ECB’s Lagarde says 2% inflation target in reach
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ECB’s Lagarde says 2% inflation target in reach
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Inspiring Quotes From Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys
In 1965, while the rest of his band was on tour, Brian Wilson, a founding member of the Beach Boys, who died this week at age 82, challenged himself to stay home and create a masterpiece. The results of that challenge, Pet Sounds, has become one of the most revered and influential works of pop music.
“Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened,” recalled longtime Beatles’ producer George Martin in Rolling Stone. “Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds.”
Paul McCartney agrees, saying, “I’ve often played Pet Sounds and cried.”
In 2017, I became infatuated with Pet Sounds, and I have to admit — that’s a little weird. I’m old enough to have seen the Ramones perform live, but I’m not that old. To me, The Beach Boys was music that just kind of always existed in the background. Something my parents tapped their fingers to on the steering wheel when we were stuck in traffic. Not something that I loved or hated, something that was always there.
But lately, I’ve been giving a lot of thought to things that seem to have always existed — cellphones, Batman, America — and here’s the thing, they didn’t! Someone, or a group of people, created these things out of thin air. They had an idea and got to work.
I’m no music critic, but listening to songs such as “God Only Knows” and “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” with fresh ears, I couldn’t stop thinking, “What made him even think of doing that?” There are not many top hits before or after “Sloop John B” with lyrics about eating all of a shipmate’s corn that I can think of, can you? You start to understand why the “genius” word gets thrown in Brian Wilson’s direction, and why it sticks.
I jumped at the chance to see Brian Wilson in the fall of 2017, alongside Beach Boys co-founder Al Jardine and a tremendous backing band, play the entirety of the groundbreaking album track by track at Radio City Music Hall. (Additional Pet Sounds: The Final Performances Tour dates can be found here.) Hearing these songs live — more than 50 years after the guy sitting at the piano first heard them in his head — was incredible and inspiring. I left the theater not sure that in my lifetime I’ll be able to create something that remains relevant and groundbreaking for half a century, but certain that I am not going to stop trying.
Here are some quotes from Brian Wilson about creativity and the drive to succeed, pulled from great interviews he’s done with Jason Fine for Rolling Stone and Alison Beard for Harvard Business Review.
“I’m success-oriented. You have to program yourself to be successful. Kick ass at life.”
Wilson talks to engineers and other on-lookers while recording Pet Sounds in 1966 in Los Angeles.
“I still believe in that message — working hard is the way to go. I live by it.”
Brian Wilson and Al Jardine perform Pet Sounds at the Pantages Theatre on May 26, 2017, in Los Angeles.
“If you stick with it, things work out in the end. Not always, but sometimes.”
The Beach Boys pose during a portrait session at Pacific Ocean Park on March 10, 1966 in Los Angeles. Left to right are Dennis Wilson, Carl Wilson, Bruce Johnston, Mike Love, Al Jardine and Brian Wilson.
“The park helps keep me straight. I show up feeling bad, and I leave feeling good. It blows the bad stuff right out of my brains.”
Rolling Stone profile, as featured on Brian Wilson’s official Instagram page.
“Fifty years later, I’m doing a world tour, playing [Pet Sounds] live, and seeing and hearing the audience respond. That makes me very proud. That record brought and continues to bring love to the world, which was my intent when I wrote the music.”
Drumhead for the 2017 tour.
“Sometimes things happen, and sometimes they don’t, but you can’t force it. It’s frustrating, but I keep at it.”
Brian Wilson’s career retrospective Playback: The Brian Wilson Anthology is now available on CD, vinyl and digital.
“Some people are leaders, and everyone contributes in different ways. The Beach Boys were a family — three brothers, a cousin and a friend — which gave us a cohesiveness. But I think the key to our success was respecting one another’s ideas and opinions.”
Carl Wilson, Bruce Johnston, Brian Wilson and Al Jardine sing around a piano in the recording studio circa 1966.
“I’m getting older but I don’t give a goddamn. I can still sing my ass off.”
Singer and mastermind Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys directs from the control room while recording the album Pet Sounds in 1966 in Los Angeles.
“I wanted to be a center fielder for the Yankees. That was my ambition, but I got sidetracked into the music business.”
“To succeed in life, you have to put a little muscle into it — mind muscle.”
Brian Wilson at the San Diego Civic Theatre on May 24, 2017, in San Diego, Calif.
In 1965, while the rest of his band was on tour, Brian Wilson, a founding member of the Beach Boys, who died this week at age 82, challenged himself to stay home and create a masterpiece. The results of that challenge, Pet Sounds, has become one of the most revered and influential works of pop music.
“Without Pet Sounds, Sgt. Pepper never would have happened,” recalled longtime Beatles’ producer George Martin in Rolling Stone. “Pepper was an attempt to equal Pet Sounds.”
Paul McCartney agrees, saying, “I’ve often played Pet Sounds and cried.”
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Apple just made 3 great new privacy and security enhancements—but missed these 3 opportunities
iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS 26 will let you keep your data even more secure and private. But Apple could go further.
This week, Apple previewed its redesigned (and renumbered) operating systems at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference. While the new Liquid Glass design language was the star of the show across iOS 26, iPadOS 26, and macOS 26, there were some other standout features, like a vastly improved calling experience on the iPhone.
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‘Recession risks alive’ as Canada’s manufacturing numbers suffer under Trump tariff regime
The dampening effect of
on
and
in Canada is leading economists to warn that
growth forecasts are in jeopardy
and, even worse, that the numbers could portend the
.
and
, excluding petroleum, dropped 2.8 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respectively, in April from March, according to Statistics Canada data released on Friday. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had expected manufacturing sales to drop two per cent and wholesale sales to fall 0.9 per cent.
“Feedback from respondents highlighted the impact of the recent tariffs imposed by the United States on Canada’s manufacturing sector,” Statistics Canada said in a press release.
Manufacturers said they were experiencing price increases as well as rising costs for raw materials, shipping and labour. One-third said demand for their products had changed.
Trump’s tariffs include 25 per cent duties on goods that are non-compliant with the
, 25 per cent on foreign-made vehicles and 50 per cent on steel and aluminum.
Economists said the sales data put
gross domestic product (GDP) forecasts
in the crosshairs.
“The implications for April and second-quarter GDP are squarely negative and recession risks are alive and well,” David Rosenberg, economist and founder of Rosenberg Research & Associates Inc., said in a note.
Andrew Grantham, an economist at CIBC Capital Markets, said the data suggests that GDP growth for April will be downgraded from a “surprisingly positive” first estimate of 0.1 per cent, and could be the prelude for second-quarter growth “tracking flat.”
First-quarter GDP growth came in at 2.2 per cent, well ahead of estimates for 1.7 per cent.
On the manufacturing front, petroleum and coal, vehicle sales and primary metals, such as aluminum, contributed the most to April’s decline.
Excluding petroleum and coal, manufacturing sales fell 1.8 per cent in April from March and are down 2.7 per cent year over year.
“Adding insult to injury was the 6.8 per cent month-over-month contraction in new manufacturing orders,” Rosenberg said.
Orders have fallen in two of the past three months, he said, adding that orders for “big-ticket durable goods” shrivelled 10.5 per cent in April, “the sharpest slippage in nearly three years.”
Rosenberg said this data is “key because new orders are, after all, a leading indicator and the mother’s milk for future demand.”
On the wholesale front, sales fell in six of the seven subsections, accounting for 81.6 per cent of the total.
Motor vehicles and parts led the decrease in April, falling 6.5 per cent, a U-turn from March, Statistics Canada said.
As the tariff war got underway, Ontario and Quebec were singled out as being among the provinces most vulnerable to Trump’s tariffs, something the latest manufacturing and wholesale data supported.
Ontario manufacturing sales dropped 2.4 per cent in April, or $31 billion, representing the largest dollar decline since March 2024. Quebec’s contracted the second-most in dollar-terms, down $17.5 billion, the fourth straight monthly drop.
Ontario also recorded the largest decrease in wholesale sales in dollar terms as the sector contracted $910 million — a decrease of 2.1 per cent.
Rosenberg said the data further questions the
‘s recent decision to hold
for a second consecutive time at 2.75 per cent at its June 4 announcement.
“How the Bank of Canada can just sit on the sidelines as a casual observer is a good question as the disinflationary output gap widens further,” he said.
• Email: gmvsuhanic@postmedia.com
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You’re Not Prepared for the AI Revolution
GenAI capabilities are improving exponentially every six months or so, and yet most companies are adopting models at a linear pace, at best.