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Just discovered a great Podcast from CBC Radio 3 Sessions. Even greater is a great set by Daniel,Fred & Julie.
Fred Squire solos Pretty Bird and It’s in the Water starting at 30:30

Fred’s banter is hillarious.

http://t.co/r1J0PaB.

Frederick Squire - Sings Shenandoah and other popular hits
Frederick Squire – All Things Past Serve To Guide You On Your Way

Courtesy of PigeonRow.
http://pigeonrow.com/frederick-squire-sings-shenandoah-and-other-popular-hits

The UK charts seemed to be full of novelty songs and oddities growing up. A large number being theme tunes to TV shows. In the post x-factor/got talent world. Its a shame they don’t exist anymore.

Theme from Auf Wiedersehen Pet – That’s living alright – Joe Fagin

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I’m very excited about this. 19th April 2011.

Frederick Squire produced my favourite album last year. I never would have found it if I wasn’t living around the corner from soundscapes music. I found these videos a couple of weeks ago while drawing up my list of favourite music from 2010. I wish I was there.

Frederick Squire – Shenandoah

Frederick Squire and Kate Maki – Tropical Survival Guide

Frederick Squire and Kate Maki – The Future of Tradition

Top 12 of 2010.

My year living in Toronto round the corner from @soundscapesTO turns up 3 Canadian acts (Basia Bulat, Forest City Lovers and Frederick Squire) in my favourites from last year.

Frederick Squire’s album March 12 is stunning. Listen to You sing low and we’ll sing high and tell me you didn’t cry.

January
Basia Bulat – Heart of my own
Gold Rush

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So long Mick Karn.


I spent a lot of time listening to Japan growing up. I still do. Oil On Canvas gets a regular listen. I was saddened today to find out Mick Karn died due to cancer.

Mojo have an obituary for Mick. Thanks for the music.

Japan – Quiet Life

Japan – I second that emotion.

Japan – Visions of China

Bikes and late 80’s sounding indie. What more do you want.

Their first album “By the hedge” is out on Jan 11th.

Mac Excel 2008 doesn’t support utf-8. To import utf-8 files convert them to utf-16 (little endian) and try again. Textmate works well to do this.

I found this from @michaeljaco.

You undoubtedly know this but worth a look. Six Ways Leaders Can Fuel Excellence At Anything http://blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2010/08/six-keys-to-being-excellent-at.html

The key points are:-

1. Ban words like “talented,” “gifted,” and “special” from your vocabulary. Well meaning as these words may be, they tend to give people credit for something they did nothing to earn, while also suggesting that others don’t have equal potential. Consider replacing these words with ones like “effective,” “determined,” “accomplished,” “skilled,” “persevering,” and “masterful,” all of which give due credit to effort.

2. Regularly, genuinely, and specifically acknowledge and appreciate people’s successes. Believe deeply in their potential, enthusiastically encourage their passions, and don’t be overly fazed by their failures. There may be nothing more motivating to the people you lead than to notice what they’re doing well, and to express your appreciation with detail and specificity. Likewise, there may be no single more powerful act than to handwrite and mail someone a personal note of appreciation.

3. Provide constant feedback. Annual or semi-annual reviews are vastly insufficient and often worthless. Most people don’t improve their skills over time, in large part because they don’t get consistent, specific feedback. That’s different than judgment or criticism. As often as possible, resist pointing out people’s deficits, and focus instead on where you can help them improve or take it to the next level in any given area.

4. Create and protect periods of uninterrupted focus. Don’t demand instant responses from your people all day long. Interruptions fracture their attention, and absorbed focus is a prerequisite to high quality work, especially on the most challenging tasks. Stop measuring your people by how many hours they work, and assess them instead based on the value they produce.

5. Encourage and model intermittent renewal throughout the day. Great performers, the research shows, work intensely for periods no longer than 90 minutes and then stop to recover and refuel. Create a “renewal room” so people have a place to truly chill out. Nothing better fuels productivity in the afternoons than a 20-30 minute nap between 12 and 2 p.m, and encouraging people to exercise at midday runs a close second.

6. Tie the pursuit of excellence to a larger mission. Excellence requires enormous effort. You need to give your people a compelling reason to push beyond their comfort zones. What most of us hunger for is evidence that what we’re doing truly matter and serves something beyond the bottom line. CEOs such as Alan Mullally at Ford, John Chambers at Cisco, and Steve Jobs at Apple have done a great job rallying their people around a higher mission. Start by defining what you truly stand for, share with others what gets you up in the morning as often as you can, and encourage people to go through the same exercise for themselves.

The article is worth reading. http://blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2010/11/six-ways-leaders-can-fuel-exce.html

If you’re not able to say you’re doing these things. Figure out why and change it.