Ukulele Songs Repress Coming 4/15??
Comments
-
mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:After adding the 10c version to my cart and going through to checkout, it would have saved me a twonie as opposed to ordering the same deluxe version from Germany.I’ll stick with the order I already made.
EDIT - for non-Canucks, a twonie is $2I am aware there are probably concerns along the entire supply chain in the production of a record. I am also aware of how many goods are produced in China, and they care less about workers. I really only buy records (besides food and personal care products) so I will make my choice there.I’ll pay a little extra to get my vinyl from a far more reputable distributor and prefer to use local retailers when possible.Having said that, a $40 price difference is hard to argue with. All of this is pushing me towards a minimalist existence.
They also voted to split 20-1 yesterday, which makes me even more pleased with them.Occupational Health and Safety Legislation in the province I live ensures the psychological safety of workers. There are very specific requirements employers must have in place to ensure the situations you are talking about (rogue managers, poor culture within specific divisions or geographic locations, unreasonable workplace demands, pressures) does not exist.There is a fine line between ensuring customers are happy (at all cost) and workers are treated with respect and dignity. Having worked for many large multi-national corporations in my current role, I can tell you worker rights are less valued in American companies. The constant pressure to deliver results to investors outweigh the concerns of other key stakeholders, including workers.I believe there are four levels of corporate culture. What the executive and BOD would like to believe exists, what middle management has created based on corporate objectives, what the workers relay to middle management through surveys, meetings, etc.Then there is the real corporate culture that exists, which is usually a far cry
from what the executive and BOD want in place.It’s one thing in business that is almost impossible to measure. With a little professional knowledge provided by peers, I am convinced this is not a culture I can support.This is all from my own observations. I don’t read or listen to any of these “corporate culture gurus” although the Culture Code by Daniel Coyle is a good read.
You're also correct in how the American business culture varies from other countries, like Canada. Since my business is neither occupational safety (like yours) or Transportation and Warehousing (Amazon, the risky side) I'm not trying to change the American culture in this regards. I recall doing a little research back when Amazon was really under fire and their rate of serious accident was actually below the average rate of others in transportation and warehouse. Now you'd probably argue that the average isn't good enough. And maybe you're right. But I also don't necessarily agree that it makes Amazon a deplorable company.
You call out one of the great ironies in the way we view businesses. Amazon gets all of this political pressure because they are a mammoth company, with an extraordinarily wealthy founder. But it's really a business made up of middle class people going to work every day. The irony is that BOD and senior executives try to put in a culture of safety, as you say, but then it breaks down. But it breaks down at the middle management level. It's the average Joe-manager that tends to fuck it up.And to be completely honest, there is a movement among US executives to ensure stakeholders are as important as shareholders. Trailblazer by Mark Benioff is a great read outlining the new direction US executives are undertaking. These shifts in philosophy take a great deal of time of course.0 -
UK Deluxe (Sign up with a new email for an additional 10% off. Comes to £29.14)
https://thesoundofvinyl.com/*/*/Ukulele-Songs-Exclusive-Vinyl-Edition/7CT20000000
0 -
-
Ukulele Songs (Deluxe) CDN $60.99 https://shop.musicvaultz.com/*/*/Ukulele-Songs-Deluxe/7CQA0000000Ukulele Songs CDN $32.99 https://shop.musicvaultz.com/*/*/Ukulele-Songs/7CQ30000000
0 -
Still nothing up on Amazon Canada.0
-
Eddie Vedder Ukulele Songs (Vinyl) $31.99 CDNThis title will be released on May 6, 2022.Post edited by demetrios on0
-
1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:After adding the 10c version to my cart and going through to checkout, it would have saved me a twonie as opposed to ordering the same deluxe version from Germany.I’ll stick with the order I already made.
EDIT - for non-Canucks, a twonie is $2I am aware there are probably concerns along the entire supply chain in the production of a record. I am also aware of how many goods are produced in China, and they care less about workers. I really only buy records (besides food and personal care products) so I will make my choice there.I’ll pay a little extra to get my vinyl from a far more reputable distributor and prefer to use local retailers when possible.Having said that, a $40 price difference is hard to argue with. All of this is pushing me towards a minimalist existence.
They also voted to split 20-1 yesterday, which makes me even more pleased with them.Occupational Health and Safety Legislation in the province I live ensures the psychological safety of workers. There are very specific requirements employers must have in place to ensure the situations you are talking about (rogue managers, poor culture within specific divisions or geographic locations, unreasonable workplace demands, pressures) does not exist.There is a fine line between ensuring customers are happy (at all cost) and workers are treated with respect and dignity. Having worked for many large multi-national corporations in my current role, I can tell you worker rights are less valued in American companies. The constant pressure to deliver results to investors outweigh the concerns of other key stakeholders, including workers.I believe there are four levels of corporate culture. What the executive and BOD would like to believe exists, what middle management has created based on corporate objectives, what the workers relay to middle management through surveys, meetings, etc.Then there is the real corporate culture that exists, which is usually a far cry
from what the executive and BOD want in place.It’s one thing in business that is almost impossible to measure. With a little professional knowledge provided by peers, I am convinced this is not a culture I can support.This is all from my own observations. I don’t read or listen to any of these “corporate culture gurus” although the Culture Code by Daniel Coyle is a good read.I'm like an opening band for your mom.0 -
RoleModelsinBlood31 said:1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:mrussel1 said:1ThoughtKnown said:After adding the 10c version to my cart and going through to checkout, it would have saved me a twonie as opposed to ordering the same deluxe version from Germany.I’ll stick with the order I already made.
EDIT - for non-Canucks, a twonie is $2I am aware there are probably concerns along the entire supply chain in the production of a record. I am also aware of how many goods are produced in China, and they care less about workers. I really only buy records (besides food and personal care products) so I will make my choice there.I’ll pay a little extra to get my vinyl from a far more reputable distributor and prefer to use local retailers when possible.Having said that, a $40 price difference is hard to argue with. All of this is pushing me towards a minimalist existence.
They also voted to split 20-1 yesterday, which makes me even more pleased with them.Occupational Health and Safety Legislation in the province I live ensures the psychological safety of workers. There are very specific requirements employers must have in place to ensure the situations you are talking about (rogue managers, poor culture within specific divisions or geographic locations, unreasonable workplace demands, pressures) does not exist.There is a fine line between ensuring customers are happy (at all cost) and workers are treated with respect and dignity. Having worked for many large multi-national corporations in my current role, I can tell you worker rights are less valued in American companies. The constant pressure to deliver results to investors outweigh the concerns of other key stakeholders, including workers.I believe there are four levels of corporate culture. What the executive and BOD would like to believe exists, what middle management has created based on corporate objectives, what the workers relay to middle management through surveys, meetings, etc.Then there is the real corporate culture that exists, which is usually a far cry
from what the executive and BOD want in place.It’s one thing in business that is almost impossible to measure. With a little professional knowledge provided by peers, I am convinced this is not a culture I can support.This is all from my own observations. I don’t read or listen to any of these “corporate culture gurus” although the Culture Code by Daniel Coyle is a good read.I have never consulted in the restaurant industry, but I believe there are real problems and it results in many workers having substance abuse issues. I don’t remember having a more demanding job than during a kitchen rush, whether I was in the dish pit or slinging pizza. Perhaps things have changed over the past thirty years, but the people doing the work would know better (that is the case in any industry, I learn from the people doing the work and spend time with them and management to find solutions to problems in their area).In some establishments these are seen as “entry level” positions and many of these workers don’t know their rights, legislated by the province, (OSHA in the US). Many employees are also recent immigrants, who from my experience have trouble wrapping their head around worker rights, depending on country of origin.
The big restaurant chains would probably have sound Safety Management Systems (SMS) in place as they would understand the risk to the organization. However, local franchisees or managers may drop the ball on what is expected from Head Office.Local restaurants, even high end establishments, probably do not have an SMS system in place, as they don’t have enough employees to meet the requirement to have one, unless the OH&S Director (perhaps OSHA in the US) demanded they put one in place (generally due to government inspection findings or reportable incidents).The managers/owners or anyone else deemed responsible for workers safety generally don’t understand their responsibilities for worker safety, as legislated by the jurisdiction they operate. For instance, if a worker is seriously hurt at the workplace and the employer is found negligent, the business and individuals can be fined heavily.I would say this, it is very unlikely the restaurant industry has identified most of psychological safety hazards. I’m sure some have been (harassment for instance), however there are many environmental factors (noise/lighting), personal factors (work-life conflict/age-related changes), and work organizational factors (workload and pace/job security, content and control) that have never been considered, let alone thought out into mitigating those hazards.0 -
Has anyone seen the deluxe edition on Amazon?0
-
So far the only Canadian store selling the deluxe edition is https://shop.musicvaultz.com/*/*/Ukulele-Songs-Deluxe/7CQA0000000 .
0 -
-
Still no Deluxe Editions up on Amazon.
0 -
10club shipping label on the deluxe edition received yesterday.
0 -
I got my shipping label notice yesterday.
0 -
-
It was slightly cheaper for me to order this from Germany than from the 10c with all shipping charges calculated.There was a nominal difference when including shipping and state tax to my shipping address across the border in WA ($4 CDN cheaper than from Germany) which would have been eaten up in gasoline to pick up the parcel (about $2 a litre these days).Post edited by 1ThoughtKnown on0
-
Categories
- All Categories
- 148.9K Pearl Jam's Music and Activism
- 110.1K The Porch
- 275 Vitalogy
- 35.1K Given To Fly (live)
- 3.5K Words and Music...Communication
- 39.2K Flea Market
- 39.2K Lost Dogs
- 58.7K Not Pearl Jam's Music
- 10.6K Musicians and Gearheads
- 29.1K Other Music
- 17.8K Poetry, Prose, Music & Art
- 1.1K The Art Wall
- 56.8K Non-Pearl Jam Discussion
- 22.2K A Moving Train
- 31.7K All Encompassing Trip
- 2.9K Technical Stuff and Help