10.30.2008

Hasta la Victoria Siempre!

Live At Carnegie Hall
Buena Vista Social Club
Nonesuch Records




It’s one of those albums that everyone absolutely must listen to, right alongside Pink Floyd’s The Wall and The Sex Pistols’ Never Mind the Bollocks, a quintessential rite of passage for all music lovers. Originally a social club instituted in the 1940’s in Havana, Buena Vista Social Club revisits the warmth of Cuban rhythm in a way that’s both fresh and nostalgic. Songs dating from the 1920’s from the heart of Cuba were revived by Ry Cooder, who got these guys out of retirement to perform together at Carnegie Hall. What we get in the end is almost two dozen talented musicians performing exotic tunes from pre-Revolutionary times, like some sort of time capsule. Ibrahim Ferrer, legendary artist fronts the 22-member arrangement, giving the entire set a gorgeous, historical, organic texture while he sings about the innocence of pre-communist Cuba.

Oasis will Shake Your Ragdoll, Baby

Dig Out Your Soul
Oasis
Reprise Records


After a three-year hiatus, Oasis has released their seventh studio album, Dig Out Your Soul, which is arguably their best work in the last decade. While the Manchester quintet has grown up a bit, their boyish wit and juvenile charms still ring strong. The album opens with “Bag it Up,” a catchy alternative anthem that carries through while Liam sings about the “heebie jeebies.” The album takes a more melodic detour in later tracks such as “The Shock of the Lightning” and the ultra-aggressive, self-deprecating tune “Ain’t Got Nothing.” So far it seems that the break has proved to be a good choice for the band, who suffered from a major decline in popularity during the early 2000’s when Britpop wasn’t favored too strongly. Fronted by two egomaniacal Gallagher brothers, Dig Out Your Soul shows some kind of soulful growth that fans like to see, even when a band’s charm was previously defined by being an asshole.

10.29.2008

Environment is doomed, sustainability experts say
By Miné Salkin



Guest speaker Stephen Lewis told students that “this planet is doomed” at a conference advocating Students for Sustainability this afternoon at the University of British Columbia.

The Nobel-Prize winning diplomat, politician, and broadcaster said that all international and other government actions towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions, such as the 1992 World Summit Conference were ways of “getting away with the appearance of movement” in regards to the environmental crisis.

Lewis capitalized on the ineffectuality of the current Conservative government in Canada, and the capitalist framework that developed nations strive to adhere to while ignoring the tell-tale apocalyptic signs of a world in peril. He said the Harper government is one whose “agenda for the future abandoned the environment,” and that it focuses attention on propping up oil and gas companies who further the environmental decline by protecting corporate interests.


Created by the Sierra Youth Coalition and the David Suzuki Foundation, The Students for Sustainability Tour began last month to educate post-secondary students across the country on how to decrease their carbon footprint. Their message is a tough one: some of the environmental damage that has already been done is irreversible.

Quoting from George Monbiot’s book Heat, Lewis said that something must be done for the environment, otherwise we are doomed to an apocalyptic reality of irrevocable environmental and social damage that will happen within the next 40 years. “We have already seen 150,000 excess deaths due to climate change alone,” he said.


Two sides of the same coin

Motivational speaker Severin Suzuki said that the current global economic crisis is indicative of an old-world capitalist mentality that reflects its own failings, and that the reality of climate change is an impetus for both environmental and economic action.

“This crisis is an opportunity to understand how our economic system of deregulation and globalization is unsustainable. This economic system has evolved in a way that has resulted in the exploitation and destruction of the environment,” she said.



Suzuki says that we must think of new ways to create an environmentally-friendly economic system that favors the sustainability niche in the 21st century. “The environmental momentum should not be broken by an economic crisis,” she said.


Cow problem


Unsustainable industries are a large culprit in both the economic crisis and the intensification of climate change, triathlete and author of The Thrive Diet Brendan Brazier explained.

Brazier points to statistics that indicate that the cattle industry is highly unsustainable. While it takes anywhere from 2,000 to 8,000 gallons of water to produce 1 lb of beef, other protein-rich plants such as hemp only require 100 gallons to produce 1 lb of hemp seed, and are resistant to disease and don’t require pesticides.

The UN published a report in 2006 claiming that livestock animals contribute 38% more greenhouse gasses than all of our transportation combined, and are dooming us all in the environmental and economic sense.

According to Brazier, 70% of the food grown around the world is for animal feed, and it requires 9-16 lbs of grain to get 1 lb of beef. “We are creating more CO2 than we drive,” Brazier said.

Lewis ended the conference with a fearful, motivational tone. “If we don’t move with supernatural rapidity, I think there’s going to be some kind of cataclysm between 2030 and 2050,” he said.