Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Blog Page 1668

5 Minute Tute: Politics and the Media

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How will the recent media scandals change the relationship between the press and politicians?

In many ways, not that much will be different. Politicians and journalists will still have their secret contacts, and will use each other to advance their own interests just as they always have, but then these issues were never really the problem. The issue was that too much power was concentrated in the hands of a single individual – Rupert Murdoch, who had, or at least was thought to have by politicians, the power to win elections.

There is now a real chance that this will change, and that we will see a return to a more pluralistic media industry that will serve the public interest much better. Is phone hacking really just a proxy issue that al- lows MPs to tackle Murdoch’s political influence? Up to a point. The turning point was when Cameron made his ‘mea culpa’ speech, when he directly admitted that politicians, including him, ‘were so keen to win the support of newspapers that they turned a blind eye’, and has become the first Prime Minister to do so publicly.

Murdoch’s influence has been a taboo topic ever since Tony Blair first started courting him back in the 90s; the phone hacking scandal hasn’t so much allowed politicians to talk about Murdoch as forced them to, and the damage done to Jeremy Hunt, as well as David Cameron, shows that the Murdochs can still bite back if they want to.

What might future press regulation look like as a result of the Levenson Inquiry?

I think most people are agreed on the fundamentals. First, no one wants state regulation – for example, no one wants a system in which you have to get permission of a judge to disclose certain kinds of information, which would sacrifice too much for the sake of privacy. However, the Press Complaints Commission needs more power, perhaps even statutory powers. It needs the power to fine papers and the ability to investigate without a complaint being made, and it needs to have authority over all media outlets in the country, not just those that choose to participate. It’s all quite undramatic, but will likely be effective at curtailing the nastier side of the press.

Are all the parties equally at risk in this scandal?

Cameron’s in power, so ultimately he is most at risk of a public backlash. The real question is whether Ed Miliband can distance himself from News International, as he is trying to do at the moment. It may well not work though; after all, Margaret Thatcher may have been the first leader to take advantage of Murdoch’s support, but Blair was still the first to actively court him, to actually go and ask for his backing. Voters will remember this (Blair is still godfather to one of Murdoch’s children, after all), so it’s more likely that Labour and the Tories are in this together.

How might the shift from print to internet affect relations between the press and the politicians?

It’s fair to say that power is being diluted, although newspapers are still the agenda-setters in this country. British television is regulated so that it is obliged to portray both sides of an issue in a neutral way, which means that British news channels don’t have the influence over public opinion that, for example, Fox does in the US. However, it’s now much harder to completely control all means of communication with a slice of the electorate, as Murdoch was able to do, there are just too many other sources of news now. Newspapers aren’t finished yet, but I don’t think that anyone will be able to recreate the kind of control that Murdoch has had over the British media.

Steven Hewlett is a journalist, broadcaster and media consultant.

Sides of the Story – Pornography

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Facts of the matter

The cynical view is that David Cameron stuck his oar into the internet censorship debate merely to distract the conservative press fromhis party’s dismal performance in the recent local elections. If so, the stunt worked. His statement last weekend that he wished to ‘make children safer’ in relation to online content has been seized upon by the British media as an opportunity to rehash an old favourite: the pornography debate.

Sides of the story
Our take on other takes on the
online pornography debate
Facts of the matter
The cynical view is that David Cameron stuck
his oar into the internet censorship debate
merely to distract the conservative press from
his party’s dismal performance in the recent lo-
cal elections. If so, the stunt worked. His state-
ment last weekend that he wished to ‘make
children safer’ in relation to online content
has been seized upon by the British media as
an opportunity to rehash an old favourite: the
pornography debate. The campaign to regulate
internet porn has been led (noisily) by
Claire Perry, a Tory backbencher. She chaired
an independent inquiry into online child pro-
tection last month which found that youthful
over-exposure to porn can lead to ‘early sexual
involvement and an increased consumption of
sexual media’.
Confronted with this new evidence, David
Cameron has promised a review of a range of
options for filtering porn. These include the
opt-in system favoured by Perry, whereby cus-
tomers would have to specifically request ac-
cess to adult content when signing up to a new
broadband contract.
Laugh-a-minute
The Daily Mail has fallen over itself to back
Perry and prevent “the wholesale corruption
of childhood”. Its preferred call to arms has
been a string of real-life stories on the victims
of the wave of perversion sweeping Britain. ‘Ja-
mie is 13 and hasn’t kissed a girl. But he’s now
on the Sex Offender Register after online porn
warped his mind’, read one headline.
Voice(s) of reason
Michael White’s article in The Guardian hits
the nail on the head. The libertarian position
on porn, adopted by many left-leaning colum-
nists, is superficially attractive. Unlimited ac-
cess to porn / drink / cigarettes is easy to justify
if you bandy ‘liberty’ around enough. But the
consequences can be unpleasant. “Whether
it’s sex or violence, physical or mental, being
bombarded with the stuff is bound to coarsen
young sensibilities.” At the end of the day, White
says, “It’s easy to tease the Mail… but surely we
should do our best to make it difficult for eight-
year-old computer whizzes to stumble upon
disturbing and unsuitable material online?”
Charles Arthur, also at The Guardian, disa-
grees. Arthur believes that “nothing short of
a direct meteorite” will stop adolescent boys
accessing porn. Maybe so. But this does not
mean that they should be confronted with it
whenever they surf the net – we should make
it harder for children to find adult content
online. Arthur’s solution to the problem of on-
line pornography – that parents should keep a
tighter rein on their kids – is also unconvinc-
ing. Children “don’t need legislation; they don’t
need complicated filters… they just need to be
part of the family.” This smacks of middle class
complacency.
When children do not have access to the sup-
portive environment Arthur envisages, the
state must step in.

The campaign to regulate internet porn has been led (noisily) by Claire Perry, a Tory backbencher. She chairedan independent inquiry into online child protection last month which found that youthful over-exposure to porn can lead to ‘early sexual involvement and an increased consumption of sexual media’.Confronted with this new evidence, David Cameron has promised a review of a range of options for filtering porn. These include the opt-in system favoured by Perry, whereby customers would have to specifically request access to adult content when signing up to a new broadband contract.

Laugh-a-minute

The Daily Mail has fallen over itself to back Perry and prevent “the wholesale corruption of childhood”. Its preferred call to arms has been a string of real-life stories on the victims of the wave of perversion sweeping Britain. ‘Jamie is 13 and hasn’t kissed a girl. But he’s now on the Sex Offender Register after online porn warped his mind’, read one headline.

Voice(s) of reason

Michael White’s article in The Guardian hits the nail on the head. The libertarian position on porn, adopted by many left-leaning columnists, is superficially attractive. Unlimited access to porn / drink / cigarettes is easy to justify if you bandy ‘liberty’ around enough. But the consequences can be unpleasant. “Whether it’s sex or violence, physical or mental, being bombarded with the stuff is bound to coarsen young sensibilities.” At the end of the day, White says, “It’s easy to tease the Mail… but surely we should do our best to make it difficult for eight-year-old computer whizzes to stumble upon disturbing and unsuitable material online?”

Charles Arthur, also at The Guardian, disagrees. Arthur believes that “nothing short of a direct meteorite” will stop adolescent boys accessing porn. Maybe so. But this does not mean that they should be confronted with it whenever they surf the net – we should make it harder for children to find adult content online. Arthur’s solution to the problem of online pornography – that parents should keep a tighter rein on their kids – is also unconvincing. Children “don’t need legislation; they don’t need complicated filters… they just need to be part of the family.” This smacks of middle class complacency.When children do not have access to the supportive environment Arthur envisages, the state must step in.

Settling the Score

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T he first CD I ever bought was the soundtrack to Titanic. I bought all three Lord of the Rings soundtracks, and I will argue for hours with anyone who doesn’t agree that Nicholas Hooper didn’t produce the best Harry Potter score. And when I heard that Dario Marianelli was coming to Oxford, I took out my dancing shoes and skipped down to the Holywell Music Room. Marianelli – in case you’ve been living under a rock for the last seven years, or tend not to wait in the cinema after the film until the score credits come on – is the composer of period film. He wrote the score for I Capture the Castle (2001), achieved major recognition with Pride & Prejudice (2005), won an Oscar with Atonement (2007), and continued with Jane Eyre (2011). He’s been astoundingly prolific, finishing up to six projects in an eight month period, and scoring popular films like Eat Pray Love and the currently showing Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.  
His scores are lush, lyrical, neo-Romantic, and poignant. Marianelli takes a narrow and even repetitive melodic sequence and extends it symphonically. Pride & Prejudice is a matutinal, contemplative, arpeggiated piano-driven score. In contrast, the Atonement score arrests attention immediately with the percussive use of a typewriter in the opening sequence, immediately setting off a revolving rhythmic sequence which Marianelli likened to the ‘mechanical, but a bit deranged’ mind of Briony Tallis, the central character. Jack Liebeck’s violin in Jane Eyre is suitably expansive and desperately interior. This is music to have nestled in your ear, or played generously on massive speakers.
Marianelli appeared at the Holywell Music Room in conversation with Michael White, the Telegraph music critic, attended by Jack Liebeck, the young concert violinist who played on the Jane Eyre soundtrack. Despite his intuitive and very feeling scores, Marianelli betrayed little sentiment when describing how he was chosen to score a film. Atonement and Pride & Prejudice attracted attention and he’s subsequently been branded as a period composer – ‘That’s what they offer to me’, he said. Composing for film is a tricky business: most directors hand composers the finished product and expect a score as icing on the cake. Marianelli’s partnership with Joe Wright, director of Pride & Prejudice, Atonement, and the upcoming Anna Karenina (also, lamentably, starring Keira Knightly), has offered him something more generous, the opportunity to be in contact with the developing film, to start in advance, and to work alongside the director. 
White played several clips which featured key moments of Marianelli’s score. The first was the scene in Pride & Prejudice when Knightley stands on the edge of the cliff in the Peak district and Jean Thibaudeaut’s rendition of Marianellis’ score cascades all around, counterpointed by homophonous strings. Marianelli admitted he’d attempted the music several times before he got it right. It was like ‘a very big bird’ which runs fast and has to take off. 
White prodded Marianelli several times about the disparity between composing for film and composing for the concert hall. He asked if Marianelli felt a distinct lack of status, if he always envisioned making a transition, if there was something less glamorous about the commercial aspect of film-composing. Marianelli didn’t take the bait. Film composition ‘is not a sub-brand,’ Marianelli argued, ‘Music I write is used.’ Later, as the question continued to come up, Marianelli said, ‘Don’t think I’m diminished as a composer because there are people who need music to do certain things.’  He aptly compared his writing for film – a job which is recompensed by money and which might not be considered ‘pure art’ – to Bach’s composition of cantatas for the weekly Sunday mass, a job which required deadlines and an immediate sense of being set aside for the next week. ‘It’s not for the composer to judge its staying power,’ he said. 
It was very clear that White felt that such a hierarchy existed and Marianelli did not. Instead of viewing the film composer’s role as subservient to the director’s vision – liable to the sword of Damocles which the producers and financiers of films hold – Marianelli sees the composer’s role as a part of the narrative or as a character in the film itself. Like opera, film scores tell stories, enlighten, engage, and move, said Marianelli. His ambition is to write music which has ‘integrity and a life’ which can ‘stand on its own’. 
Contrary to what you might think,  young, insecure directors cling very tightly to their power and would have written the music themselves if they could. Mature directors, said Marianelli, are more relaxed. Should the director exercise his brutal editing power, Marianelli is satisfied by still getting an album, which he conceptualizes as ideally offering a narrative experience analogous to watching the film.
I met Marianelli after the conversation with White, wearied from his talk and from the queue of impassioned American fans who stayed behind to have him sign their piano scores. When I asked Marianelli about the life habits of a composer, he admitted to drinking lots of coffee. ‘I’m very messy,’ he said, ‘I go a bit to the piano or the computer, watch the movie millions of times, and then the main habit is just to sit on that chair and work until something comes out and not let go. When I find something I hold onto it like a dog with a bone and try to make something out of it.’ When he’s actively composing, Marianelli finds music ‘almost unbearable. Going out for a meal is excruciating, because there’s music in the restaurant, and I can’t eat.’ 
It struck me that Marianelli’s interpretation of the period of the film he works with is very intuitive. When I asked whether he thinks periods have particular ‘sounds’, he admitted there’s an ‘English sound’ but said he was unable to elaborate much further, as it would merit a ‘very long conversation about the surface sound of the style and of the place’.  
Marianelli is currently deeply  into composition of the score for Anna Karenina, and I wondered if his composition found any distinct roots in Russian music. Marianelli said that he found Russian folk music important, ‘Especially the kind of folk music that started the five (Mily Balakirev, Cesar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Borodin). Especially Balakirev. At some point he went off in the 1860s and went collecting folk music. He had this clear idea that he wanted a national Russian music based on folk tunes. And they’re very interesting, they have certain preferred intervals and idiomatic tone of phrases. I tried to listen as much as I could to them, more than the music of Mussorsky or Rimsky-Korsakov or even Tchaikovsky. I was more interested in what inspired them to come up with the Russian music that they invented, because Russian national classical music is a bit of an invention.’ 
Marianelli’s association with period films made me wonder if he responded to the novels upon which the films were based. ‘Yes and no,’ said Marianelli. ‘I did on Atonement because I started to work before the script was finished. Some ideas come from the novel, from knowing the characters better than I could have known if it was just a script. Sometimes it’s a hindrance to know too much because the film condenses or concentrates certain elements of the story.’
Marianelli divulged the fact that there’s a lot of liberty in Wright’s version of Anna Karenina because of a central conceit of an opera theatre.  ‘Most of the story happens within the theatre almost as if it were an opera itself,’ said Marianelli, ‘The whole story is almost like it were an opera or puppet show. So the music goes in very strange places sometimes.’
Before the end of their conversation, White played a clip of the scene of the evacuation of Dunkirk from Atonement, in which the riotous carnival and destructive mayhem of the beach is movingly contradicted by a slow cello and a building elegiac counterpoint which slowly grows towards a climax, in which soldiers on the beach resolutely sing a Hubert Parry hymn, then eases away. Marianelli doesn’t watch the screen, but looks at his feet. There is a taut attitude of concentration in his posture, as though he is feeling the music, as Wordsworth writes, ‘moving through the heart and along the blood’. When White asks Marianelli why he chose that particular realisation, Marianelli answers with feeling, ‘What music do you expect? It is a great pity…we feel a compassion for the loss and waste. It is not the hellish but the heavenly part which is missing.’ 
It is this ability to underscore or to contradict the visual dimension of the film, commenting on the narrative in a way which immerses the viewer in the experience, which will ensure Marianelli’s prominent place in film composition for years to come. 

The first CD I ever bought was the soundtrack to Titanic. I bought all three Lord of the Rings soundtracks, and I will argue for hours with anyone who doesn’t agree that Nicholas Hooper didn’t produce the best Harry Potter score. And when I heard that Dario Marianelli was coming to Oxford, I took out my dancing shoes and skipped down to the Holywell Music Room. Marianelli – in case you’ve been living under a rock for the last seven years, or tend not to wait in the cinema after the film until the score credits come on – is the composer of period film. He wrote the score for I Capture the Castle (2001), achieved major recognition with Pride & Prejudice (2005), won an Oscar with Atonement (2007), and continued with Jane Eyre (2011). He’s been astoundingly prolific, finishing up to six projects in an eight month period, and scoring popular films like Eat Pray Love and the currently showing Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.  

His scores are lush, lyrical, neo-Romantic, and poignant. Marianelli takes a narrow and even repetitive melodic sequence and extends it symphonically. Pride & Prejudice is a matutinal, contemplative, arpeggiated piano-driven score. In contrast, the Atonement score arrests attention immediately with the percussive use of a typewriter in the opening sequence, immediately setting off a revolving rhythmic sequence which Marianelli likened to the ‘mechanical, but a bit deranged’ mind of Briony Tallis, the central character. Jack Liebeck’s violin in Jane Eyre is suitably expansive and desperately interior. This is music to have nestled in your ear, or played generously on massive speakers.

Marianelli appeared at the Holywell Music Room in conversation with Michael White, the Telegraph music critic, attended by Jack Liebeck, the young concert violinist who played on the Jane Eyre soundtrack. Despite his intuitive and very feeling scores, Marianelli betrayed little sentiment when describing how he was chosen to score a film. Atonement and Pride & Prejudice attracted attention and he’s subsequently been branded as a period composer – ‘That’s what they offer to me’, he said. Composing for film is a tricky business: most directors hand composers the finished product and expect a score as icing on the cake. Marianelli’s partnership with Joe Wright, director of Pride & Prejudice, Atonement, and the upcoming Anna Karenina (also, lamentably, starring Keira Knightly), has offered him something more generous, the opportunity to be in contact with the developing film, to start in advance, and to work alongside the director. 

White played several clips which featured key moments of Marianelli’s score. The first was the scene in Pride & Prejudice when Knightley stands on the edge of the cliff in the Peak district and Jean Thibaudeaut’s rendition of Marianellis’ score cascades all around, counterpointed by homophonous strings. Marianelli admitted he’d attempted the music several times before he got it right. It was like ‘a very big bird’ which runs fast and has to take off. 

White prodded Marianelli several times about the disparity between composing for film and composing for the concert hall. He asked if Marianelli felt a distinct lack of status, if he always envisioned making a transition, if there was something less glamorous about the commercial aspect of film-composing. Marianelli didn’t take the bait. Film composition ‘is not a sub-brand,’ Marianelli argued, ‘Music I write is used.’ Later, as the question continued to come up, Marianelli said, ‘Don’t think I’m diminished as a composer because there are people who need music to do certain things.’  He aptly compared his writing for film – a job which is recompensed by money and which might not be considered ‘pure art’ – to Bach’s composition of cantatas for the weekly Sunday mass, a job which required deadlines and an immediate sense of being set aside for the next week. ‘It’s not for the composer to judge its staying power,’ he said.

It was very clear that White felt that such a hierarchy existed and Marianelli did not. Instead of viewing the film composer’s role as subservient to the director’s vision – liable to the sword of Damocles which the producers and financiers of films hold – Marianelli sees the composer’s role as a part of the narrative or as a character in the film itself. Like opera, film scores tell stories, enlighten, engage, and move, said Marianelli. His ambition is to write music which has ‘integrity and a life’ which can ‘stand on its own’. 

Contrary to what you might think,  young, insecure directors cling very tightly to their power and would have written the music themselves if they could. Mature directors, said Marianelli, are more relaxed. Should the director exercise his brutal editing power, Marianelli is satisfied by still getting an album, which he conceptualizes as ideally offering a narrative experience analogous to watching the film.

I met Marianelli after the conversation with White, wearied from his talk and from the queue of impassioned American fans who stayed behind to have him sign their piano scores. When I asked Marianelli about the life habits of a composer, he admitted to drinking lots of coffee. ‘I’m very messy,’ he said, ‘I go a bit to the piano or the computer, watch the movie millions of times, and then the main habit is just to sit on that chair and work until something comes out and not let go. When I find something I hold onto it like a dog with a bone and try to make something out of it.’ When he’s actively composing, Marianelli finds music ‘almost unbearable. Going out for a meal is excruciating, because there’s music in the restaurant, and I can’t eat.’ 

It struck me that Marianelli’s interpretation of the period of the film he works with is very intuitive. When I asked whether he thinks periods have particular ‘sounds’, he admitted there’s an ‘English sound’ but said he was unable to elaborate much further, as it would merit a ‘very long conversation about the surface sound of the style and of the place’.  

Marianelli is currently deeply  into composition of the score for Anna Karenina, and I wondered if his composition found any distinct roots in Russian music. Marianelli said that he found Russian folk music important, ‘Especially the kind of folk music that started the five (Mily Balakirev, Cesar Cui, Modest Mussorgsky, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov and Alexander Borodin). Especially Balakirev. At some point he went off in the 1860s and went collecting folk music. He had this clear idea that he wanted a national Russian music based on folk tunes. And they’re very interesting, they have certain preferred intervals and idiomatic tone of phrases. I tried to listen as much as I could to them, more than the music of Mussorsky or Rimsky-Korsakov or even Tchaikovsky. I was more interested in what inspired them to come up with the Russian music that they invented, because Russian national classical music is a bit of an invention.’ 

Marianelli’s association with period films made me wonder if he responded to the novels upon which the films were based. ‘Yes and no,’ said Marianelli. ‘I did on Atonement because I started to work before the script was finished. Some ideas come from the novel, from knowing the characters better than I could have known if it was just a script. Sometimes it’s a hindrance to know too much because the film condenses or concentrates certain elements of the story.’

Marianelli divulged the fact that there’s a lot of liberty in Wright’s version of Anna Karenina because of a central conceit of an opera theatre.  ‘Most of the story happens within the theatre almost as if it were an opera itself,’ said Marianelli, ‘The whole story is almost like it were an opera or puppet show. So the music goes in very strange places sometimes.’

Before the end of their conversation, White played a clip of the scene of the evacuation of Dunkirk from Atonement, in which the riotous carnival and destructive mayhem of the beach is movingly contradicted by a slow cello and a building elegiac counterpoint which slowly grows towards a climax, in which soldiers on the beach resolutely sing a Hubert Parry hymn, then eases away. Marianelli doesn’t watch the screen, but looks at his feet. There is a taut attitude of concentration in his posture, as though he is feeling the music, as Wordsworth writes, ‘moving through the heart and along the blood’. When White asks Marianelli why he chose that particular realisation, Marianelli answers with feeling, ‘What music do you expect? It is a great pity…we feel a compassion for the loss and waste. It is not the hellish but the heavenly part which is missing.’ 

It is this ability to underscore or to contradict the visual dimension of the film, commenting on the narrative in a way which immerses the viewer in the experience, which will ensure Marianelli’s prominent place in film composition for years to come. 

Interview – Peter Mandelson

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Neil Kinnock famously quipped that ‘those who call Peter Mandelson an ‘evil genius’ are only half-right’. When I put this to the now ennobled Lord Mandelson, he cracks up into laughter – an uncharacteristic release of energy. The truth, I suggest, is that the two aren’t quite mutually exclusive, even mutually reinforcing. This time he reveals a wry smile and a knowing glance to his aide; he seems relaxed, jovial but overall – in control.

Since Labour failed to get a majority at the last election, the peer has maintained a ferocious schedule, globe-trotting, meeting foreign leaders – especially in the EU, on which he delivered the annual ‘Hands Lecture’ last Friday.

Mandelson is an ardent pro-European, unlike his grandfather Herbert Morrison who, as Acting Prime Minister, was faced with the decision of whether to join the European Coal and Steel Community (a precursor to the EU). When a civil servant pressed him for an answer, Morrison had no doubt. ‘The Durham miners won’t wear it’ he said, thereby sealing Britain’s fate on the periphery of the integrationist project for a generation. In his speech at the Exam Schools, Mandelson expressed concern that the ‘looser arrangement’ the UK is developing with the Franco-German core may lead ultimately to a similar exclusion that left Britain behind in the 50s and 60s. As the Eurozone’s ‘inexorable logic’, to coin George Osborne’s grim phrase, forces it to become fiscally and politically unified, Britain will ultimately have to make a choice – fully in, or fully out

Not surprisingly considering his voluminous charm and intellect, Mandelson was an Oxford PPE-ist. I ask him about those days; his answer was fascinating. As Mandelson recounts: ‘I came from a family background that was about serious politics. I was almost literally born into the Labour Party’. Indeed the Hampstead garden suburb in which he was raised nurtured those seeds of moderate liberalism that would come to full fruition under Blair’s premiership. Born in 1953 to a relatively prosperous family Mandelson was pedigree Labour – the grandson of Herbert Morrison and contemporary to the Wilson’s who lived nearby. I put it to him that given his pedigree it seems strange that the Union and even the Labour Club never fell under his spell. ‘A number of greasy poles inhibited [Oxford] politics’ replied the most infamous political operator of the past generation, ‘the struggles of the Union society, and their termly elections, didn’t fire me with great interest or enthusiasm’. Given that he proved so apt at climbing it, his statement that ‘the greasy pole didn’t attract me’, left me incredulous. Yet upon examination perhaps I shouldn’t have been so bemused. Mandelson was intensely political – it’s just he was more focused on doing something than on being someone.

His gap-year in Tanzania, then an incubator for an eclectic mix of leftism and nationalism had the effect of, if not radicalising him, then imbuing a sense of social purpose that was fundamentally socialist in its world view.  A 1972 letter he wrote to his friend, Stephen Howell, captured his political maturity: ‘Sometimes, I reason that Tanzanian socialism is tremendous, and the only hope for development, but that socialism in England would be wholly impractical…England no more has a socialist future than it will fly in the air’. Mandelson was left-wing, but not self-indulgently so like his contemporary Christopher Hitchens – the Balliol Bolshevik who planned communist insurrections before Sunday formal. Upon returned from Africa and settling into our city of dreaming spires, he was reticent: ‘Oxford to me was a little but alien, a little bit difficult, and I could not shake off my interest in Africa’.

An introvert, however, he was not, joining the United Nations Youth and Students Association and set up an alternative Oxford Labour Students Association, seeking to disassociate himself from the ‘self-serving careerists and preening would-be Cabinet ministers’ – the would-be Labour politicians, who inhibited the Labour club.  After failing his politics prelim – surely a refutation of any causal link between success in academic and practical politics – young Peter invested more of his time in academics, deepening his understanding of the world as the post-war consensus crumbled around him.

As we met, a legacy from that era, Ken Livingstone, was witnessing the end of his dramatic career as hopes of a third mayoral term disintegrated. Vindicating the incumbent’s strategy to focus on personality, not policy, Bullingdon Boris had won over the electorate in a city where Labour were polling 19 points higher than the Conservatives. Mandelson was candid: ‘if the Labour party chooses to run a candidate who is not just pre-New Labour, but pre-Kinnock as well, you can hardly be surprised when the voters turn around and say ‘actually we’d prefer a rather more contemporary candidate thank you’’. The spirit and tone was light-hearted, yet I couldn’t help thinking that the joviality was somewhat forced, contrived to mask a contempt towards Ken that has roots in his independent bid for the mayorality in 2000, for which he was expelled from the Labour Party.

Ken isn’t the only politician with whom Mandelson had turbulent relations. Indeed no one inspires loyalties or hatreds as much as he does. The price of success is that he accrued enemies in the parliamentary party; so many, in fact, that all of the Labour leadership candidates sought to disown him. Certainly his stock is less than it was. I challenge him on Enoch Powell’s famous observation that ‘all political lives…end in failure’. Without hesitation, ‘I’m the exception to that’ he asserts. ‘My career ended in failure half-way through it’ – alluding to the scandals that forced his ejection from the Cabinet, twice – ‘but I was given a third chance’.

Mandelson’s reputation as a Machiavellian man of mystery always proved useful, allowing him to manipulate the surprisingly small cabal of political correspondents who worked in awe of him. I wanted to uncover his human side; the one that walks his pet dog, Bobby, or lived secretly as a gay man, only to be out-ed on national television. It’s clear that he doesn’t revel in his ego, but largely the impressions of his personality evade me. He exudes statesmanship. In an inversion of Norman Lamont’s famous putdown to Major, Lord Mandelson gives the impression of being in power but not in office. Moulded by his experience at the heart of the Labour Party, teasing, disciplining, coercing it into a party of government, that is now his nature. Would he join a Miliband government? I didn’t bother asking; that’s been an unlikely prospect ever since Ed pronounced his crowning achievement – New Labour – dead. Still, with Mandy, you never know.

A Bluffer’s Guide to: The New Wave of Hip Hop

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There’s been a lot of good stuff coming out of the US recently as the new guard of rap and hip hop artists have really begun picking up both steam and mainstream attention.  These new artists come from a range of hard to define genres from ‘cloud rap’ to ‘swag-hop’, hence the title that sounds like a BBC4 documentary or the title of Newsnight segment.  Although a Newsnight segment isn’t exactly beyond the realms of belief (I would advise anyone who hasn’t seen Odd Future’s appearance on the show to head to youtube A$AP).

Oldie is a song by the group Odd Future, and works as one of the best showcases of theircollective talent that they’ve released so far.  Anyone with even a cursory interest in the genre will have heard of them, but the song demonstrates their different styles and even features a verse from Earl, who’s finally been freed from Samoa, and Frank Ocean forsaking his usual croon for a more aggressive rap, behind a beat that repeats through the song’s ten minutes. 

Schoolboy Q, A$AP Rocky, SpaceGhostPurrp and Main Attrakionz are all derivatives of the ‘chopped and screwed’ style of rap which sees slowed down vocals mixed with woozy beats.  There’s a lot of overlap between these artists, A$AP Rocky guests with Schoolboy Q and Theophilus London, on his rework of the classic ‘Big Spender’, while SpaceGhostPurrp has produced and guested on a number of A$AP Rocky’s songs.  These songs have roots in the work of DJ Screw, who pioneered the screw music genre by slowing records and adding smooth cuts and slurred vocals to the mixes, before dying from an overdose of codeine caused from drinking cough syrup, a drug that is closely intertwined with the genre and the origin of the numerous references to ‘purple’, after the purple liquid.

Closer to the style of Odd Future, although his flow is a lot faster and possibly even more aggressive, is Joey Bada$$, who at only 17 has already released his first few tracks and has a mixtape, 1999, arriving imminently.  A final inclusion is Mac Miller, who is relatively established with a Billboard Number One album under his belt, but this cut comes from his earlier mixtape K.I.D.S. which I personally think is much better than his album, which ditched a lot of what made him distinctive.  The sun drenched video and the vibes from this song mean that, if the sun ever does come out, this song is a perfect soundtrack to a lazy afternoon in the park.

Tracklist: Oldie – Odd Future

Hands on the Wheel (feat. A$AP Rocky) – Schoolboy Q

Peso – A$AP Rocky

Survival Tactics – Joey BADA$$

No Evidence – SpaceGhostPurrp

Legion of Doom – Main Attrakionz

Big Spender (feat. A$AP Rocky) – Theophilus London

Kool Aid & Frozen Pizza – Mac Miller

Click here for the accompanying 8tracks playlist.

Students pledge 10% of future earnings

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A group of St Peter’s students are among the latest Oxford students to have promised to give ten per cent of their future income to charity.

The move comes as part of an international scheme called Giving What We Can, where people make a public pledge to “use part of [their] income to do a substantial amount of good in the developing world” and will do so “publicly, freely, and without regret”.

On their website, the organisation says it believes strongly in the necessity of making this public pledge as it “encourage others to join” and lets them “share advice” about how best to give.

Giving What We Can was first founded by Dr Toby Ord in 2009, who was the first to make the pledge and will give an estimated one million pounds over his lifetime.

Bionic eye created

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Treatment coordinated by Oxford University has led to the first implantation of an electronic retina in a patient in the UK.

The surgical team, led by the Professor Robert MacLaren, Professor of Ophthalmology at Oxford University, inserted retinal implants in the backs of the eyes of two men.

The technology consists of a small microchip containing 1,500 tiny light-detectors, implanted below the retina, and a power source implanted behind the ear. The light-detectors, when powered, transmit a signal to the optic nerve, allowing restoration of some sight.

Professor MacLaren said there was some uncertainty about how much sight would be recovered, but that under “best conditions” patients might be able to see the top letter on an eye chart.

Dr Dolores Conroy, Director of Research at Fight for Sight, commented, “The news from this pioneering trial that some useful vision can be regained will be extremely welcome to those who are living with sight loss.”

Oxford students among first to compete at Olympic Stadium

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Oxford students helped to make history as some of the first athletes ever to compete in the new London Olympic stadium.

Around 70 students from Oxford competed at the annual BUCS VISA Outdoor Athletics Championships, which this year also served as a test event for the Olympics.

The event was officiated by the same personnel that will be responsible for looking after Usain Bolt and other athletes this summer.

Stand-out Oxford performers included Clara Blättler of Univ, who took Bronze in the Women’s Pole Vault, Jessica Chen from Somerville, who came fifth in the Women’s 5000m and consequently tops the UK U20 rankings for 2012, and the Men’s 4X400 relay team, which is waiting for confirmation that it broke the OUAC record in the event.

Helen Hanstock, President of the Oxford Sports Federation, commented, “It was a pleasure to be involved. The organisation of the event was immaculate and I’d like to thank BUCS and the London Prepares series for providing this opportunity to all the student athletes who were able to compete.”

The competitors echoed Hanstock’s enthusiasm, telling Cherwell that the professional surroundings were an important factor in the high quality of the athletics on display.

Blättler commented, “Even while walking up to the stadium, it felt like we were approaching an exciting event. I think the atmosphere helped athletes raise their own standards, and I for one certainly felt as if I was centre-stage and performed to the best of my ability.”

Jake Shelley, a 1500m runner, agreed, adding that the venue made it “all the more exciting and nerve racking” He said, “It will be great to think that I was one of the first people to race at the Olympic stadium.”

Fall in drug-related deaths

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There has been a major reduction in deaths involving a pain-relief drug since it was withdrawn in the UK in 2005, an Oxford University-led study has found.

The drug, Co-proxamol, was linked to a fifth of drug-poisoning suicides in England and Wales between 1997 and 1999.

Following concerns regarding its widespread use in suicidal poisonings, it was withdrawn from use in the UK between 2005 and 2007.

A previous study showed a reduction in the number of suicides related to co-proxamol suicides during this three year withdrawal phase and no evidence of an increase in deaths from other prescription pain killers.

The study showed that, following the drug’s withdrawal, there were 20 deaths related to co-proxamol per year, including suicides and accidental poisonings. It was more than 250 per year during the 1990s.

The study was funded by the National Institute for Health Research with support from the Oxford NHS Foundation Trust.

Access scheme targets black applicants

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A team of black Oxbridge graduates has launched a scheme to improve the numbers of African and Caribbean students at the University.

The scheme, called Target Oxbridge, will mentor black students through sixth form and prepare them for the rigorous admissions procedures for Oxford and Cambridge.

Last year only seven black Caribbean students were admitted for undergraduate study at Oxford.

Raphael Mokades, founder of the organisation, explained, “Lots of black kids apply for the most competitive subjects like Law and Economics, when the ratio of applicants is lower for subjects such as Classics and Theology.” He claimed his project hoped to address this imbalance.

Naomi Kellman, an alumnus of Lincoln College, spoke last week at a conference hosted by Oxford discussing the problem of racial prejudice in higher education. She said that she hopes the programme will give black applicants “the help and support that their more privileged and connected counterparts are guaranteed both at home and at school”.

She added, “The scheme aims to make black students aware of the different opportunities and paths to success that the universities offer.”

Mentor Andre Flemmings hopes that mock interviews will be conducted in the impressive Oxford and Cambridge Club in London.

He said that many black students were put off by the universities reputations, arguing that “Oxford and Cambridge have that mystique that’s difficult to overcome.’

He also commented that many black potential undergraduates “self-select” themselves out of the process because they lack confidence and do not have a tradition of university attendance in their families.

Hannah Cusworth, the OUSU Vice-President for Access and Academic Affairs, welcomed the scheme. She commented, ‘I hope it’s a resounding success.’

She added that she hopes the scheme’s emphasis on helping prospective applicants should improve the number of black students both applying and being accepted.

A University spokesperson echoed Cusworth’s comments, saying, “We support efforts by groups such as Target Oxbridge to provide students from educationally disadvantaged backgrounds with free information and support through the Oxford admissions process.”

However, they also highlighted the university’s own “extensive work” to improve diversity, explaining that the University encourages “bright students from all backgrounds to apply to Oxford and make the most competitive application possible”.