remembering Hillsborough

Posted: April 15, 2009 in football

Like many football fans, I was extremely moved by today’s emotional ceremony at Anfield to mark the 20th anniversary of the Hillsborough disaster when 96 Liverpool fans were killed at the FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest.

I was thinking about Hillsborough a few weeks ago when I took my six-year-old son Toby to his first big game (albeit a disappointing 0-0 between the Mighty QPR and Crystal Palace). Loftus Road may not be the most luxurious football ground in the world but siting in safety and comfort in the “family stand” was a million miles away from my experiences in the 1970s and early 1980s. I shudder when I think back to the many times I might have been crushed to death  on the heaving terraces – yes, even at Loftus Road in those heady days – as we were crushed by crowds against barriers and walls. It took the tragedy of Hillsborough to make football grounds safer and I for one will swap a little diminshed atmopshere over life and death any day.

Hopefully, when Toby takes himself to matches in the future it won’t be a life and death issue. The ultimate irony, of course, is that despite his Dad’s best efforts, he has declared himself a Liverpool fan.

Safely seated: Father and son at QPR, April 4, 2009

Safely seated: Father and son at QPR, April 4, 2009

lanceI just got back from the UK and was wading through the armful of music mags that I inevitably stagger out of WH Smith Gatwick with when I came across this nugget in The Word about the founding of Island Records by Jamaican Chris Blackwell. Island, which marks its 50th anniversary this month, may be famous for bringing the world Bob Marley, U2, Roxy Music, Free and many more great artists but I didn’t realise that Bermudian jazz pianist Lance Hayward was Blackwell’s first signing.

“… Chris Blackwell’s beginnings as a record mogul were … prosaic,” writes Rob Hughes in the May issue of The Word. “He’d already dabbled in various enterprises … when he stumbled upon blind pianist Lance Hayward at [Montego Bay’s] Half Moon Hotel one night in 1959. The 22-year-old decided to record Hayward and, lifting the name from Alec Waugh’s novel Island In The Sun, founded a record company with just £1,000.” Lance Hayward at the Half Moon was thus the first-ever release on what was to become one of the world’s most famous record labels.

Lance, the father of well-known Bermudian environmental activist Stuart Hayward, died in 1991 and there seems to be little trace of that historic Island record today. He lived and played for more than 25 years in New York City and accompanied the likes of Marvin Gaye when they played in Bermuda but rarely recorded himself. You can, however, still find A Closer Walk by Lance Hayward and Friends – an album that  many critics called the “definitive” Lance Hayward set – on iTunes.

While in Manhattan, Lance formed his own chorus, the Lance Hayward Singers, who are still going strong performing a wide range of music from Bach to Eliington using Lance’s original arrangements.

Meanwhile, to hear and see some of Island’s greatest tracks, go to this special Island50 anniversary web page.

Skype on iPhone, Crackberry soon

Posted: March 31, 2009 in Mac, Technology

Skype to Debut Apps for Apple iPhone, BlackBerry

iPod touch owners are finally able to download the much-requested Skype application onto their mobiles.

About time – can you spell “killer app”? Download it for iPhone and iPod touch here