For tickets, go to www.wegottickets.com/f/​4339 or for more information, check out http://www.facebook.com/#!/events/309410775791467/
Review: Sweet Billy Pilgrim – Crown and Treaty
Sweet Billy Pilgrim lurk in that murky area of the musical world where critical fawning has failed to translate into popular attention. Crown and Treaty provides clues to account for this fact. The opening track, ‘Joyful Reunion’, is one of the most frustrating songs I have ever listened to. On paper it looks magnificent – an atonal brass opening, lyrics evoking a more innocent time and even a section with marching-band snare drum. However, when it comes to the chorus, the entire band seems to fall asleep. It is intensely disappointing to hear a song that is obviously lovingly constructed fail to break into some sort of exciting hook.
This trend continues throughout the first half of the record, until, suddenly, in the middle of ‘Bruguda’, we are finally given a chorus. Admittedly, it’s not exactly the greatest chorus of all time, but you could imagine singing along to it. However, not only is this revelation too little, too late, it is also a rarity. The rest of the record returns to somnambulant mumblings and warblings and therein lies the problem. There’s no edge to the music. Their closest comparisons may be Bon Iver or Bonnie Prince Billy, but, on the evidence of Crown and Treaty, Sweet Billy Pilgrim seem to lack the visceral honesty of the former or the damaged, broken and, most importantly, interesting voice of the latter.
Perhaps this fault explains the difficulty that Sweet Billy Pilgrim have had in breaking into the mainstream. They are too well–adjusted to be a cult band, too content to be the next heartbroken Bon-Iveralike, and lack the hooks to be a mainstream ‘alternative’ rock band. Until they decide on a direction they wish to follow, they are likely to remain as they are: on the periphery of both musical and commercial success.
2 STARS
Review: Get Cape, Wear Cape, Fly – Maps
Get Cape, Wear Cape, Fly, also known as 26 year old Essex boy Sam Duckworth, is set to release his fourth album, Maps, this May and it could prove to be his most upbeat effort yet. Opener ‘The Real McCoy’ is an infectious, bouncy, cheeky indie-pop number that sets the cheerful, energetic tone of the LP and ‘Vital Statistics’ is a similarly playful song, slurred with a jaunty, snazzy repeating bass riff whilst alluding to an addictive crush: ‘you are the same as before, so hard to ignore’. ‘Daylight Robbery’, the album’s lead single, is another fast tempo track softened by a lilting background of ‘woohooing’.
Collaboration seems to be the fashion these days and on ‘The Long And Short Of It All’ Duckworth doesn’t fail to keep up, the track featuring UK hip–hop artist MC Jehst on the verse whilst Duckworth only interjects during the simple, thudding chorus.
Lyrically, Maps is cleverly astute and non-demandingly poetic and this is unquestionably one of the real strong points to the LP. The lyrics are particularly strong on one of the more mellow tracks, ‘Offline Maps’, a philosophical, political number that questions and searches: ‘repressed questions of whose land it really is’, ‘tracing my hand across the map searching for something tangible’ as the protagonist delves for his ‘moral compass’.
Maps doesn’t delve into uncharted territory, but nor does it lead us down a completely dead end. We are left to loiter in a slightly unfulfilling middle zone, feeling neither particularly refreshed nor especially dejected, just disappointed in the fact that the promised map has failed to lead us to any real goldmines. Maps is a solid fourth effort from Duckworth but falls short of really exciting the ear.
2.5 STARS
Bo Guagua defends lifestyle
Oxford graduate Bo Guagua has defended his allegedly extravagant lifestyle following “increasing attention from the press”.
Bo’s mother, the wife of a Communist party chief Bo Xilai, was named as “highly suspected” in an investigation into the murder of British businessman Neil Heywood.
In an open letter to The Crimson, Harvard University’s newspaper, where Bo is currently a student, Bo said he is “deeply concerned about the events surrounding my family”, but made no further comments on the investigation.
The case sparked interest from press all over the world in Guagua’s private life, and he addressed the “rumours and allegations” that surround his time as a student in his letter Guagua denied rumours that he didn’t take his education seriously, stating that he achieved 11 A*s at GCSE, straight As in his AS and A-Level exams, and confirming that he graduated with a 2:1 in PPE from Balliol in 2010.
He commented, “My tuition and living expenses at Harrow School, University of Oxford and Harvard University were funded exclusively by two sources – academic scholarships, and my mother’s savings.”
Guagua went on to elaborate on his non-academic life at Oxford, saying, “It is true that I participated in ‘Bops,’ a type of common Oxford social event, many of which are themed. These events are a regular feature of social life at Oxford and most students take part in these college-wide activities.
“I debated in the Oxford Union and served as president of the Politics, Philosophy and Economics Society. These extra-curricular activities enabled me to broaden my perspective, serve the student community, and experience all that Oxford has to offer. I am proud to have been the first mainland Chinese student to be elected to the Standing Committee of the Oxford Union, and I truly value the close friendships I formed with my fellow students.”
Guagua also denied reports that he had picked up the then-Chinese ambassador Jon Huntsman’s daughter from the ambassador’s residence in a Ferrari. He insisted, “I have never driven a Ferrari. I have also not been to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing since 1998…nor have I ever been to the U.S. Ambassador’s Residence in China.’
One student told Cherwell, “It looks to me that the media are desperately trying to dig up some more dirt on the Bo family for a good story. He seems to have behaved pretty well for a young student with so much money at his fingertips. You hear much worse stories about the behavior of privileged students here.”
Guagua also stated that he wished to ‘sincerely thank my teachers, friends and classmates for their support during this difficult time’, and requested that ‘members of the press kindly refrain from intruding into the lives of my teachers, friends and classmates.’
Behind the Scenes: Precious Metals
Footage from the ‘Precious Metals’ photo shoot featured in this week’s Cherwell
Photographer: Xinyang Amy Hong
Art Director: Shiyin Cindy Lin
Model: Connie Bloomfield
Grim down the bottom
It’s squeaky bum time at the wrong end of the Premier League, with just five points separating five teams. Any two of QPR, Bolton, Blackburn, Wigan and Aston Villa could join Wolves in the Championship next year. With the loss of revenue that comes with relegation, the difficulty in keeping hold of the club’s best players and attracting new players, a trend has emerged in recent years of relegated clubs going into freefall rather than bouncing straight back into the big time. Portsmouth going down to League One only a few years after the FA Cup Final is indicative of the perils facing relegated clubs in the modern game. Was John Utaka the biggest waste of money ever? Anyway, I digress. The Championship is littered with Premier League clubs of yesteryear, and as a Bolton Wanderers fan I can tell one of the worst things about the looming spectre of relegation is the prospect of having to stay up on a Saturday after the Match of the Day crowd has dispersed and listen to Manish on the Football League Show to catch a glimpse of us getting beaten by Barnsley or Peterborough.
Forget the Manchester derby next Monday, the real action at this time of year goes on at the basement end of the table. Sure, Chelsea versus Barca was pretty good. Rooney and Tevez will put on a show on Monday, and there are definitely a couple of twists left in this title race, but a David N’Gog winner surely deserves more attention.
The relegation battle has been thrown wide open by Wigan Athletic beating United, Arsenal and Liverpool in the last five weeks. The crunch game against Blackburn on 7th May could see them to safety, given that they are at home to Wolves on the last day of the season, who have nothing to play for and have managed to ship 75 goal thus far. It would be a truly miraculous story if Blackburn manage to escape the drop, but with memories of the Venkys promising European football and Ronaldinho still fresh, who knows what to expect. They say that the team that is bottom at Christmas is nailed on to go down, and the Yak will need to get Rovers points at Spurs, against Wigan at Ewood Park and then at Chelsea on the final day to survive. If Wigan get 3 points at Blackburn it’s hard to see Rovers escaping the drop and likely Wigan will survive. Given that Chelsea are now in the Champions League final, if Di Matteo puts out a weakened side there is still a glimmer of hope. Plus you can’t help but feel a bit sorry for Steve Kean. How was he to know Scott Dann would rupture his testicle?
QPR definitely have the toughest run in, but three points at home to Stoke would probably put them safe, and give us all the privilege and the pleasure of another 12 months of Joey Barton in the Premier League. In the past few weeks Adel Taraabt has given a few glimpses of the talent that had everyone talking about him at the start of the season, and if they stay up there should be more to come from him next year, and any other signings that Tony Fernandes bankrolls.
For Bolton to survive, they will need three points at home to West Brom, and pick up points on their travels to Sunderland and Stoke on the last day. Fair play to Owen Coyle, he definitely needs recognition if the Trotters stay up given that he has had one of Kevin Davies, Ivan Klasnic and N’gog leading the line all year. Sadly the days of the likes of Jay Jay Okocha and Fernando Hierro gracing the Reebok and I can certaintly see Bolton going down. They essentially need one of Wigan and QPR to not pick up any points, the two teams of the five that have been in the best form of late and begun to drag themselves out of the mire.
Villa still need a win and a draw to reach the 40 point mark, the traditional yardstick to avoid relegation, and they are definitely not safe yet, but Blackburn are definitely most likely to go down, followed by QPR and Bolton. Saying that, the chances are that I’m completely wrong.
What is certain however, is that there will be a montage on Match of the Day of crying children being comforted by their dads as they watch their team go down, and some fat tattooed men taking their tops off celebrating someone like Grant Hanley or Gary Caldwell shinning a corner in at the back post. We shouldn’t deny them their moment in the sun: there is so much more to the Premier League and football in general than the title race or the battle for European qualification. Aside from the heartache and traumatic memories, the bottom end of the table six pointers throw up some real passion and magical moments. With Reading promoted for next season, the short trip to the Madjeski from Oxford represents the perfect opportunity to watch some top flight football. But rather than getting tickets for when United or City come into town, take a punt and go and see Ryan Shawcross pull shirts or Lee Cattermole get away with a ridiculous number of fouls, it might be a welcome change from the superstars.
A View From The Bridge – Trinity Week I
Following last year’s unequivocal success outside Park End, CherwellTV toddles over to The Bridge in order to bring you a fresh helping of news and views from Oxford’s self-proclaimed ‘number one nightclub and bar’.
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Oxford’s International Affairs
Oxford is set to experience a dramatic influx of foreign students, with an increase of 30,000 to the UK as a whole expected within the next decade.
The number of non-EU students studying in the UK has already increased considerably in recent years. A 2010 report by the Sutton Trust shows that universities have doubled the number of non-EU students over the past 10 years, with 12% of undergraduates and 54% of postgraduates coming from overseas. and the majority of this growth coming from China and India.
The British Council predicts a further 10% increase in the number of overseas students studying in the UK by 2020. It also states that the worldwide number of students studying overseas had risen to over 3.5 million at the end of the last decade, and that these numbers are predicted to continue rising.
According to UNESCO, (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation) over 60% of these international students opted to study in one of the US, the UK, Australia, France, Germany, Russia, Japan or Canada. Britain is predicted to experience the fastest increase in the flow of foreign students from one country to another, with an expected increase of 20,000 students coming from India to the UK.
With unrestricted fees on international students, top universities can afford to charge international students far more for the same university experience as UK students. This is reflected in Oxford’s 2012/2013 tuition fees for international students. According to the Oxford ‘Fees, funding and scholarship search’, Oxford plans to charge as much as £18,550 a year for an non-EU student prospective undergraduate wishing to study in 2012/13.
There is also a ‘college fee’, only paid by non-EU students, which amounts to around £6,157 (significantly more expensive than Cambridge’s £4500-£5500 college fee). According to the University website, this “covers academic facilities and other services that are provided by your college”. Factoring in £10,700 worth of living expenses, one international student could be expecting to pay as much as £35,407 in their first year at Oxford – £15,707 more than a UK student would expect to pay over the same period.
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The Sutton Trust, which aims to promote social mobility through education, suggests in a 2010 report that universities may seek to capitalise on lucrative foreign students, saying that it is one of the “most likely options that universities in England have of generating more income from student financial contributions in the future.”
Concern has been expressed at the expense of studying in the UK by international students. The 2011 International Student Barometer report shows that overseas students feel that there is not enough opportunity to earn money whilst studying, with a 3% decrease in satisfaction over the past year. Meanwhile, 43% of international students expressed dissatisfaction with the high costs associated with university accommodation.
Many international students at Oxford said they felt that they are being taken advantage of. Bobo Zhang, a first year Economics and Management student originally from Singapore, commented, “Honestly, whilst everyone is facing a fee hike, I think that what international students have to pay is ridiculously large, considering how many students in Oxford come from private schools with insanely high tuition fees.” Zhang added, “Most US universities still offer financial aid to international students, I feel that it is one of the biggest drawbacks studying at Oxford.”
Erina Kato, a visiting student from Tokyo studying PPE agreed, stating, “It is unfair that foreign students have to pay higher tuition – it makes foreign students hesitate about making the choice to study at Oxford. On the other hand, it is inevitable that foreign students pay more, because I assume that it costs more for the university to accept them in terms of visas etc.”
Yet for some, the attraction of an Oxford education appears to override the thought of paying up to £55,650 for tuition in Britain. Kato said, “Just the thought of being able to study at one of the famous universities in the world made me want to come, but I also found the tutorial system very appealing. In Japan, you just attend lectures with about 200 people and take exams at the end of the term, and so there aren’t many opportunities to discuss and exchange ideas on what you learn with professors and other students.”
Madeline Foote, a first year historian originally from the US, agreed that the Oxford system is worth the extra expense, saying, “The tutorial style and the independence were attractive and offered a different kind of education from the US schools I was considering. I was looking for an education that would really push me out of my comfort zone.”
With regard to tuition fees, Foote added, “I think everyone should be paying for what their degree is worth. Our education is so valuable, that even paying international fees I know that I’m not truly having to bear the full cost.”
The average cost of educating an Oxford student is £16,000 a year (although lab-based subjects cost considerably more). The University told Cherwell, “The amount of money the University receives for teaching a Home/EU student through fees and grant falls well short of the University’s costs and is made up from other sources including endowment.”
In light of this, students fear that faced with two candidates of a similar calibre, Oxford will offer places to students to whom they can charge an amount that the University describes as “more closely reflects the actual cost of teaching in colleges”.
Emma Finlayson, first year musician at St Peter’s asked, “If Oxford says it offers places only on a meritocratic basis and many more overseas students are applying, surely this would mean that British students are crowded out as places become limited?”
A spokesperson for Oxford University denied that admissions tutors ever favour overseas applicants over home students, insisting that decisions are made purely on the basis of academic factors rather than any financial or social considerations.
Preview: Two Gentlemen of Verona
Barbarian Productions’ Two Gentlemen of Verona had me rather embarrassingly bellowing with laughter. Set against the backdrop of 1940’s America, the accompanying band is charming with a live ‘New York, New York’ as the overture to Shakespeare’s first play.
Two Gentlemen is very much in the vein of his later plays, and I was struck by Valentine’s (Tim Gibson) resemblance to Hamlet. The humour of the show is led by Valentine’s servant, Speed (Barney Iley-Williamson), his natural charm and comic timing earning his place as shepherd of the comedy, despite phrases like ‘lost mutton’. Alongside, symmetrical double act Julia (Alice Fraser) and Lucetta (Florence Robson) present ‘woman’s reason’ beautifully. At once, they demonstrate unbending female logic – ‘I think him so because I think him so’ – and connect brilliantly, with a natural performance from Fraser.
Iley-Williamson and Gibson use both the Y and X axes of space, extending and contracting their shapes like contortionists, and bringing circus-like dynamism into their performances. Proteus (Ed Seabright) is a shapeshifter too, metamorphosing seamlessly from enfeebled lover, clutching helplessly at a grubby ring, to backstabbing Brutus. The duchess was cast to perfection – Ebney-Landy’s husky, sexy voice was precisely what the gender-subverted Duke required. Best cameo goes to Nick Lyons whose role as an outlaw is integral to the entire production. The play is a delicious cocktail of timeless slapstick, set in the verdant gardens of Christ Church.
The main themes – love and honour – are well presented in what promises to be a hugely enjoyable production. Proteus highlights the major issue at the heart of the play – ‘love making us neglect our studies.’ Whether for love of comedy or love of theatre, neglect your studies for an evening and don’t miss Two Gentlemen of Verona.
FIVE STARS