Radio New Zealand National. 2015-07-21. 00:00-23:59.

Rights Information
Year
2015
Reference
274398
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Ask about this item

Ask to use material, get more information or tell us about an item

Rights Information
Year
2015
Reference
274398
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Duration
24:00:00
Credits
RNZ Collection
Radio New Zealand National, Broadcaster

A 24-hour recording of Radio New Zealand National. The following rundown is sourced from the broadcaster’s website. Note some overseas/copyright restricted items may not appear in the supplied rundown:

21 July 2015

===12:04 AM. | All Night Programme===
=DESCRIPTION=

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Spectrum (RNZ); 1:05 From the World (RNZ); 2:05 Night Lights Classic Jazz - Portraits of Harlem (10 of 12, WFIU); 3:05 Swamp Fever, written and told by Gerard Hindmarsh (7 of 10, RNZ); 3:30 An Author's View (RNZ); 5:10 Witness (BBC)

===6:00 AM. | Morning Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

Radio New Zealand's three-hour breakfast news show with news and interviews, bulletins on the hour and half-hour, including: 6:18 Pacific News 6:22 Rural News 6:27 and 8:45 Te Manu Korihi News 6:44 and 7:41 NZ Newspapers 6:47 Business News 7:42 and 8:34 Sports News 6:46 and 7:34 Traffic

=AUDIO=

06:00
Top Stories for Tuesday 21 July 2015
BODY:
Dame Tariana Turia says kereru should be back on the menu for Māori elders on special occasions. A big announcement from Murray McCully in New York and Labour leader Andrew Little on party's languishing poll results.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 29'29"

06:06
Sports News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'14"

06:17
Pacific News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
The latest from the Pacific region.
Topics: Pacific
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'32"

06:21
Morning Rural News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'22"

06:25
Te Manu Korihi News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An education researcher says so-called 'white flight' is causing resourcing issues for lower decile schools; The Labour MP for Ikaroa-Rawhiti, Meka Whaitiri, is accusing the Māori Party of not doing enough to lobby the Government about the low home-ownership rates of tangata whenua in Auckland; Three leading Māori authors will be used to support recently bereaved whanau in a unique pilot project; Chinese audiences are expected to be wowed for the first time in Beijing by a highly acclaimed Māori stage show touring there this month.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'34"

06:39
Iwi leader says being served kereru an honour
BODY:
An iwi leader says he viewed it as an honour to be served kereru at a central North Island hui and trusted the local marae to use the resource sustainably.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 3'13"

06:48
Contact Energy's price falls amid speculation of Origin sale
BODY:
Speculation is mounting that Contact Energy's majority shareholder is about to sell its stake.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Contact Energy
Duration: 1'10"

06:49
Services sector continues to expand in June
BODY:
An economist says activity in the services sector indicates the economy will continue to grow at a moderate pace.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'22"

06:50
Banks need to set aside more capital - APRA
BODY:
In Australia, the banking regulator wants the country's major lenders to set aside more capital against potential losses on home loans, and help bolster the financial system.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: Australia, banks
Duration: 1'39"

06:51
A2 Milk knocks back a potential takeover offer
BODY:
The specialty milk producer, A2 Milk, has knocked back a potential takeover offer but says other suitors are circling.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: A2 Milk
Duration: 2'23"

06:53
Rare for FMA to accept undertakings - Partner
BODY:
A partner at Chapman Tripp has applauded the capital markets watchdog for showing some flexiblity in dealing with a New Zealand couple that commited breaches in Australia.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: FMA, Financial Markets Authority
Duration: 1'34"

06:55
Business feature - Footfalls and Heartbeats
BODY:
Time to follow up on a less well-known business that we talked to a couple of years back... it's the smart fabric firm, Footfalls and Heartbeats.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Footfalls and Heartbeats
Duration: 3'00"

06:58
Morning markets for 21 July 2015
BODY:
Gold prices have plunged to the lowest level in more than five years after aggressive selling out of China.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'12"

07:07
Sports News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'59"

07:11
Former Māori Party co-leader denies eating kereru
BODY:
The cabinet ministers claimed to have been offered Kereru at a hui in Ohakune in 2013 are running for cover.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 4'01"

07:15
Maungarongo Marae speaks out after claims
BODY:
Che Wilson is the spokesman for the Maungarongo Marae at which the cabinet ministers ate.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 5'17"

07:20
NZ leads UN Security Vote on Iran deal
BODY:
The United Nations Security Council, led by New Zealand, has unanimously endorsed a deal to curb Iran's nuclear programme in return for sanctions relief.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN, Iran
Duration: 5'09"

07:27
Banks reopen in Greece
BODY:
Greece has re-opened its banks for the first time in three weeks as it starts the process of paying off the billions of euros it owes to international creditors.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Greek debt crisis, Greece
Duration: 3'10"

07:34
PM reluctant to predict dairy price comeback
BODY:
The Prime Minister, John Key, is talking up the possibility of dairy prices turning around and says New Zealand must not give in to a gloomy mindset.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: dairy prices
Duration: 2'26"

07:36
Australian anti Serco group unsurprised
BODY:
The union representing prison officers says Serco is dodging responsibility by saying it only received a report in May on allegations of a fight club at Mount Eden Correctional Facility.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Serco, MT Eden prison
Duration: 3'33"

07:46
Labour leader Andrew Little on party's languishing poll results
BODY:
The polls aren't shifting for Labour. The decision to highlight the number of Auckland property buyers with Chinese sounding surnames hasn't worked.
Topics: housing, politics
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: house prices
Duration: 5'15"

07:51
Govt admits policy could bring major change to school funding
BODY:
The government is considering using its flagship education policy to make unheralded changes in the way schools are funded.
Topics: education, politics
Regions:
Tags: school funding
Duration: 3'04"

07:54
Will Phil Rudd ever make it back into ACDC
BODY:
Phil Rudd , ACDC's former drummer, was yesterday granted bail on a charge of possessing and consuming alcohol while on home detention.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Phil Rudd, ACDC
Duration: 4'31"

08:07
Sports News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'12"

08:12
Labour MP calls for investigation into eating of kereru at hui
BODY:
Claims three senior cabinet ministers were served Kereru for dinner during a hui is ruffling feathers in parliament.
Topics: politics, te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 3'49"

08:16
Ex-inmate says prisons need to help people
BODY:
The fallout continues over the fight clubs, drug use, booze, and cellphones at Serco's Mount Eden remand prison.
Topics: crime
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Serco, Mt Eden prison
Duration: 3'53"

08:20
Calls for beehive inspections
BODY:
Beekeepers want the government to monitor all hives over summer after the discovery of a new parasite.
Topics: farming, rural
Regions:
Tags: bees, parasite, Lotmaria passim
Duration: 2'51"

08:23
Auckland property investors running scared
BODY:
The approach of tight new bank lending restrictions have Auckland property investors rushing to beat the deadline.
Topics: housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: banking rules, banking
Duration: 3'39"

08:27
Long sought fleet reduction at Auckland Transport
BODY:
The agency in charge of transport in Auckland has finally made a move to cut its vehicle fleet after two years of planning, including a much criticised shuttle service for it's staff.
Topics: transport
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Auckland Transport
Duration: 4'01"

08:31
Markets Update for 21 July 2015
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 59"

08:36
Police make dent in number of boy-racers on Banks Peninsula
BODY:
A police operation to cut the number of boy-racers around Banks Peninsula has caught mainly speeding residents in the net.
Topics: transport
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: boy-racers, Banks Peninsula, boy racers
Duration: 3'16"

08:39
American Zach Johnson takes British Open Golf Championship
BODY:
The American golfer Zach Johnson has won the British Open Golf Championship at St Andrews.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: British Open Golf Championship, golf
Duration: 3'32"

08:44
Te Manu Korihi News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An education researcher says so-called 'white flight' is causing resourcing issues for lower decile schools; The Labour MP for Ikaroa-Rawhiti, Meka Whaitiri, is accusing the Māori Party of not doing enough to lobby the Government about the low home-ownership rates of tangata whenua in Auckland; Three leading Māori authors will be used to support recently bereaved whanau in a unique pilot project; Chinese audiences are expected to be wowed for the first time in Beijing by a highly acclaimed Māori stage show touring there this month.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'21"

08:48
Seaside Sumner residents worry about coastal hazard status
BODY:
Residents from seaside suburbs in Christchurch are worried their property values will drop and they won't be able to get insurance for them.
Topics: environment
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Property values
Duration: 2'42"

08:51
Councils set out blueprint for new ways of funding
BODY:
Councils have unveiled their prescription for their future funding, calling for the right to tax tourists, charge motorists and claim a share of royalities from mineral extraction in their regions.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Local Government NZ
Duration: 3'35"

08:54
Muslims celebrate Ramadan's end
BODY:
Thousands of people across New Zealand have just celebrated the Islamic holiday of Eid.
Topics: spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: Eid, Islamic holiday, Islam, New Zealand's Muslim community
Duration: 3'24"

=SHOW NOTES=

===9:06 AM. | Nine To Noon===
=DESCRIPTION=

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: Five Sons and 100 Muri of Rice, by Sharyn Steel and Zoe Dryden (2 of 12, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:08
Moving the Treaty of Waitangi
BODY:
A project to move the original Treaty of Waitangi document is still in the planning stage, four years after it was announced and having already cost more than three million dollars. In 2011 the government announced it would move the country's founding document, from its current home in the National Archive, to a new space in the National Library - just 200 meters up the road. The 1835 Declaration of Independence and the 1893 Women's Suffrage Petition are also to be moved. The plan was for a new, bigger exhibition space at the National Library, catering for more visitors, which was to have been opened last July. That deadline was never met and the Department of Internal affairs announced it was "refocussing" the project. $3,176,000 has now been spent, and the conceptual design phase is still ongoing, with the new exhibition not due for opening til early 2017. Kathryn speaks to Peter Murray, the Department of Internal Affairs Deputy Chief Executive of Information Knowledge Services.
Topics: history, politics, te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags: Treaty of Waitangi
Duration: 15'21"

09:26
School principals accused of patch protection
BODY:
Trades academies are accusing some school principals of patch protection over the number of students they'll approve to attend vocational training. A funding anomaly has meant that trades students have been funded as if they were at school full-time, and the Education Ministry is adjusting that. This will mean that schools receive less for those students, and Linda Fox from the PPTA Principals' Council has warned members that up to 60 teaching positions could go if too many students are placed in trades academies. Stuart Middleton from Tertiary High School at Manukau Institute of Technology responds.
Topics: education, politics
Regions:
Tags: trades academies
Duration: 22'52"

09:52
US Correspondent Steve Almond
BODY:
Donald Trump vs Burnie Sanders in the Republican presidential candidate race. Amy Schumer's movie Trainwreck. The Harper Lee prequel book 'Go Set a Watchman'.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: USA
Duration: 7'37"

10:09
Digital artist Evan Roth
BODY:
Evan Roth is variously described as an artist, an activist, a graffiti engineer, a programmer and a rebel. He's an award-winning American artist living in Paris, who originally studied architecture - ostensibly he says - to create skater-friendly plazas in buildings. But he left his architecture job after developing a love for the internet to study design and launched into creating works that explore the intersect between free and popular culture and technology - including the use of information and the philosophies of hacker communities His work is in the permanent collection of New York's Museum of Modern Art and he's exhibited at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Tate in London and on the front page of Youtube.
EXTENDED BODY:
Evan Roth is variously described as an artist, an activist, a graffiti engineer, a programmer and a rebel.
He's an award-winning American artist living in Paris, who originally studied architecture – ostensibly he says – to create skater-friendly plazas in buildings. But he left his architecture job after developing a love for the internet to study design and launched into creating works that explore the intersect between free and popular culture and technology – including the use of information and the philosophies of hacker communities.
His work is in the permanent collection of New York's Museum of Modern Art and he's exhibited at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Tate in London and on the front page of Youtube.
Evan Roth talks to Kathryn Ryan.
Topics: arts, technology
Regions:
Tags: Evan Roth, digital arts
Duration: 26'29"

10:39
Book review: 'The 3rd Woman' by Jonathan Freedland
BODY:
Published by HarperCollins, RRP$34.99. Reviewed by Phil Vine.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'18"

11:06
Business commentator Rod Oram
BODY:
Rod Oram discusses the nitrogen trading market which is cleaning up the Lake Taupo catchment.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 17'03"

11:23
The Phantom of Fifth Avenue
BODY:
Meryl Gordon is the author of The Phantom of Fifth Avenue. Her novel is is about American heiress Huguette Clark who died in 2011. The 104-year-old left behind a 45-room apartment on New York's Fifth Avenue, a 23-acre estate overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Santa Barbara - a fortune estimated at $300 million. Upon her death there were also some unanswered questions, including why she spent the last 20 years of her life hiding out in hospitals with only her antique French porcelain dolls for company. Meryl Gordon is an author, an award-winning journalist and a regular contributor to Vanity Fair. She is also the author of Mrs Astor Regrets: The Hidden Betrayals of a Family Beyond Approach.
Topics: author interview
Regions:
Tags: Meryl Gordon, Phantom of Fifth Avenue, elder abuse, Huguette Clark
Duration: 20'11"

11:44
Media commentator Gavin Ellis
BODY:
Media commentator Gavin Ellis discusses the funding situation of Radio New Zealand and the resignation of the New Zealand Herald's Economics Editor, Brian Fallow. Gavin Ellis is a media commentator and former editor of the New Zealand Herald. He can be contacted on gavin.ellis@xtra.co.nz
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'53"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 Moving the Treaty of Waitangi
A project to move the original Treaty of Waitangi document is still in the planning stage, four years after it was announced and having already cost more than three million dollars. In 2011 the government announced it would move the country's founding document, from its current home in the National Archive, to a new space in the National Library – just 200 meters up the road. The 1835 Declaration of Independence and the 1893 Women’s Suffrage Petition are also to be moved. The plan was for a new, bigger exhibition space at the National Library, catering for more visitors, which was to have been opened last July. That deadline was never met and the Department of Internal affairs announced it was "refocussing" the project. $3,176,000 has now been spent, and the conceptual design phase is still ongoing, with the new exhibition not due for opening til early 2017. Kathryn speaks to Peter Murray, the Department of Internal Affairs Deputy Chief Executive of Information Knowledge Services.

09:20 School principals accused of patch protection
Trades academies are accusing some school principals of patch protection over the number of students they'll approve to attend vocational training. A funding anomaly has meant that trades students have been funded as if they were at school full-time, and the Education Ministry is adjusting that. This will mean that schools receive less for those students, and Linda Fox from the PPTA Principals' Council has warned members that up to 60 teaching positions could go if too many students are placed in trades academies. Stuart Middleton from Tertiary High School at Manukau Institute of Technology responds.
09:45 US Correspondent Steve Almond
Steve Almond reports on the latest from the US elections as Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders shake up the primary races from opposite ends of the ideological divide.
10:05 Digital artist Evan Roth
Evan Roth is variously described as an artist, an activist, a graffiti engineer, a programmer and a rebel. He's an award-winning American artist living in Paris, who originally studied architecture – ostensibly he says – to create skater-friendly plazas in buildings. But he left his architecture job after developing a love for the internet to study design and launched into creating works that explore the intersect between free and popular culture and technology – including the use of information and the philosophies of hacker communities His work is in the permanent collection of New York's Museum of Modern Art and he's exhibited at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Tate in London and on the front page of Youtube.
[gallery:1279]
10:30 Book review: 'The 3rd Woman' by Jonathan Freedland
Published by HarperCollins, RRP$34.99. Reviewed by Phil Vine.
10:45 The Reading: 'Five Sons and 100 Muri of Rice', by Sharyn Steel and Zoe Dryden
The life of Kharika Devkota, raised as a five-year-old bride in rural Nepal (2 of 12, RNZ).
11:05 Business commentator Rod Oram
Rod Oram discusses the nitrogen trading market which is cleaning up the Lake Taupo catchment.
11:20 The Phantom of Fifth Avenue
Meryl Gordon is the author of The Phantom of Fifth Avenue. Her novel is is about American heiress Huguette Clark who died in 2011. The 104-year-old left behind a 45-room apartment on New York's Fifth Avenue, a 23-acre estate overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Santa Barbara – a fortune estimated at $300 million. Upon her death there were also some unanswered questions, including why she spent the last 20 years of her life hiding out in hospitals with only her antique French porcelain dolls for company. Meryl Gordon is an author, an award-winning journalist and a regular contributor to Vanity Fair. She is also the author of Mrs Astor Regrets: The Hidden Betrayals of a Family Beyond Approach.

11:45 Media commentator Gavin Ellis
Media commentator Gavin Ellis discusses the funding situation of Radio New Zealand and the resignation of the New Zealand Herald's Economics Editor, Brian Fallow. Gavin Ellis is a media commentator and former editor of the New Zealand Herald. He can be contacted on gavin.ellis@xtra.co.nz

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Lawrence Arabia
Song: The Listening Times
Composer: Milne
Album: The Sparrow
Label: Honorarybedouin
Time Broadcast: 09:23
Artist: Neko Case
Song: Local Girl
Composer: Case
Album: The Worse Things Get, The Harder I Fight
Label: Anti
Time Broadcast: 09:50
Artist: Jackie Wilson
Song: Higher and Higher
Composer: Jackson
Album: n/a
Label: Global
Time Broadcast: 10:37

===Noon | Midday Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

Radio New Zealand news, followed by updates and reports until 1.00pm, including: 12:16 Business News 12:26 Sport 12:34 Rural News 12:43 Worldwatch

=AUDIO=

12:00
Midday News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
Bill English says Labour's housing campaign was raised with him in China and a patient dies after an ambulance crashes in Northland.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'19"

12:17
Migration hits fresh high
BODY:
The growing economy is continuing to attract people to live and work long-term in New Zealand, driving annual migration to fresh highs for the 11th straight month.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: migration
Duration: 1'42"

12:19
Auckland property investors already impact of new loan rules
BODY:
The Bankers Association says investors will need to hustle if they are seeking a bank loan to buy an Auckland property after October 1st, with less than a 30 percent deposit.
Topics: business, housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: banks
Duration: 1'19"

12:20
Martin Aircraft shares jump
BODY:
Shares in the Martin Aircraft Company have risen after it signed a memorandum of understanding with the United States based, AvWatch, for jetpacks in North America.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: aircarft, jetpacks
Duration: 46"

12:23
Midday Markets for 21 July 2015
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Keith Ferguson at Craigs Investment Partners.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'38"

12:26
Midday Sports News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
The American golfer Zach Johnson says he's humbled to have won the British Open although the father of three says it's his family he's most proud of.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: golf, rugby, All Blacks
Duration: 2'43"

12:35
Midday Rural News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'29"

=SHOW NOTES=

===1:06 PM. | Jesse Mulligan, 1–4pm===
=DESCRIPTION=

Information and debate, people and places around NZ

=AUDIO=

13:06
Your Song - Angels
BODY:
Today's song is Angels by Robbie Williams as chosen by Adele Carran in Auckland.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 16'10"

13:20
TV review with Colin Hogg
BODY:
Colin Hogg talks about the finals of Top Gear and Dancing With the Stars.
Topics: media
Regions:
Tags: T.V. review
Duration: 9'52"

13:35
Music review with Zac Arnold
BODY:
Zac Arnold looks at new music from Auckland band Rackets and Omar Souleyman from Syria.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music review, Rackets, Omar Souleyman
Duration: 11'19"

13:46
Book review with Vanda Symon
BODY:
Vanda Symon reviews The Lives of Colonial Objects - Edited by Annabel Cooper, Lachy Paterson and Angela Wanhalla.
Topics: books, arts
Regions:
Tags: book review
Duration: 4'12"

13:51
Web review with Helen Baxter
BODY:
Helen Baxter talks about the InterCommunity event held at the Net Hui this month and the rise of Twitch T.V.
Topics: technology, internet
Regions:
Tags: Net Hui
Duration: 9'13"

14:10
The Smallest Continent: Journeys Through New Zealand Landscapes
BODY:
Our next guest is an epic adventurer. He's spent twenty years working for New Zealand Geographic. And he's written about climbing, cave diving, sunken treasures and fly fishing. His name is Derek Grzelewski, and now he's written a new book. It's called The Smallest Continent: Journeys Through New Zealand Landscapes.
Topics: books
Regions: Otago
Tags: Derek Grzelewski, New Zealand Geographic, Wanaka
Duration: 14'13"

14:45
Feature Album - The Wall Live in Berlin
BODY:
Todays feature album is The Wall Live in Berlin by Roger Waters which was recorded 25 years ago today.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, The Wall
Duration: 16'35"

15:10
Feature interview - Mary Taylor Previte
BODY:
When Mary Taylor Previte was 9-years-old she was a girl guide doing what girls guides do, singing songs at troop meetings, earning badges and doing her best to live up to the Guide pledge. But Mary's troop wasn't in the suburbs, Mary was a girl guide at a Japanese Prisoner of War camp in China. She and her siblings were attending a boarding school in China. The day after the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, the Japanese sent the teachers, students and staff to a prison camp. The adults started a Girl Guides troop in the camp, and gave Mary and her friends a tiny piece of their childhoods. In just a few weeks, Mary will celebrate the 70th of the liberation of that camp. Mary Previte is on the line with us from New Jersey.
EXTENDED BODY:
When Mary Taylor Previte was nine years old, she and her brothers and sisters were attending a boarding school in China while their parents did missionary work. The day after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, Japanese soldiers marched into her boarding school in China and sent everyone to a concentration camp.
She’s 82 years old now, and her memories of that time are vivid. “They shipped us by train then by truck like animals in a truck to the Weihsien concentration camp where we ended up with 1500 allied prisoners” Previte tells Afternoons. “When we were marched off to concentration camp, the whole school started singing ‘God is our refugee and our strength, he will take care of us in trouble, we will not be afraid’. There we were marching into camp signing that song. And our teachers kept that up through the war.”
Her teachers started the Chefoo Brownies and Girl Guides inside the camp. “We had all these things going on that made us feel safe. A child is protected in their souls by a feeling of structure and predictability,” Previte says. “We would practice how to build a fire with one or two matches. These are things Brownies all over the world were learning how to do. These kinds of things distracted us from the fact we were hungry and we did not know when we would see our parents.” She did not see her parents again until 1945.
The Brownies in camp earned badges. “We had teams of two. Marjorie Harrison and I, I can remember the victory. We were the team that got the pot belly stove red hot more times than any other girls in our dormitory. I can remember that at the age of 82 that I was the best at getting the pot belly stove red hot,” Previte says.
Scottish Olympic athlete and Rugby player Eric Liddell, made famous by the film, Chariots of Fire, was one of the prisoners of Weihsien. The children called him Uncle Eric Mary says. He died in the camp. “Someone at his memorial service said this was Jesus in running shoes” Previte remembers.
On August 17, 1945 a team of American soldiers with a Japanese interpreter librated the camp. They parachuted in from a B24 Bomber. “The people rushed out to the fields to these six Americans and picked up these heroes and carried them to the gates of the camp and there was the Salvation Army Band playing,” Previte tearfully recalls.
She has spent the last 18 years tracking down all the men who rescued her. She found the last one just a few months ago. The 70th anniversary of the liberation of her camp will be celebrated in August.
Topics: history
Regions:
Tags: World War Two, Japan, China, prisoners of war, Girl Guides
Duration: 38'37"

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 21 July 2015
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'02"

21:20
Sea Urchins and Their 'Landscape of Fear'
BODY:
Do sea urchins live in a 'landscape of fear' and is the mere presence of predatory crayfish and snapper enough to change their behaviour?
EXTENDED BODY:
By Alison Ballance
“Fear is causing them to be more cryptic. It’s a really cool result. Predators don’t actually have to be having a direct effect on the sea urchins to potentially limit how much kelp they graze.”
Arie Spyksma, Leigh Marine Laboratory

When wolves were re-introduced into Yellowstone National Park in the United States, the park’s vegetation began to rapidly change. And it wasn’t that the wolves were eating all the deer – it was that the mere presence of the wolves was causing the deer to spend more time hiding in the forest, and less time out in the open eating grass.
Ecologists call this the 'landscape of fear’, and University of Auckland PhD student Arie Spyksma wonders if the same thing could be happening closer to home – but with sea urchins instead of deer, and snapper and crayfish rather than wolves.
This time-lapse video was made by Arie Spyksma as part of his research. For the first 4 seconds you see a crowd of sea urchins behaving normally. Then, after a white perforated pot containing some crushed sea urchin is introduced, many urchins react to the smell by moving away from the pot. At the same time a number of fish come in to investigate the pot. Arie says the crushed sea urchin is a proxy for a sea urchin being eaten by a crayfish or snapper, and is a way of seeing how the urchins react to their predators. The metal poles and fluttering tape at the left and right of shot are the legs of the tripod holding the time-lapse camera.
Arie has been comparing the behaviour of sea urchins, or kina (Evechinus chloroticus) both inside and outside two marine reserves – the Leigh, or Cape Rodney to Okakari Point marine reserve, and Tawharanui marine reserve. In unprotected areas of the Hauraki Gulf ‘kina barrens’ are a common feature – over-fishing results in low numbers of popular species such as crayfish and snapper, both of which are key predators of sea urchins. As a result, the numbers of sea urchins builds up, leading to the over-grazing of the common kelp, Ecklonia radiata. What happens in a fully protected marine reserve once fishing is prohibited is that snapper and crayfish numbers recover, sea urchin numbers go down and at the same time the kelp also begins to recover.
“There’s a theory known as the trophic cascade theory,” says Arie. “When predator numbers are high they can effectively control herbivore numbers - so herbivores like the sea urchin – which keeps their numbers in check and means that they’re not over-grazing the kelp, and it keeps the ecosystem in a good balance. If those predators are removed then the herbivore populations will explode, they’ll over-graze and then you’re left with a reef that’s got no kelp on it, has got low coralline and turfing algaes, and isn’t as productive and can’t hold as many species.”
The main idea behind the trophic cascade theory is that it is direct interactions between the predators and their prey i.e. the predator eats the prey species and removes it. What Arie is investigating is a growing idea that the indirect effects of predators may be as, if not more, significant.
“By causing the urchin to fear for its life and stay hidden or cryptic, the urchins are not going to be out on the reef as much and therefore might not graze the kelp as much,” says Arie.

Arie has carried out his research both in the field and in the lab at the Leigh Marine Laboratory. To begin with he compared the size and behaviour of sea urchins inside and outside the marine reserves. He observed that the smaller population of urchins inside the marine reserve were more cryptic and spent much more of their time hiding, compared to those outside the reserve which spent much more time out in the open, even when they were quite little (just 40 mm in size).
However, this could have been either because they were hiding from greater numbers of predators in the marine reserve, or that there was simply more food in the reserve so they didn’t have to spend so much time looking for it but could rely on drift algae coming to them as they hid.
To tease those two possibilities apart Arie ran some experiments in the lab, exposing sea urchins to the smell of crushed sea urchins that he hoped would “mimic another sea urchin somewhere in the area being attacked.” He also created scenarios with and without lots of kelp being washed around the tank.
“Then for about three weeks I’d get up every four hours and go and see what the urchins were doing” says Arie. “So by the third week there was a very clear separation between the groups of urchins with and without predator cues. When predator cues [the crushed sea urchin] were present a much higher proportion of the sea urchins were cryptic on a daily basis, and this was regardless of whether there was food present or not present.”

So, Arie concludes, it seems that ‘fear’ of predators was shaping how urchins behaved in the lab, and subsequent work he has done back out in the field, filming how urchins react to different cues (crushed fish versus a crushed sea urchin, for example) certainly backs up this result. Our underwater world, then, really does seem to be a ‘landscape of fear.’
Topics: science, environment
Regions:
Tags: sea urchin, kina, crayfish, snapper, marine resserves, fishing, Leigh Marine Laboratory
Duration: 15'19"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 Your Song
'Angels' by Robbie Williams, chosen by Adele Carran.
1:20 Tuesday - The Critics

TV reviewer Colin Hogg
Music critic Zac Arnold
Book reviewer Vanda Symon
Web critic Helen Baxter

2:10 The Smallest Continent: Journeys Through New Zealand Landscapes - Derek Grzelewski
Our next guest is an epic adventurer. He's spent twenty years working for New Zealand Geographic. And he's written about climbing, cave diving, sunken treasures and fly fishing. His name is Derek Grzelewski, and now he's written a new book. It's called The Smallest Continent: Journeys Through New Zealand Landscapes.
2:20 Our Changing World
'The landscape of fear' is an idea in ecology that suggests fear alone might be enough to change the way prey animals live in and shape their environment. The classic example is wolves and deer in Yellowstone National Park, but Alison Ballance finds out how marine biologist Arie Spyksma is investigating whether the humble sea urchin also lives in a landscape of fear.
2:45 Feature Album
Roger Waters, The Wall Live in Berlin 1990.
2:30 NZ Reading - How To Make Your First Billion
Our serial 'How to Make Your First Billion' is a fictionalised insight into Silicon Valley, the home of the global communications revolution - where a young entrepreneur is trying to persuade his friend - a computer whiz from India to help him to launch a new internet company.
3:10 Mary Taylor Previte
When Mary Taylor Previte was nine years old she was a girl guide doing what girls guides do, singing songs at troop meetings, earning badges and doing her best to live up to the Guide pledge. But Mary's troop wasn't in the suburbs, Mary was a girl guide at a Japanese Prisoner of War camp in China. She and her siblings were attending a boarding school in China. The day after the Pearl Harbor attack in 1941, the Japanese sent the teachers, students and staff to a prison camp. The adults started a Girl Guides troop in the camp, and gave Mary and her friends a tiny piece of their childhoods. In just a few weeks, Mary will celebrate the 70th of the liberation of that camp.
3:45 Panel Pre-Show
What the world is talking about with Julie Moffett.
4:06 The Panel - Margaret Sewell and Matt Nippert

===4:06 PM. | The Panel===
=DESCRIPTION=

An hour of discussion featuring a range of panellists from right along the opinion spectrum (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 21 July 2015
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'02"

16:00
The Panel with Margaret Sewell and Matt Nippert (Part 1)
BODY:
Intro, Why the long face over the economy?, Car crashes, Car park charges
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 24'40"

16:01
The Panel with Margaret Sewell and Matt Nippert (Part 2)
BODY:
Sibling birth order, Panel Says, Every move you make, Max Key's social (media) life.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 25'44"

16:06
Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists Matt Nippert and Margaret Sewell have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'56"

16:12
Why the long face over the economy?
BODY:
Economist Geoff Simmons joins the Panel to talk about John Key's upbeat attitude to the economy even in the face of dairy prices continuing to fall.
Topics: economy
Regions:
Tags: dairy industry
Duration: 9'35"

16:20
Car crashes
BODY:
Is it driver inattention and not speed which accounts for road crashes?
Topics: transport
Regions:
Tags: road safety
Duration: 7'13"

16:28
Car park charges
BODY:
Car parking charges to go up at Auckland Council-run CBD parking buildings.
Topics: transport
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: car parks
Duration: 3'47"

16:34
Sibling birth order
BODY:
New research is telling us the opposite of what we've been led to believe about how birth order impacts on siblings traits.
Topics: identity, science
Regions:
Tags: birth order
Duration: 5'16"

16:40
Panel Says
BODY:
What the Panelists Matt Nippert and Margaret Sewell have been thinking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'05"

16:48
Every move you make
BODY:
Bad behaviour caught on smart phone video and everyday shots of everyday things caught by Google Street view. We ask privacy lawyer Gareth Abdinor if privacy has gone completely out the window.
Topics: life and society, technology
Regions:
Tags: privacy
Duration: 7'50"

16:56
Max Key's social (media) life
BODY:
The prime minister's son Max Key has been posting video and photos on social media much like the kids of non-prime ministers do. Does it matter?
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: social media, John Key, Max Key
Duration: 3'23"

=SHOW NOTES=

===5:00 PM. | Checkpoint===
=DESCRIPTION=

Radio New Zealand's two-hour news and current affairs programme

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint Top Stories for Tuesday 21 July 2015
BODY:
Labour raises questions about death of prisoner, Power line obstacle in ambulance crash in which one person dies, Government concerned at $3 payout forecast, Visa scam victims say sentence not enough, People block two Timaru boy racers way out, Government rules out a law change on the Kereru, Labour MP on prisoner death claims.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'11"

17:07
Labour raises questions about death of prisoner
BODY:
The Labour MP Kelvin Davis has used a snap debate in Parliament to raise questions about a prisoner who died after being transferred from Serco's Mt Eden prison.
Topics: law, politics
Regions:
Tags: prisons, Mt Eden prison, Serco
Duration: 2'57"

17:10
Power line obstacle in ambulance crash in which one person dies
BODY:
Rescuers were kept at bay by fear of live power lines around a crashed ambulance in which a critically ill patient died in Northland today.
Topics: health
Regions: Northland
Tags: ambulance
Duration: 1'23"

17:12
Government concerned at $3 payout forecast
BODY:
The Government says it's now expecting dairy prices to stay lower for longer.
Topics: politics, rural
Regions:
Tags: dairy, exports, dairy prices
Duration: 3'11"

17:15
Visa scam victims say sentence not enough
BODY:
Victims of a woman who set up a fake visa scam targeting Tongan overstayers say they feel betrayed and upset the woman who ripped them off hasn't be sent to jail.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: fraud
Duration: 3'21"

17:19
People block two Timaru boy racers way out
BODY:
Two boy racers had to run from their cars after tearing up a Timaru rugby and cricket field when a group of angry residents blocked their way out.
Topics:
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: boy racers, Timaru
Duration: 3'01"

17:26
Government rules out a law change on the Kereru
BODY:
Māori MPs say eating Kereru on special occasions, should be allowed so long as it doesn't threaten the number of birds.
Topics: te ao Māori, politics, environment
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 3'31"

17:33
Evening Business for 21 July 2015
BODY:
News from the business sector including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'55"

17:35
Labour MP on prisoner death claims
BODY:
The Labour MP Kelvin Davis has used a snap debate in Parliament to raise questions about the death of a prisoner transferred out of Serco's Mt Eden prison.
Topics: law, politics
Regions:
Tags: prisons, Mt Eden prison, Serco
Duration: 5'21"

17:40
NZEI negotiates changes to govt scheme
BODY:
The primary teachers' union is abandoning its fierce opposition to the government's flagship education scheme after negotiating what it says are significant changes to the plan.
Topics: education
Regions:
Tags: schools, teachers
Duration: 3'55"

17:44
Parliament steps in to make speeding tickets legal
BODY:
Parliament has gone into urgency to fix a muck up that's meant some road speed limits haven't been legal.
Topics: politics, transport
Regions:
Tags: speed limits
Duration: 2'10"

17:48
The suitcase with kilos of methamphetamine
BODY:
A 74 year-old Vietnam veteran from the United States told customs he wasn't carrying luggage for anyone else, despite agreeing to deliver a suitcase to a woman he had never met.
Topics: law
Regions:
Tags: drug smuggling
Duration: 3'21"

17:50
Iwi leader opposes kereru being served at iwi leaders' hui
BODY:
A Ngati Hine leader in Northland says he's vehemently against kereru being served at events such as Iwi Leaders Forum events.
Topics: te ao Māori, environment
Regions:
Tags: kereru
Duration: 3'06"

17:56
Ambulance should have been called for soldier
BODY:
A soldier who died of heart failure after marching up a hill should have been taken to hospital straight away.
Topics: health, defence force
Regions:
Tags: NZ Army
Duration: 3'30"

18:08
Sports News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'57"

18:11
Making speeding limits and speeding tickets legal
BODY:
Parliament is rushing through a fix to road speed limits to make sure the limits, and all the speeding tickets issued under them, are legal.
Topics: transport, politics
Regions:
Tags: roads, speed limits
Duration: 5'22"

18:18
Finance Minister says Labour's housing campaign raised with him in China
BODY:
The Labour leader, Andrew Little, has been forced to defend his party targeting Chinese buyers in the Auckland housing market at Parliament today.
Topics: housing, politics
Regions:
Tags: parliament
Duration: 2'55"

18:22
Children on board suspected asylum boat of WA coast
BODY:
Children are confirmed to be on board a suspected asylum seeker boat off the coast of Western Australia.
Topics: refugees and migrants
Regions:
Tags: asylum seekers, Australia
Duration: 3'13"

18:23
Government experiment to fund children's science projects
BODY:
The Prime Minister's chief science advisor has launched what's believed to be a world-first programme to get young people doing science projects.
Topics: science, education
Regions: Otago
Tags:
Duration: 3'37"

18:27
Backpackers sue over golfball-hunting job
BODY:
In Australia two backpackers from the Netherlands have taken a former employer to court, claiming they were underpaid for a job most of us wouldn't think exists.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Australia, wages, employment
Duration: 3'38"

18:35
Australia welcomes home the surfer who fought off a shark
BODY:
The surfer hailed a hero for paddling towards Mick Fanning as he was fighting off a great white shark says he was getting ready to use his board as a weapon.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: surfing, Mick Fanning, Julian Wilson, sharks
Duration: 2'58"

18:38
Australian Professor gets top job to hunt for aliens
BODY:
An Australian astrophysicist says he's 'blown away' at being given the job of leading a multi-million dollar search for alien life.
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags: astrophysics
Duration: 3'42"

18:44
Tauranga businesswoman drops Isis from company name
BODY:
After more than a year of abuse and threats a Tauranga woman has finally decided to re-name her business and drop the word Isis.
Topics: business
Regions: Bay of Plenty
Tags: Tauranga
Duration: 3'25"

18:47
Te Manu Korihi News for 21 July 2015
BODY:
A Ngati Hine leader in Northland said he's vehemently against kereru being served at events such as Iwi Leaders Forum; The Social Development Minister is backing an investigation into two Work and Income employees after they got into an argument with a doorman outside a Taupo bar; The Principals' Federation says schools are becoming much more racially segregated and that's not good for New Zealand society; A secondary student's speech to call for New Zealanders to pronounce Māori correctly has been backed by the Minister of Māori Development.
Topics: te ao Māori
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'37"

18:52
Today In Parliament for 21 July 2015 - evening edition 2
BODY:
Government moves urgency to fix a glitch in the law related to speed limits; PM questioned on Housing, the flag referendum, and Mt Eden Prison fight-clubs - which is also the subject of a snap debate.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: parliament
Duration: 5'09"

=SHOW NOTES=

===7:06 PM. | Nights===
=DESCRIPTION=

Entertainment and information, including: 7:30 The Sampler: A weekly review and analysis of new CD releases (RNZ) 8:13 Windows on the World: International public radio features and documentaries 9:06 The Tuesday Feature: You Call This Art? Filmmakers, performance artists, musicians, actors, sculptors and writers explore their approach to creating art. In this edition, host Justin Gregory queries dancer and choreographer Louise Potiki Bryant, composer and performer Dudley Benson and landscape architect Megan Wraight about the rewards of collaboration and the difficulties of solo creation. Film maker Roger Horrocks previews his upcoming biography of Len Lye (2 of 3, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

19:10
Our Own Odysseys: The Siberia Experiment
BODY:
There were adventures en route through Russia to the science station in north eastern Siberia, which was part of Jeremy Butler's Masters fieldwork.
EXTENDED BODY:
There were adventures en route through Russia to the science station in north eastern Siberia, which was part of Jeremy Butler's Masters fieldwork.
Topics: life and society
Regions:
Tags: odysseys, Siberia, science station, mosquitoes, mammoths
Duration: 17'39"

20:40
New Zealand History
BODY:
A lucky guy whose job is also his hobby, Gavin McLean is a senior historian for the Ministry for Culture and Heritage. He talks about New Zealand's hospital ships in the First World War.
EXTENDED BODY:
A lucky guy whose job is also his hobby, Gavin McLean is a senior historian for the Ministry for Culture and Heritage.
He talks about New Zealand's hospital ships in the First World War.
Topics: history, life and society
Regions:
Tags: New Zealand history, hospital ships, Maheno, Marama, Gallipoli, WW1
Duration: 16'17"

20:59
Conundrum Clue Three for Tuesday 21 July
BODY:
Conundrum Clue Three for Tuesday 21 July.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 29"

21:59
Conundrum Clue Four for Tuesday 21 July
BODY:
Conundrum Clue Four for Tuesday 21 July.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 43"

=SHOW NOTES=

7:10 Our Own Odysseys: The Siberia Experiment
There were adventures en route through Russia to the science station in north eastern Siberia, which was part of Jeremy Butler's Masters fieldwork.
[gallery:1283]
7:30 The Sampler

=SHOW NOTES=

=AUDIO=

19:30
The Sampler for 21 July 2015
BODY:
Jim Pinckney reviews The Monsanto Years by Neil Young, Tambolero by Toto La Momposina and Freedom Tower - No Wave Dance Party 2015 by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.
EXTENDED BODY:

The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. Photo by Nata Worry
Jim Pinckney reviews Neil Young taking aim at Monsanto and big business USA, the revitalized sounds of Colombian legend Toto la Momposina and a heartfelt, hip shaking tribute to New York City from the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music, music review, Neil Young, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Totó La Momposina
Duration: 29'49"

19:30
The Monsanto Years by Neil Young + Promise Of The Real
BODY:
Jim Pinckney tunes in to Neil Young taking aim at Monsanto and big business USA.
EXTENDED BODY:
Jim Pinckney tunes in to Neil Young taking aim at Monsanto and big business USA.
Neil Young is revving up for another outing, and this time he’s got agrochemical corporation and GM food pushers, Monsanto squarely in his sights. After A Letter From Home, last years humble and enjoyable run through of favourites and inspirations, recorded in Jack White’s primitive voicebox,, and the brace of re-union albums with Crazy Horse, Neil’s been keeping a pretty tidy batting average of late, as he rumbles towards his 70th birthday. However this, his 36th album, finds him stepping up to his soapbox once again, and forsaking some of his character and craft in order to slay dragons and make the big statement.
Right through almost every single track, he is on the case of the company and its practices, though he manages to find space to have a pop at Walmart, the death of Main Street America, political apathy and ecological indifference on the way. Thankfully there’s just enough to show the glorious, unrepentant old curmudgeon still has what it takes.
Songs Played: Workin’ Man, Rules Of Change, Big Box, A New Day For Love, Rock Star Bucks A Coffee Shop, People Want To Hear About Love, Wolf Moon, Monsanto Years
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music, music review, Neil Young
Duration: 11'59"

19:30
Tamobolero by Totó La Momposina y Sus Tambores
BODY:
Jim Pinckney rejoices in the revitalized sounds of Colombian legend Toto la Momposina.
EXTENDED BODY:
Jim Pinckney rejoices in the revitalized sounds of Colombian legend Toto la Momposina.
First released on Peter Gabriel’s Real World in 1993 as La Candela Viva, and now available again in a restored and extended edition, Colombian singer and folklorist Totó La Momposina’s Tambolero is a refreshed classic. Adding two previously unreleased tracks to this landmark album, the much sampled singer is joined by two of her granddaughters, one of whom was present at the original sessions as a mere toddler.
After a 60 year career that has been dedicated to preserving the music of her ancestors and countryfolk, this passing of the baton feels quite monumental. It’s all been done with a deft touch, and a genuinely simpatico attitude towards the sanctity of the original album. Even with some refreshed musical parts it never feels like the well worn grooves of La Candela Viva have been unnecessarily tampered with, more that an old recording has been fully brought out into the light, with the help of modern technology and techniques.
Songs Played: Tambolero, La Acabacion, Curura, Chi Chi Mani, La Candela Viva, Adios Fulana, El Pescador, La Sombra Negra
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music, music review, Totó La Momposina, Columbia, Real World Records
Duration: 8'51"

19:30
Freedom Tower - No Wave Dance Party 2015 by The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
BODY:
Jim Pinckney undertakes a heartfelt, hip shaking tribute to New York City from The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.
EXTENDED BODY:
Jim Pinckney undertakes a heartfelt, hip shaking tribute to New York City from The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion.
With a firm grounding in punk, funk, blues and dirty old rock’n’roll The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion have been terrifying tweeters and worrying woofers at venues the world over, for the past 24 years. Remarkably the band is exactly the same power trio that recorded their first single, an 86 second long salvo of Cramps style rocking hootenany, Shirt Jac in 1992.
The title Freedom Tower – No Wave Dance Party 2015, is somewhat of a misonomer, because if there is any sign of No Wave - the loose name given to the eruption of New York bands in the mid-late 70’s mixing elasticated funk, jazz, rock and electronic influences, it’s very well hidden. It certainly does sound good though, with none of the showy, attention grabbing, stressed dynamics that colour so many modern rock records, and more clout in the bottom end for an album than you might reasonably expect for a record without any bass guitar.
Songs Played: Funeral, White Jesus, Wax Dummy, Cooking For Television, Do The Get Down, Down And Out, Tales Of Old New York: The Rock Box, Crossroad Hop
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music, music review, The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Duration: 8'41"

7:30 The Sampler
A weekly review and analysis of new CD releases.
8:10 Windows on the World
International public radio documentaries - visit the Windows on the World web page to find links to these documentaries.
8:40 New Zealand History
A lucky guy whose job is also his hobby, Gavin McLean is a senior historian for the Ministry for Culture and Heritage. He talks about New Zealand's hospital ships in the First World War.
9:06 The Tuesday Feature: You Call This Art?: The feeling of Zizz
Filmmakers, performance artists, musicians, actors, sculptors and writers explore their approach to creating art. In this edition, host Justin Gregory queries dancer and choreographer Louise Potiki Bryant, composer and performer Dudley Benson and landscape architect Megan Wraight about the rewards of collaboration and the difficulties of solo creation. Film maker Roger Horrocks previews his upcoming biography of Len Lye (2 of 3, RNZ)
10:00 Late Edition
A review of the news from Morning Report, Nine to Noon, Afternoons and Checkpoint. Also hear the latest news from around the Pacific on Radio New Zealand International's Dateline Pacific.
11:06 The Shed
Award-winning former British broadcaster Mark Coles presents his pick of the best new music releases and demos from around the planet. A glorious mix of brand new sounds from all over the world, real conversations with music makers and tales of everyday life as seen from an English garden shed (4 of 13, MCM)

===10:00 PM. | Late Edition===
=DESCRIPTION=

Radio New Zealand news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from Radio New Zealand National

===11:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

Award winning former British broadcaster Mark Coles presents his pick of the best new music releases and demos from around the planet. A glorious mix of brand new sounds from all over the world, real conversations with music makers and tales of everyday life as seen from an English garden shed (4 of 13, MCM)