The indie rock band Wild Beasts, from Kendal in the north of England. Courtesy Klaus Thymann
The indie rock band Wild Beasts, from Kendal in the north of England. Courtesy Klaus Thymann
The indie rock band Wild Beasts, from Kendal in the north of England. Courtesy Klaus Thymann
The indie rock band Wild Beasts, from Kendal in the north of England. Courtesy Klaus Thymann

Music for Friday nights


  • English
  • Arabic

You join us in the centre of a provincial British town. It is night. The end of the working week has brought with it a certain amount of celebration and spirits are almost uncontrollably high. With whatever intention, somewhere a crude remark is made. This is overheard, misconstrued, and offence is taken. Soon, fists start to fly. Eventually the police will be called, arrests made, court fines issued.

Observing the scene from a discreet distance, you would, in 2008, have found the British group Wild Beasts. They were far from the first independent guitar group to write a song about the volatile social scene on Friday night on a British high street – the locale has provided inspiration for groups as diverse as Pulp, the Arctic Monkeys and the Kaiser Chiefs – but no group had hitherto captured it in quite the way they managed in their song Hooting and Howling, a prominent feature on their Two Dancers album of 2009. “Any rival who goes for our girls will be left thumbsucking in terror,” they sang, “And bereft of all coffin bearers.”

Rivals? Thumbsucking? Bereft? Rather than merely an act of amusing reportage as – say – I Predict a Riot by the Kaiser Chiefs had been, Hooting And Howling seemed to take things a great deal more personally. "They're just brutes," Wild Beasts sang of the fighting weekend revellers, "looking for shops to loot …" If hell is other people, here the group had depicted its inferno. It was a great song, but it explored a wider social (and implicitly musical) horror.

Five years on, Hooting and Howling still plays like a manifesto. The song and the group defining itself by opposition: independent versus mainstream, aesthete versus herd, us versus them. Where there was brutality, Wild Beasts offered articulacy. Where there was violence, they offered a gently chiming musical delicacy. Where there was bullish machismo, Wild Beasts supplied a thrilling feyness: the devastating falsetto swoops of the song’s composer, Hayden Thorpe.

Not all Wild Beast songs are sung by Thorpe (those sung by his co-writer Tom Fleming have a doughty, careworn quality that will put many in mind of Elbow’s Guy Garvey). It is those sung by Thorpe, however, that seem the most challengingly unlike anything else. “It was my flag, my declaration to the world,” he recently said of this unique instrument. “I used it as a weapon rather than as a weakness.”

Weakness as weapon. It’s the independent-music ethos in a nutshell, and a hardcore of previously disenfranchised listeners has since rallied round Thorpe’s flag. With his voice as their compass, the band has, for eight years now, joyfully embraced its otherness, quietly hopeful they are speaking to a constituency of empathetic individuals.

Their fourth album, Present Tense, duly begins with the dark electronic fanfare of a song called Wanderlust, which seems to renew the band’s vows to itself. To indulge its whimsy, and to pay others no mind. This kind of independence won’t be easy, they know, but then theirs has always been a risky business. “We’re digging in beyond our means,” Thorpe announces, as a choir of synthesised voices mounts in intensity behind him. “We feel the things they never feel.” Wanderlust, he sings, “is a feeling I’ve come to trust …”

Paradoxically, this selective mission has in fact brought Wild Beasts closer to the mainstream than they must ever have thought likely. Two Dancers was nominated for the Mercury Prize in 2010. In 2011, meanwhile, they remixed Lady Gaga’s song You and I – proof if any were needed that there exists a secret passage from the cutting edge to the mainstream. As Hayden Thorpe put it recently: “I think the ultimate goal for a creative person is to beautify something that is ugly.”

You wouldn’t call it concessionary by any means, but Smother, the band’s album of 2011 (which they toured for two years), found them largely abandoning their off-piste indie guitar jangling for a more easily assimilable synthesiser-led sound.

Still, their abandon remained undiminished on the album, if you knew where to look. Take the opening lines of Plaything: “New squeeze/Take off your chemise …”

From Kendal in the north of England, Wild Beasts have cultivated divisive responses since they formed in 2006. A band of rich vocabulary and throbbing passions, the band are odd as Morrissey and The Smiths were once thought odd – because they articulate a hitherto unheard voice.

Humorous, fleshy and lopsidedly funky, they have particularly marked out their differences in the way they write about sex. Indeed, in the fact that they write about it at all – a subject British guitar groups prefer to leave well alone.

Devil’s Crayon, from their debut album Limbo, Panto (2008) imagines a lover’s outline as being traced by an evil force, such is the obsessional power it exerts. More particularly characteristic is the wordy, amusing We’ve Still Got the Taste Dancin’ on Our Tongues from 2009’s Two Dancers, which includes the line: “Trousers and blouses make excellent sheets ….”

The band’s best compositions have immersed them in the sensation of the moment, and their efforts to write such songs – idiosyncratic, amusing, far from slick – seem like a valuable extending of the language that might be used to talk about sex and love.

Those kind of wordy and carnal high spirits are not, however, what you will be hearing much of on this album. Present Tense still has its adult content – but whereas previously Wild Beasts have made amusing and insightful hay in the world of anecdote, here they return to the laboratory to mull over their data and assemble their report.

Their findings are deep and nuanced, occasionally troubling. On Sweet Spot, one of the few guitar songs on the record, the group use imagery both luridly sexual and oddly religious as they contemplate a relationship. As well as any particular sexual connotation, here the “sweet spot” is the peak of a couple’s empathy – from here, the song implies, the only way is down. One particularly excellent track, reminiscent of Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love, again attempts to define a successful union: “How we feel now,” Hayden Thorpe sings, “Was felt by the ancients …”

In a nutshell, that’s what Present Tense is all about – about honouring and articulating the here and now, the present tense, the fleeting moment, whatever the future may hold.

On Palace, the final song on the album, the band give this moment actual architectural form. In the past, love has offered inhospitable lodging (“In the darkened house of love/I was sleeping rough/The bath ran cold”).

But now, they are visiting a venue for which they have paid their admission and studied the guidebook. It’s love viewed as a stately home excursion.

It’s a witty moment of reflection on an album that isn’t overrun by them. Fleming recently described Wild Beasts as having a “pretty/ugly” dynamic and that’s certainly the case here, the songs alternating between light and tuneful (those sung by Thorpe) and rather darker material (those sung by Fleming). Near the start of the album, with Nature Boy – in which the band personify the battle between body and mind – it works wonderfully. Clouds quickly gather with Daughters, which recounts the bizarre biblical story of Lot, whose daughters conceived by him so that his line might continue. By the time we reach A Dog’s Life – in which indignities are heaped on the titular, metaphorical canine – the Fleming songs have become a little oppressive.

Some might well mourn the band’s gradual progression from florid, guitar-based naturalism to this more impressionistic way of writing, in which synthesiser textures are the dominant force. True enough, the band as depicted here feel like an infinitely more serious and marketable concern than previously. But that would be to miss Wild Beasts’ larger point on Present Tense. In love and relationships, change is inevitable. Why wouldn’t that also be the case for music? For all the light and shade it offers, the best song on the album is also the most guileless. A Simple Beautiful Truth – sung by Thorpe and Fleming in tandem – celebrates love in its simplest essence: a solution reached, an equation balanced, a reason to believe. It’s a succinct, beautiful tune, an accessible mainstream pop song the like of which we’ve not heard the band deliver before.

It’s an unexpected development, perhaps. But such is the band’s unique flavour, their people will always seek it out wherever it appears. That may mean doing so at home in private. It may even eventually come to mean in the town centre.

John Robinson is the associate editor of Uncut and the Guardian Guide’s rock critic. He lives in London.

Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

How to wear a kandura

Dos

  • Wear the right fabric for the right season and occasion 
  • Always ask for the dress code if you don’t know
  • Wear a white kandura, white ghutra / shemagh (headwear) and black shoes for work 
  • Wear 100 per cent cotton under the kandura as most fabrics are polyester

Don’ts 

  • Wear hamdania for work, always wear a ghutra and agal 
  • Buy a kandura only based on how it feels; ask questions about the fabric and understand what you are buying
'Top Gun: Maverick'

Rating: 4/5

 

Directed by: Joseph Kosinski

 

Starring: Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, Jennifer Connelly, Jon Hamm, Miles Teller, Glen Powell, Ed Harris

 
The language of diplomacy in 1853

Treaty of Peace in Perpetuity Agreed Upon by the Chiefs of the Arabian Coast on Behalf of Themselves, Their Heirs and Successors Under the Mediation of the Resident of the Persian Gulf, 1853
(This treaty gave the region the name “Trucial States”.)


We, whose seals are hereunto affixed, Sheikh Sultan bin Suggar, Chief of Rassool-Kheimah, Sheikh Saeed bin Tahnoon, Chief of Aboo Dhebbee, Sheikh Saeed bin Buyte, Chief of Debay, Sheikh Hamid bin Rashed, Chief of Ejman, Sheikh Abdoola bin Rashed, Chief of Umm-ool-Keiweyn, having experienced for a series of years the benefits and advantages resulting from a maritime truce contracted amongst ourselves under the mediation of the Resident in the Persian Gulf and renewed from time to time up to the present period, and being fully impressed, therefore, with a sense of evil consequence formerly arising, from the prosecution of our feuds at sea, whereby our subjects and dependants were prevented from carrying on the pearl fishery in security, and were exposed to interruption and molestation when passing on their lawful occasions, accordingly, we, as aforesaid have determined, for ourselves, our heirs and successors, to conclude together a lasting and inviolable peace from this time forth in perpetuity.

Taken from Britain and Saudi Arabia, 1925-1939: the Imperial Oasis, by Clive Leatherdale

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

 

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Tips on buying property during a pandemic

Islay Robinson, group chief executive of mortgage broker Enness Global, offers his advice on buying property in today's market.

While many have been quick to call a market collapse, this simply isn’t what we’re seeing on the ground. Many pockets of the global property market, including London and the UAE, continue to be compelling locations to invest in real estate.

While an air of uncertainty remains, the outlook is far better than anyone could have predicted. However, it is still important to consider the wider threat posed by Covid-19 when buying bricks and mortar. 

Anything with outside space, gardens and private entrances is a must and these property features will see your investment keep its value should the pandemic drag on. In contrast, flats and particularly high-rise developments are falling in popularity and investors should avoid them at all costs.

Attractive investment property can be hard to find amid strong demand and heightened buyer activity. When you do find one, be prepared to move hard and fast to secure it. If you have your finances in order, this shouldn’t be an issue.

Lenders continue to lend and rates remain at an all-time low, so utilise this. There is no point in tying up cash when you can keep this liquidity to maximise other opportunities. 

Keep your head and, as always when investing, take the long-term view. External factors such as coronavirus or Brexit will present challenges in the short-term, but the long-term outlook remains strong. 

Finally, keep an eye on your currency. Whenever currency fluctuations favour foreign buyers, you can bet that demand will increase, as they act to secure what is essentially a discounted property.

Our Time Has Come
Alyssa Ayres, Oxford University Press

Company profile

Name:​ One Good Thing ​

Founders:​ Bridgett Lau and Micheal Cooke​

Based in:​ Dubai​​ 

Sector:​ e-commerce​

Size: 5​ employees

Stage: ​Looking for seed funding

Investors:​ ​Self-funded and seeking external investors

In-demand jobs and monthly salaries
  • Technology expert in robotics and automation: Dh20,000 to Dh40,000 
  • Energy engineer: Dh25,000 to Dh30,000 
  • Production engineer: Dh30,000 to Dh40,000 
  • Data-driven supply chain management professional: Dh30,000 to Dh50,000 
  • HR leader: Dh40,000 to Dh60,000 
  • Engineering leader: Dh30,000 to Dh55,000 
  • Project manager: Dh55,000 to Dh65,000 
  • Senior reservoir engineer: Dh40,000 to Dh55,000 
  • Senior drilling engineer: Dh38,000 to Dh46,000 
  • Senior process engineer: Dh28,000 to Dh38,000 
  • Senior maintenance engineer: Dh22,000 to Dh34,000 
  • Field engineer: Dh6,500 to Dh7,500
  • Field supervisor: Dh9,000 to Dh12,000
  • Field operator: Dh5,000 to Dh7,000
Silent Hill f

Publisher: Konami

Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, PC

Rating: 4.5/5

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Almnssa
Started: August 2020
Founder: Areej Selmi
Based: Gaza
Sectors: Internet, e-commerce
Investments: Grants/private funding
Farasan Boat: 128km Away from Anchorage

Director: Mowaffaq Alobaid 

Stars: Abdulaziz Almadhi, Mohammed Al Akkasi, Ali Al Suhaibani

Rating: 4/5

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets

The Two Popes

Director: Fernando Meirelles

Stars: Anthony Hopkins, Jonathan Pryce 

Four out of five stars

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