems. Certainly, had the findings in the Laws case been published in full, it would cast doubt on the "it's cos I is Gay" defence. (Interestingly, Ivan Massow agrees with me "Cooking the books had nothing to do with being gay, it was due to his utter lack of integrity." he writes) But that does not suit Fleet Street, or the Political Classes; Laws is in.

 Chris Huhne most certainly is out. The question is how long has he got? The news today is that there is a tape which, while not being conclusive, certainly paves the way for an investigation. Did someone say, down in the vaults of the Establishment, "Mr Huhne has become a nuisance. Let's hope he meets with an accident."

I doubt he will last the week at this rate. The MSM have decided to go for him and that is that.

Eurovision 2011

Weasel's comments and predictions for Eurovision 2011, over at www.rock-legacy.blogspot.com.

I have reviewed all the finalists and placed my bets. Am I right or wrong?

Quote of the Decade

In seeking to criticise the actions of the US over the death of his father, Omar Bin Laden said:

"We maintain that arbitrary killing is not a solution to political problems"

Super Injunction

I am really very disappointed at the weekend revelations of who has a super injunction and why they got one. None of the people concerned are remotely of interest to me and what they have been getting up to is, well, to say the least somewhat predictable.




A bit of spanking? A bit of rumpy pumpy outwith the marriage? A visit to a reasonably priced prozzie?

The only reason I can imagine that these rather very sad people got a Super Injunction is because it has somehow replaced adoption of a poor black kid as the latest must-have accessory.

So, folks, perhaps you should aspire to getting one for yourself.


Go on. Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on.
Go on. Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on.
Go on. Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on.
Go on. Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on.
Go on. Go on, go on, go on, go on, go on.












NB: No C list celebs were harmed during the writing of this post.

Elections: The election result is about the mood, not the politics

Just had a look at the latest results of the local elections. If there is a story, a big story, it is not Nick Clegg. Clegg, along with his party, is a side-show. All I will say on that is that Cameron should now support Clegg to the hilt and do everything he can to strengthen the position of his deputy. It goes along with the old rule about being nice to people on the way up because you will certainly need them on the way down.

Tories on the way up?

Yes. Latest figures show they have actually made a net gain in the number of councillors and one council. This is astounding. The "others", the parties of the loony left and right have made massive losses, many, I suspect, have had voters migrate to the main parties. Except the Lib Dems, that is. Labour has not done as well as it may seem. They are clearly benefiting from an anti-Lib Dem vote.

No, the astonishing thing about yesterday's election is that the Conservatives have not only remained resistant to everything we have been fed about them, the people have given them what at least is a partial thumbs up to the way they are running the country. A majority of voters support the need for economies. You have to be deluded to be in favour of continuing the profligacy of the last government. Finally, people are catching on to this and the vote last night proves it.

The AV vote has yet to come in, but see my post below about that. Nobody wants weird changes to the system in times of stress. It is sad news for those who want voting reform because it will be a long time before there is a political will to do this again.

Scotland has its own story. My local MSP Iain Gray, scraped in with 150 votes. Gray of course is the leader of Labour in Scotland so his personal result is nothing short of a near disaster. Alex Salmond must be more than his usual oleaginous self this morning. Don't get me wrong, I voted for him, but he does have a way of looking far too pleased with himself.

The fact is, in Scotland, the result has little to do with Labour. Politics works in Scotland. The SNP have managed a rare balancing act of being old fashioned socialists and at the same time have mostly avoided becoming obessed with providing free translation services for Lithuanian Lesbians.

Some of us remember that it was the SNP who assisted the fishing industry during the fuel crisis a few years ago when Gordon Brown absolutely refused to help. This kind of thing gets remembered. Labour has been just about crap at everything, having never really torn itself away from the Westminster government. Your man in the street sees potholes being repaired, gets free prescriptions and a mood of fairness about austerity. Nicola Sturgeon's dumping of PFI, almost the day the SNP formed a government, was far-sighted and showed clear blue water between the SNP and Labour. All these things are easy to see and they are real.

So, really, this is not about politics - I mean the result - it is about the voters' reaction to the times we live in and we either dismiss that which we do not understand (AV) or cleave to what we know (The Conservatives and the SNP)

All the rhetoric in the world cannot stand against our basic emotion to hunker down, stay calm and wait.

Change? Not at the moment, we are too stressed out

An observation on tomorrow's vote:

I emailed a friend the other day, in fact two days ago, and he hasn't replied. This is unusual for him, but for the fact that tomorrow he has an important event, unrelated to the vote. I say important; in fact it is very important and certainly something that will have absorbed his time and energy for some days and in reality my email was of little consequence.

In times of stress people shut down a little bit. If I am doing a particularly difficult bit of driving during poor conditions, I turn off the radio.

Well, we are living through quite a lot of national stress right now. Anybody who is not suffering from what are for some, catastrophic rises in the price of base commodities is very lucky, and, probably very wealthy, or living somewhere not in Europe.

We stare into an abyss. The indicators are that in real terms we shall be relatively impoverished. Most of us understand why this is. Most of us know that 13 years of maxing out the national credit card created a bubble that has now burst. And it's payback time. Those who are lucky enough to have work and an income are paying the bills, not just for themselves, but for every screwball "initiative" that was designed to inflate the state, and in so doing, maintain Labour in power forever.

Well, that investment did not work. Sooner or later people were going to resent the fact that feckless, anti-social tatterdemalions were getting social housing, benefits and free everything in return for making no contribution to society whatsoever, and in some cases, actively seeking to destroy our society all together.

So we live in a time of stress. We also live in a time when hatred of minorities is acute. Some might link economic stress and scapegoating, but that would be something of a glib answer. Hatred is not the preserve of the envious poor. I read that a man called Philip Sallon was the subject of a horrendous attack in London recently. Sallon, some might argue, was asking for it. Flamboyant is not the word. Sallon is also fairly showily gay. Being different is clearly something that attracts hatred. Being gay clearly does and there seems to be an anti-gay element to an attack that resulted in a fractured skull and broken bones. In an interview, Sallon's pal Boy George expressed dismay at the attack and told a paper of "his fears of a growing intolerance towards people who stand out from the norm".

"Growing intolerance"? Society has always been intolerant to people who stand out. Not a lot has changed. Intolerance is not "growing", it is endemic in our society. It is merely the case that there is a tectonic slip between what we are supposed to think and say officially and what really think, mostly, privately.

However and whatever, it is with a shed load of irony that another flamboyant character, John Galliano, the fashion designer, has been dropped from his sponsors and employers, Christian Dior, for allegedly making several anti-semitic remarks and also hurling insults at an Asian. He is about to stand trial and we shall find out if he has a case to answer.

So, perhaps there is a prevalence of hatred, perhaps it is more shocking in times that are thought of as liberal. Whatever the case, people are stressed and quite honestly do not have a lot of time for anything other than their own personal problems.

My case here is that perhaps the collapse in the "Yes" to AV vote, and the poor showing of Labour in Scotland, suggests that change on this kind of scale is not wanted at a time when there are too many changes to contend with and they are all too close to home for comfort.

COMMENTING IS ON FOR THE TIME BEING

Dead Terrorists

THEY DON'T LIKE IT UP 'EM MISTER MANNERIN'

Who do you think you are kidding Mister Laden...

So, Farewell then
Obama Bin Laden
Your name
caused confusion
perhaps
it is for the best




I read that five people, of dusky middle eastern appearence have been arrested for taking photos and videos of a nuclear power station. With a view to what?

In the end it will be a battle of the people. Over in Pakistan, the people have been keeping mum about Osama. Over here, we need vigilance, vigilance I tell you. We are the eyes and ears of the war on terror. And unless we have the Muslim population of this country on our side, our defenses will be sorely tried.

In other news, more and more luvvies are signing up for AV. Yes to AV they say. Well, if an actor says it's good for the country, what more do I need?

Shameless plug once again but if you keep on visiting this blog, that is what you are going to get.

Read my interview with Tom McGuinness over at www.rock-legacy.blogspot.com