Crossings
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Artists | Herbie Hancock |
---|---|
Release date | May 1, 1972 |
Producers | David Rubinson |
Studio | Different Fur Trading Company |
San Francisco | |
Genres | Jazz |
Jazz Fusion | |
Avant-garde Jazz | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2602404 |
About Crossings
Crossings is the tenth album by jazz pianist Herbie Hancock, released in 1972. It is the second album in his Mwandishi period, which saw him experimenting in electronics. The album is the band's first to feature new member, synthesizer player Patrick Gleeson.
How Hamas carried out its shock assault on Israel
... At 05:50 local time, a Telegram account associated with Hamas s armed wing posted the first images from the ground, taken at Kerem Shalom - the most southern of Gaza s Crossings...
Scots swimmer breaks record for Oceans Seven challenge
... The next four Crossings - the Molokai Channel in Hawaii, the Strait of Gibraltar between Spain and Morocco, the Catalina channel from Santa Catalina to Los Angeles and the Tsugaru Strait - were crammed into three months between April and July...
Illegal Migration Bill breaches human rights obligations, MPs and peers warn
... " The government has said the plans are central to achieving Prime Minister Rishi Sunak s pledge to stop small boat Crossings - one of his five key priorities...
UK must train own workers to curb migration - Braverman
... The government has recently been focusing on tackling illegal migration, in particular small boat Crossings - which has been a Conservative pledge for a number of years...
Keir Starmer refuses to rule out coalition with Lib Dems
... " Meanwhile, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has insisted his five priorities - including cutting inflation, bringing down NHS waiting lists and tackling small boat Crossings - are the best way to put his party back on track after it lost 48 councils and more than 1,000 councillors...
Illegal Migration Bill risks breaching human rights obligations, watchdog warns
... The government says the bill is needed to prevent dangerous Channel Crossings...
Can Sunak-Macron bromance help stop the boats?
... But the most politically potent theme for Mr Sunak was small boat Crossings...
European court at odds with British values, says Suella Braverman
... The home secretary was speaking to the BBC one day after acknowledging her plan to stop small boat Crossings could be challenged in the Strasbourg court...
Can Sunak-Macron bromance help stop the boats?
By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News
Wandering onto The Crunch of The Courtyard gravel of The Elysee Palace In Paris , The President and The Prime Minister shared smiles and a brolly.
It was The Image that said More Than many more words had sought to convey.
These leaders of similar age and similar background clearly get on; that word " bromance" is going to get a good workout in The write ups of The Franco-British summit.
To Focus On The chemistry between political leaders may feel superficial.
But relationships in diplomacy really matter, particularly when The contrast is so striking.
Last Summer , The when asked if President Macron was a friend or foe.
However throwaway or in jest that remark may have been, it is impossible not to notice The contrast now.
Mr Sunak has put great store in what he sees as restoring The UK as an honest broker and reliable ally on The World stage after The Chaos of Ms Truss's brief premiership and what might be gently described as The idiosyncrasies of Boris Johnson .
Mr Johnson and President Macron were A Million miles apart on Brexit.
But, remember, so are The President and Mr Sunak.
Mr Macron pointedly claimed The implications of The UK's departure from The European Union had been " underestimated" by some of its advocates.
Mr Sunak was an early backer of Brexit.
But diplomats often reflect privately that many European leaders struggled to trust Mr Johnson as Prime Minister .
Mr Sunak is working hard to attempt to ensure that is no longer The case now he is in The Job .
His calculation is that it is a necessary but not necessarily sufficient approach to achieve his political objectives, as well as protective, or perhaps restorative, of The UK's reputation worldwide.
So, beyond The personality stuff, let's take a look at precisely what has come of this summit.
There were important discussions between two allies about Ukraine and China.
But The Most politically potent theme for Mr Sunak was small boat Crossings .
For A Man who has five political priorities, one of which is stopping The Boats , doing something to stop at least some of them really matters.
over The Next few years.
And at least some of it will not deliver anything quickly - The new detention centre will be years in The making.
Downing Street think The funding they had already allocated was good value for money with tangible benefits.
And so their logic is more could deliver more.
The Problem for them is whatever benefits they can point to - Crossings that would have otherwise happened -
And that promise is clear cut.
Stop The Boats .
Why on earth would a political leader shackle themselves to such a stark promise when this is a complex, international, diplomatically fraught, politically risky issue?
When I put this to one well placed minister, they said The calculation was any caveating or diluting would have sounded pathetic, and they would rather their ambition be clear cut, even if The Delivery falls short.
But there is still a difference between a considerable reduction and no reduction at all.
Or The numbers continuing to climb.
Mr Sunak repeatedly pointed out to us at this summit that there is " No One silver bullet" as he puts it to resolve The issue of migrants crossing The Channel in small boats.
But resolve it is what he has promised to do.
And so The political jeopardy for The Prime Minister is simple: anything short of that will be seen by critics as a transparent failure.
His political reputation, at least in part, rests on how well he does.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com