RNZ National. 2016-04-09. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2016
Reference
288182
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288182
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online
Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Credits
RNZ Collection
RNZ National (estab. 2016), Broadcaster

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

09 April 2016

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight (RNZ); 12:30 Laugh Track (RNZ); 1:05 From the World (BBC); 2:05 NZ Live (RNZ); 3:05 The Dream of Nikau Jam by Peter Hawes (5 of 10, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC); 5:10 BBC Witness (RNZ); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)

===6:08 AM. | Storytime===
=DESCRIPTION=

Gold Panning Day, by Feana Tu'akoi, told by Nick Dunbar; The Tolliwoffle, by Rosalie Carey, told by William Kircher; Rescue, by Fleur Beale, told by Michael Wilson; The Loblolly Boy, by James Norcliffe, told by Dick Weir; Tom's Story, by Mandy Hager, told by Jonathan Hendry; String of Gold Nuggets, by Pauline Cartwright, told by Brian Sergent

===7:10 AM. | Country Life===
=DESCRIPTION=

Memorable scenes, people and places in rural New Zealand (RNZ)

===8:10 AM. | Saturday Morning===
=DESCRIPTION=

A mixture of current affairs and feature interviews, until midday (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

08:12
Smári McCarthy: Iceland, the Pirate Party and the Panama Papers
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley interviews Smári McCarthy, chief technologist for the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, and founder of the Iceland Pirate Party.
EXTENDED BODY:
The release of the Panama Papers – 11.5 million documents leaked from the database of Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca – has resulted in waves of stories exposing the hidden wealth of politicians, celebrities and other influential figures. Three Icelandic ministers are listed as owners of offshore companies registered in tax havens.
In Iceland, the prime minister, Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson, has either "resigned", "stepped aside" or taken "temporary leave" from the position, depending on what report you're reading. An estimated 10% of the Icelandic population of 330,000 protested in the streets at the start of the week at the news that the offshore company the former PM and his wife owned in the Virgin Islands was holding millions of dollars of her inheritance.
Smári McCarthy is based in Sarajevo, where he is chief technologist for the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, which is linked to the release of the Panama Papers. In 2012 he co-founded the Iceland Pirate Party with unofficial leader Birgitta Jónsdóttir and others. Following the revelations in the Panama Papers, the Iceland Pirate Party is currently the highest polling party in the country, with public support of 43%.

Listen to Philippa Tolley's conversation with Smári McCarthy.
Topics: business, economy, history, inequality, law, media, money, politics, world
Regions:
Tags: Iceland, Panama Papers
Duration: 18'32"

08:30
Ian Tannock: personalised cancer care
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley interviews Dr Ian Tannock, Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Medical Biophysics at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and University of Toronto and a major international leader in cancer research.
EXTENDED BODY:
This week is Cancer Research Week. As part of the celebrations of 60 years of cancer research there is a free (but now sold-out) public lecture at Auckland University - 'Cancer... this time it's personal'.
Acclaimed Canadian oncologist Dr Ian Tannock will talk about personalised cancer care – how sequencing the genome of a patient's cancer can lead to targeting of an appropriate therapy.
Philipa Tolley spoke with Professor Tannock about what has changed in the time he has been researching the disease, over 40 years.
Dr Ian Tannock is Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Medical Biophysics at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and the University of Toronto. He is a major international leader in cancer research.
Topics: disability, education, health, history, money, science, technology, world
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: cancer, medicine, drugs
Duration: 29'55"

09:10
Barbara Brookes: a history of New Zealand women
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley interviews Barbara Brookes, Professor of History at the University of Otago, about her new book A History of New Zealand Women.
EXTENDED BODY:
Histories are usually HIS stories – following the deeds of men – but looking at events and eras though the experiences of women gives a very different perspective.
Barbara Brookes does just this in the new illustrated book A History of New Zealand Women.
It tells the stories of women, from those who arrived in the first waka through to those who held powerful positions by the end of the 20th century.
Barbara Brookes covers social and economic change – the fights for suffrage, equality, the right to vote – and groundbreaking New Zealand women such as Kate Sheppard, Whina Cooper and Jean Batten, as well as intimate and domestic stories.
Listen to Barbara Brookes in conversation with Philippa Tolley.
Barbara Brookes is Professor of History at the University of Otago, and she has long been interested in gender relations and the history of health and disease in New Zealand and Britain.
Topics: author interview, farming, health, history, identity, inequality, life and society, politics, rural, te ao Maori
Regions: Otago
Tags: women, Elsie Locke, Jean Batten, feminism, Plunket, Chinese, racism
Duration: 32'21"

09:40
Suad Amiry: conservation architecture and Palestine
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley interviews Palestinian conservation architect and writer Suad Amiry, founder of the Riwaq Centre for Architectural Conservation, and author of Sharon and My Mother in Law, and Golda Slept Here.
EXTENDED BODY:
Palestinian author Suad Amiry started her working career as an architect and preservationist of historic buildings. She is founder of the Riwaq Centre for Architectural Conservation, which works for the rehabilitation and protection of architectural heritage in Palestine.
She taught architecture at a university in Ramallah, where she lives, for many years, and has written extensively on the subject. But it was a book of journal entries and emails to friends written in 2002 when Prime Minister Ariel Sharon put Ramallah under a 43 day curfew that gained her worldwide attention.
That book, Sharon and My Mother in Law deals with various political issues but is full of humour, largely from having to endure her 92 year old mother in law living with her family through the curfew.
She's also the author of the 2014 book Goulda Slept Here, a first person narrative about the ordeal faced by Palestinians, telling the stories of her friends and family.
Suad Amiry will be here in May to speak at three events at the Auckland Writers Festival.
Topics: author interview, conflict, history, world
Regions:
Tags: Auckland Writers Festival, Israel, Palestine, Jerusalem, Ramallah
Duration: 20'50"

10:05
Caitlin Moran: class, feminism and dufflecoats
BODY:
Caitlin Moran talks with Philippa Tolley about her latest book and the risk of making Britain 'stupider as a country' by cutting social services.
EXTENDED BODY:
"Everyone has an idea - however tiny - that would make the world a better place. And if we don't have a political or a social system in place that allows every great idea to be fully impressed and benefit others, we're letting ourselves down as a species."

The very fast and very funny British writer Caitlin Moran is a columnist for The Times, has won all sorts of awards, and has had five books published.
In her new collection of columns Moranifesto, the author of How to be a Woman writes of the importance of welfare benefits and what they do for those unable to support themselves.
Ms Moran told Saturday Morning that most Britons received some sort of monetary assistance from the state.
"In the UK, 60 percent of people ... are on some kind of benefit - either outright support from unemployment or disability or some kind of income support and tax breaks.
"But those who rule the country and formulate policy do not come from those kind of backgrounds."
She said private schools were over-represented in government: "We have more people in our Cabinet who went to a single school - Eton - than we do have women."
That meant the majority of her fellow Britons did not see themselves represented in the arts, journalism, culture or politics.
The eldest of eight children, Ms Moran grew up in a three-bedroom council house in Wolverhampton and was grateful for the support she received from the state.
But she didn't believe generations of people should be condemned to be beneficiaries.
"This whole idea that the sins of the father will be visited on the children, and that if you are the child of someone who is poor and is brought up on benefits that that is the life that you are condemned to and mustn't be helped, is biblical.
"It doesn't fit in modern society, it doesn't fit us at all; it's not a noble way to conduct ourselves."
The presumption was that people on benefits were draining the system, but she and her seven siblings had been able to get jobs and pay back every penny in tax used to support her family.
Ms Moran also said writing off people who relied on benefits meant the UK lost out on many brilliant people.
"I have no doubt there are people out there now who are being raised on benefits who won't get the education they deserve because we're cutting down on benefits and education now - who could have the key to curing cancer, who could come up with a new economic system.
"Simply because of the way that we're structured, and because those kind of people don't get the top jobs, we become stupider as a society and stupider as a country, and that does us all a terrible disservice."

Topics: author interview, books, education, history, identity, inequality, media, money, politics, world
Regions:
Tags: dufflecoats, Hillary Clinton, Dinald Trump, Ireland, libraries
Duration: 30'54"

10:40
Hannah Smith and Ralph McCubbin Howell: beards & bookbinders
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley interviews theatre director Hannah Smith and playwright Ralph McCubbin Howell whose Trick of the Light Theatre company is about to take two shows to festivals in the UK.
Topics: arts, music
Regions:
Tags: beards, theatre, plays, drama
Duration: 21'36"

11:10
Miranda McKearney: reading and empathy
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley talks to British social justice entrepreneur and reading advocate Miranda McKearney who founded The Reading Agency and recently set up EmpathyLab.
Topics: author interview, books, education
Regions:
Tags: libraries, reading
Duration: 26'31"

11:40
Kate's Klassic: Georgy Girl
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley and Kate Camp discuss the 1965 novel Georgy Girl by English writer Margaret Forster, who died in February.
Topics: books, history, life and society
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: sex, Margaret Forster, gay, feminism
Duration: 19'12"

11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 9 April 2016
BODY:
Guest host Philippa Tolley reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of 9 April.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'34"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:64608:quarter]

8:12 Smári McCarthy
Smári McCarthy is chief technologist for the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project in Sarajevo. He founded the Iceland Pirate Party, which is currently the highest polling party in the country, following the revelations in the Panama Papers that three Icelandic ministers and other influential people in Icelandic politics, are listed as owners of offshore companies registered in tax havens.

[image:64603:quarter]

8:30 Ian Tannock
Dr Ian Tannock is Emeritus Professor of Medicine and Medical Biophysics at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and University of Toronto. He has a 40-year career in cancer research and clinical trials and is one of Canada’s best known oncologists and a major international leader in cancer research. He is visiting New Zealand to speak at a Cancer Society free public lecture event at Auckland University about the future of personalised cancer care (14 April, now sold out), as part of Cancer Research Week.

[image:64594:quarter]

9:05 Barbara Brookes
Barbara Brookes is Professor of History at the University of Otago. Her research interests include gender relations in New Zealand, and the history of health and disease in New Zealand and Britain. Her new book is A History of New Zealand Women (Bridget Williams Books).

[image:64596:quarter]

9:35 Suad Amiry
Palestinian conservation architect and writer Suad Amiry lives in Ramallah and is the founder of the Riwaq Centre for Architectural Conservation. She is the author of Sharon and My Mother in Law: Ramallah Diaries (2004, Granta), and Golda Slept Here (2014, Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation), and will be here in May to speak at three events at the Auckland Writers Festival (10-15 May).

[image:64595:quarter]

10:05 Caitlin Moran
British writer Caitlin Moran is a columnist for The Times, and was a guest on the Saturday Morning programme in 2013 discussing her memoir How to Be a Woman, and in 2014 talking about the first collection of her columns, Moranthology. Her new collection is Moranifesto (Ebury Press).

[image:64680:quarter]
10:40 Hannah Smith and Ralph McCubbin Howell
Theatre director Hannah Smith and playwright Ralph McCubbin Howell (winner of the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award 2015) are members of Trick of the Light Theatre. The Wellington company recently presented their newest work, The Devil’s Half Acre, to full houses at the New Zealand Festival, and are currently at BATS Theatre (to 9 April) with their family show BEARDS! BEARDS! BEARDS! Later this month, their award-winning production The Bookbinder will play in Christchurch for the first time (Christchurch Art Gallery, 20-24 April), and at the Fortune Theatre, Dunedin (27 April), and the Southland Arts Festival (30 April to 5 May). Trick of the Light will then take both productions to UK festivals including the prestigious Imaginate Festival for Children in Edinburgh, the Brighton Fringe Festival, Salisbury Arts Festival, and the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

[image:64599:third]

11:05 Miranda McKearney
British social justice entrepreneur and reading advocate Miranda McKearney is the founder of The Reading Agency and recently set up EmpathyLab. She is visiting New Zealand as a guest of the Book Council and National Library to participate in a series of events discussing the importance of reading.
11:45 Kate’s Klassic: Georgy Girl
Kate Camp has published five collections of poems, most recently Snow White’s Coffin (VUP). She will discuss the 1965 novel Georgy Girl (Vintage), by English novelist, biographer, memoirist, historian and literary critic Margaret Forster, who died in February.
This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Dominic Godfrey
Auckland engineer: Blair Stagpoole
Research by Infofind

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Ralph McCubbin Howell and Paul Waggott
Song: Beards
Composer: Gareth Hobbs, Ralph McCubbin Howell
Album: From the soundtrack to BEARDS! BEARDS! BEARDS!
Broadcast: 10:40
Artist: Merle Haggard
Song: The Bottle Let Me Down
Composer: Merle Haggard
Album: Swinging Doors
Label: Capitol, 1966
Broadcast: 11:05
Artist: David Bowie
Song: Ashes to Ashes
Composer: Bowie
Album: Scary Monsters and Super Creeps
Label: EMI, 1980
Broadcast: 11:35
Artist: The Seekers
Song: Georgy Girl
Composer: Dale, Springfield
Album: 20 Golden Greats
Label: EMI
Broadcast: 11:40

===12:11 PM. | This Way Up===
=DESCRIPTION=

Exploring the things we use and consume. Some content may offend (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

12:01
This Way Up Part 1
BODY:
Fertility apps, Panama Papers, video editing apps, and the microbiome's link to brain health.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 48'29"

12:15
Fertility apps
BODY:
The self tracking movement uses technology to measure your body and how it is performing. Until now this has tended to focus on your activity levels; how many steps you've made, how far you've run or biked, calories burned versus calories consumed, and your heart rate and blood pressure too. But a woman's menstrual cycle, and how this can be tracked by technology to maximise a woman's fertility, has been a largely neglected area. That's changing fast though, and Moira Weigel has been looking at the latest fertility apps on the market.
EXTENDED BODY:
The self tracking movement uses sensor technology to measure and record your body and how it is performing.
Until now this has tended to focus on activity levels; how many steps you've taken, how far you've run or biked, calories burned versus calories consumed, as well as your heart rate, blood pressure and blood sugar levels.
Tracking a woman's menstrual cycle to establish when she is fertile has not really featured in many of the app stores until recently, according to Moira Weigel.
She's been looking at the latest fertility tracking apps on the market and when fertility tracking started.
Topics: technology, health
Regions:
Tags: fertility, self tracking, apps
Duration: 17'00"

12:30
Tech: Panama Papers and video editing apps
BODY:
Peter Griffin with the technological challenges raised and overcome by this week's revelations surrounding the Panama Papers, a huge collection of millions of documents leaked to a German newspaper and subsequently pored over by hundreds of journalists collaborating all over the world. So how did they manage to do it and keep a lid on their investigations so successfully? Also Peter's been having a play with the latest video editing apps. Rather than having hours of unedited videos sitting on your PC, unwatched and unloved, could you easily turn these into shareable memories of weddings, birthdays, and holidays?
EXTENDED BODY:
Peter Griffin looks at the technological challenges raised and overcome by this week's revelations surrounding the Panama Papers - a huge collection of millions of documents leaked to a German newspaper and subsequently pored over by hundreds of journalists collaborating all over the world. So how did they manage to do it and keep a lid on their investigations so successfully?
Also Peter's been having a play with the latest video editing apps. Rather than having hours of unedited videos sitting on your PC, unwatched and unloved, could you easily turn these into shareable memories of weddings, birthdays, and holidays?
Video editing apps discussed by Peter Griffin
iMovie (iOS, installed free on 2013 model iPhones onwards. Otherwise $7.49)
The go-to editing app for iPhone and iPad users is impressive in the way it takes the best of the desktop version, but adapts it for ease of use on the phone. Choose from templates or free form your own edits. Great if you want to start editing projects on the phone and finish them at home. (Free for 2013 models onwards, iOS)
Adobe Premier Clip (iOS, Android, free)
Designed to tempt you into Adobe’s world of high-end video production, but perfectly useful as a free editing app designed for speed, over functionality.
Splice (iOS, free)
Totally free and remarkably powerful, one of the best video editing apps to grace the iPhone. Splice has just been bought by Go Pro, which could see a welcome splicing of great software and the iconic rugged camera.
WeVideo (iOS, Android, web, free)
A very simple and easy to learn editing tool for the smartphone, with a cloud-based version you can use in a web browser. Does the basics very well, though slightly stingy when it comes to publishing allowing only five minutes of published video per month with the free version.
Topics: technology, media, internet
Regions:
Tags: apps, video editing, Panama Papers, journalism
Duration: 15'17"

12:50
Your microbiome and brain health
BODY:
It seems like the colony of bacteria living inside our gut has never been so important! Previous studies have revealed links between the composition of this microbiome and our mood, how likely mothers are to have a preterm birth, whether you own a pet, even how hungover you're going to feel after you've been drinking too much. Now a new study shows the vital role our gut bacteria could be playing in our brain health too. Professor John Cryan and his team at the University College Cork discovered how the colony of bacteria living inside us could be regulating levels of myelin in the brain. Myelin's a fatty white substance that covers many nerve cells like insulating tape, and increases the speed at which signals from our brain can travel about. It could give us some important pointers for the management and even the treatment of conditions like multiple sclerosis, stroke and spinal cord injuries.
EXTENDED BODY:
A new study has revealed the vital role our gut bacteria could be playing in our brain health.
It is the latest in a growing body of research pointing to the importance of the colony of bacteria living inside your gut. Previous studies have already suggested links between the composition of our microbiome and our mood, how likely mothers are to have a preterm birth, our food choices and even how bad a hangover can be after a big night out!
Professor John Cryan and his team at the University College Cork has now discovered how microbes regulate myelin production in the brain. Myelin is a fatty white substance that covers many nerve cells like insulating tape, and increases the speed at which signals from our brain can travel about.
So far, Professor Cryan has only been studying mice, but one day the discovery could provide important pointers for the management and even the treatment of multiple sclerosis, stroke and spinal cord injuries in human patients.
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: microbiome, myelin, brain, multiple sclerosis
Duration: 10'09"

13:01
This Way Up Part 2
BODY:
Is surgery the ultimate placebo? Mammograms as a cardiac screening tool, and gene libraries.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 52'30"

13:15
Surgery, the ultimate placebo?
BODY:
Could many operations and surgical procedures employed in hospitals today be working as a powerful placebo? Professor Ian Harris is an orthopaedic surgeon based in Sydney and in his book 'Surgery, the Ultimate Placebo' (NewSouth Publishing) he argues that many times we go under the knife, the operation is useless and can even be harmful.
EXTENDED BODY:
Could many operations and surgical procedures employed in hospitals today be working as a powerful placebo?
Professor Ian Harris is an orthopaedic surgeon based in Sydney. In his book Surgery, the Ultimate Placebo he argues that many times we go under the knife, the operation is useless and can even be harmful.
He is not saying ALL surgery is bad – he is a surgeon himself, after all – but he does think that many common surgeries like back fusion, cardiac stenting and knee arthroscopies have not been sufficiently researched.
LISTEN to Professor Ian Harris in conversation with Simon Morton.
"Patients have to ask for the evidence. They should be saying to their surgeon 'What evidence do you have that this operation is better than any non-operative alternative?" ~ Ian Harris.

Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 19'03"

13:30
Mammograms as cardiac screening tool
BODY:
Could mammograms be used for more than assessing a woman's risk of breast cancer? Like whether she has heart disease, a condition that in the US is about 7 times more likely to kill her than breast cancer. That's the key finding of a paper published by a team of researchers including Laurie Margolies of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. She says that for little extra cost or effort a mammogram can become an effective tool to measure a woman's cardiac health.
EXTENDED BODY:
Mammograms are X-rays of the breast that can show up any abnormalities in the tissue. Here in New Zealand they're offered free to most women aged 45 to 69 as a screening tool for breast cancer.
But could a mammogram be telling us a whole lot more? Like whether a woman has heart disease - a condition that in the US is 7 times more likely to kill a woman than breast cancer.
That's the key finding from a paper published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology's Cardiovascular Imaging journal by a team of researchers including Laurie Margolies of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York.
She says that for little extra cost or effort, a mammogram can become an effective tool to measure a woman's cardiac health, showing calcification or plaquing in the arteries bringing oxygenated blood to the breasts.
Meanwhile, here in New Zealand, the National Screening Unit said it was not currently considering extending the BreastScreen Aotearoa programme to include reporting on women's cardiac health.
The Clinical Leader of BreastScreen Aotearoa, Marli Gregory, says:
"The National Screening Unit does continually look at new research findings. There would need to be a large body of international evidence of breast screening programmes including screening for cardiac risk which result in improved outcomes for women before we could consider any changes to the New Zealand breast screening programme."
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: mammograms, heart disease, breast cancer
Duration: 11'01"

13:45
Gene libraries
BODY:
Joanne Kamens is the Executive Director of Addgene, a not-for-profit library of genetic material that can be used by scientists around the world to manipulate genes. Addgene's aim is to facilitate research and to promote scientific sharing.
EXTENDED BODY:
When scientists want to study a specific gene, they'll make a molecular clone, a copy of a some DNA that they can then play around with in the lab.
This is called a plasmid; it's a unit of DNA that can be easily copied, then broken and is an important tool for molecular biologists.
Addgene.org is a not-for-profit genetic library where scientists can deposit and withdraw their DNA inventions. Think of it a bit like a bank for molecular biological parts, a way to share genetic discoveries.
Joanne Kamens is the Executive Director of Add Gene.
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags: genetics, plasmids, research
Duration: 15'05"

=SHOW NOTES=

We're playing these tracks too...
Artist: Lescop
Track: La Foret
Composer(s): Lescop
Album: Lescop
Label: POP NOIRE RECORDS
Artist: Santigold
Track: Chasing Shadows
Composer(s): Santi White and Rostam Batmanglij
Album: 99c
Label: ATLANTIC 465132
Artist: Charles Bradley
Track: You Think I Don't Know (But I Know)
Composer(s): Charles Bradley
Album: Changes
Label: DAPTONE
And our theme music is:
Artist: Jefferson Belt
Track: The Green Termite
Composer: Jefferson Belt
Album: Table Manners
Label: Round Trip Mars

===2:05 PM. | Music 101===
=DESCRIPTION=

The best songs, music-related stories, interviews, live music, industry news and music documentaries from NZ and the world

=AUDIO=

13:00
Music 101 Pocket Edition 81: Street Chant/Parquet Courts/Miloux
BODY:
Emily Littler and Billie Rogers on Street Chant's new album 'Hauora', Andrew Savage of Parquet Courts, Auckland-based beatmaker, vocalist and producer Miloux live in session and Sergio Vega of Deftones.
EXTENDED BODY:
Emily Littler and Billie Rogers on Street Chant's new album 'Hauora', Andrew Savage of Parquet Courts, Auckland-based beatmaker, vocalist and producer Miloux live in session and Sergio Vega of Deftones.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 53'55"

=SHOW NOTES=

2-3pm
Street Chant
In a revealing essay penned for The Pantograph Punch last September, Street Chant’s Emily Littler documented the litany of difficulties she faced while trying to complete the band’s much delayed second LP: “Writers’ block, poor band dynamics, substance abuse problems... you name it.” With the release of Hauora, Littler and bandmate Billie Rogers talk us through the album’s laboured delivery.
[image:64475:full]
Parquet Courts
Parquet Courts have built their reputation on dry wit, wiry guitar tones and a vocal performance that goes from lethargic to lethal with the flick of a switch. With their latest release Human Performance out this week, singer and guitarist Andrew Savage opens up about the writing process, police brutality and the latest New Zealand signing to his record label.
[image:64273:full]
3-4pm
Deradoorian
Former Dirty Projectors' bassist Angel Deradoorian speaks to Shaun D. Wilson about her new solo incarnation, Deradoorian, ahead of her shows in NZ next week.
Live: Miloux
Auckland jazz trained singer and beat-maker Rebecca Melrose, a.k.a. Miloux has just released her debut EP - she plays a couple of those songs live in the studio.
[image:64732:full]
4-5pm
The Secret Life of Lighting Techs
Your favourite concert probably wouldn’t have had the impact it did without the tireless work of these unsung heroes – lighting technicians. On this week’s Secret Life, Tony Stamp delves into the world of lighting, talking to techs, designers and video operators, and discovers an industry full of people willing to go the extra mile to practice this large-scale art form.
[image:64426:full]
Introducing: How Get
[image:64302:full]
Deftones
Three albums into his tenure as Deftones’ bassist, New York-based musician Sergio Vega remains the new guy in the Sacramento alt-metal outfit. With the release of Deftones’ eighth studio LP Gore, Vega explains the geographical challenges presented by their bi-coastal line-up.
[image:64418:full]

=PLAYLIST=

2-3pm
Artist: DJ Shadow
Song: The Mountain Will Fall
Composer: Davis
Album: The Mountain Will Fall
Label: Private
Street Chant - Hauora
Artist: Street Chant
Song: Refreshead, Hauora Forever, The Good Room, Insides, Never, Pedestrian Support League, One More Year
Composer: Street Chant
Album: Hauora
Label: Arch Hill Recordings
Artist: Roy Irwin
Song: Defect
Composer: R. Irwin
Album: Chrome Lord EP
Label: Roy Irwin
Parquet Courts
Artist: Parquet Courts
Song: Human Performance,
Composer: Parquet Courts
Album: Human Performance
Label: Rough Trade
Artist: Parquet Courts
Song: Monastic Living I.
Composer: Parquet Courts
Album: Monastic Living
Label: Rough Trade
Artist: Parquet Courts
Song: Outside, Two Dead Cops, One Man, No City
Composer: Parquet Courts
Album: Human Performance
Label: Rough Trade
Artist: Zen Mantra
Song: Maybe I'll See You In My Dreams
Composer: S. Perry
Album: Zen Mantra
Label: Flying Nun Records
Artist: Merle Haggard
Song: Mama Tried
Composer: Haggard
Album: 40#1 Hits
Label: EMI
The Sampler - Ryan Bingham
Artist: Ryan Bingham
Songs: Nobody Knows My Trouble, Gun Fighting Man, Adventures of You and Me, Diamond Is Too Rough, Fear and Saturday Night, Broken Heart Tattoos.
Composer: Bingham
Album: Fear and Saturday Night
Label: Universal
Artist: Dave Dobbyn
Song: You get so lonely
Composer: Dobbyn
Album: Harmony House
Label: Red Trolley
3-4pm

Angel Deradoorian
Artist: Deradoorian
Song: The Expanding Flower Planet, A Beautiful Woman
Composer: Angel Deradoorian
Album: The Expanding Flower Planet
Label: Anticon
Artist: Mariah Carey
Song: Dreamlover
Composer: Mariah Carey, Dave Hall
Album: Greatest Hits
Label: Columbia
Artist: Leila Adu
Song: The Bluest Eye
Composer: Adu
Album: Scary Love Monster
Label: Beats and Whistles
Artist: Yumi Zouma
Song: Keep It Close To Me
Composer: Yumi Zouma
Album: Yoncalla
Label: Cascine
Milloux Live in Session
Artist: Miloux
Song: These Rules, Pocket
Composer: Rebecca Melrose
Album: RNZ Recording
Label: RNZ Recording
Artist: M83
Song: Do it, Try it
Composer: M83
Album: Junk
Label: Mute
Artist: Upper Hutt Posse
Song: E Tu
Composer: Hapeta, DLT, Roughan
Album: Dedicated (1988 - 1991)
Label: Posse Songs
Artist: Phife Dawg
Song: Nutshell
Composer: Phife
Album: Single
Label: Smoking Needles
Artist: David Byrne
Song: How Does The Brain Wave?
Composer: Baby Elephant
Album: Single
Label: Private
4-5pm
The Secret Life of Lighting Techs

Artist: Hot ChipSong: Flutes (Sasha Remix)
Composer: Hot Chip/ Sasha
Album: Single
Label: Last Night On Earth

Artist: David Bowie
Song: Sound and Vision
Composer: David Bowie
Album: Low
Label: RCA
Artist: The Streets
Song: Blinded By The Lights
Composer: Mike Skinner
Album: A Grand Don’t Come For Free
Label: Warner Music
Artist: Fat Freddy’s Drop
Song: Mother Mother
Composer: Fat Freddy’s Drop
Album: Blackbird
Label: The Drop
Artist: Kiasmos
Song: Burnt
Composer: Ólafur Arnalds and Janus Rasmussen
Album: Kiasmos
Label: Erased Tapes
Artist: Citizen Band
Song: Ladder Song
Composer: Citizen Band
Album: Citizen Band
Label: Mandrill
Artist: Th’ Dudes
Song: Walking In Light
Composer: Dave Dobbyn, Ian Morris
Album: Where Are The Boys?
Label: Key
Artist: Chemical Brothers
Song: Under Neon Lights
Composer: Tom Rowlands, Ed Simons, Annie Clark
Album: Born In The Echoes
Label: Virgin EMI
Artist: Sere
Song: Alien Boy
Composer: The Wipers
Album: Wiped Out: A Tribute To The Wipers
Label: Zero
Artist: Soccer Practice
Song: Windfall, Haere Mai E Tama
Composer: Soccer Practice
Album: Single
Label: Freezing Works

Artist: Sol3Mio
Song: No Diggity
Composer: Chauncey Hannibal, Teddy Riley, William Stewart, Lynise Walters, Andre Young, Richard Vick, Bill Withers
Album: Single
Label: Umusic
Artist: Weird Together
Song: Drop The Brass
Composer: Nick Dwyer, Dick Johnson, Leon Radojkovic
Album: Single
Label: Private
Artist: Kanye West
Song: All Of The Lights
Composer: West, Bhasker, Jones, Warren Trotter
Album:My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
Label: Roc-A-Fella, Def Jam
Artist: Moniker
Song: Milestone 2 (Skux Life)
Composer: Moniker
Album: Hunt for The Wilderpeople OST
Label: Private
Artist: Anika Moa
Song: Taniwha Taniwha
Composer: Moa
Album: Songs for Bubbas 2
Label: Diamond and Kowhai
Introducing: How Get
Artist: How Get
Song: Rest
Composer: How Get
Album: Very Strong
Label: How Get

Deftones
Artist: Deftones
Song: Gore, Prayers/Triangles, Pittura Infamante, Phantom Bride, Acid Hologram
Composer: Deftones
Album: Gore
Label: Reprise
Artist: PJ Harvey
Song: The Orange Monkey
Composer: Harvey
Album: The Hope Six Demolition Project
Label: Island
Artist: Andrew Bird
Song: Left Handed Kisses ft. Fiona Apple
Composer: Bird
Album: Are You Serious
Label: Wegawam
Artist: The Veldt
Song: Sanctified
Composer: Danny C. Chavis, Daniel Chavis, Hayato Nakao
Album: The Shocking Fuzz of Your Electric Fur: The Drake Equation
Label: Private

===5:11 PM. | Focus on Politics===
=DESCRIPTION=

Analysis of political issues presented by RNZ's Parliamentary team (RNZ)

===5:30 PM. | Tagata o te Moana===
=DESCRIPTION=

Pacific news, features, interviews and music for all New Zealanders, giving an insight into the diverse cultures of the Pacific people (RNZI)

===6:06 PM. | Great Encounters===
=DESCRIPTION=

In-depth interviews selected from RNZ National's feature programmes during the week (RNZ)

===7:06 PM. | Saturday Night===
=DESCRIPTION=

Saturday nights on RNZ National is where Phil O'Brien plays the songs YOU want to hear. All music from 7 till midnight (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

=SHOW NOTES=

7 – 8

Lambchop - The Saturday Option
Engelbert Humperdinck – The Last Waltz
Malcolm McNeil with Kiri Te Kanawa – Somewhere Out There
The Bornemouth Symphony Orchestra – Karelia Suite Intermezzo
Joe Brown - Picture Of You
D. A. Wallach - Glowing
Jussi Björling and Robert Merrill – Au Fond du Temple Saint
The Hi Lo’s and Rosemary Clooney – Love Letters
John Denver – Poems Prayers and Promises
The Tornadoes – Telstar
Dr Hook – Sylvia’s Mother
Lyle Lovett - If I Had A Boat
Sandy Nelson - Let There Be Drums
Mike Oldfield - I Got Rhythm

8 - 9

Etta James - Misty Blue
Slim Whitman – Twila Lee
Charly McClain – Radio Heart
Joe Ely - West Texas Waltz
Burl Ives – A Little Bitty Tear
PJ Proby - Today I Killed A Man I Didn't Know
Frank Sinatra - Let's Face The Music And Dance
Little Esther - Aged and Mellow
Bonnie Raitt - Unintended Consequence Of Love
Merle Haggard – Okie From Muskogee
Jamie Lawson - Wasn't Expecting That
Van Morrison and Steve Winwood - Fire In The Belly
John Prine and Nanci Griffith - Speed Of The Sound Of Loneliness

9 - 10

Emmylou Harris - Here There and Everywhere
Jason Isbell – Songs She Sang In The Shower
Alan Jackson and Jimmy Buffett - Margaritaville
Bob Dylan – Lily Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts
Randy Newman - Mama Told Me Not to Come
Alan Toussaint and Elvis Costello - The Sharpest Thorn
Dinah Washington – September In The Rain
Mr Magnifico by Eliza Carthy
Andrew London - Speed Up At The Overtaking Lane
The Mamas and The Papas - California Dreaming
Dusty Springfield - My Lagan Love
Brian Protheroe - Pinball
The Peddlers - Time After Time
Pentatonix - Hey Momma / Hit The Road Jack

10 - 11

The Soup Dragons – I’m Free
Henrik Freischlader - I've got it Good
The Allman Brothers – Midnight Rider
Family - The Weaver's Answer
Golden Harvest - All Along the Watchtower
Alison Krauss and Union Station – The Lucky One
The Michael Hill Blues Mob - Hard Blues For Hard Times
Human League - Love Action
Fly My Pretties – Angels
Bulldogs Allstar Goodtime Band - Baby Get Out

11 – Midnight.
Supermodel - Send Me Dreaming
Joe South And The Believers - Walk A Mile In My Shoes
Late Night Phil. Playing music by artists who celebrated a birthday in the past seven days.
Richard Thompson – Oops, I Did It Again
Hugh Masekela and Herb Alpert – Skokiaan
The Hollies – Gasoline Alley Bred
Dave Swarbrick – Antarctic Ice
The Housemartins – Caravan Of Love
Kraftwerk – Autobahn
Hall And Oates – I Can’t Go For That
Janis Ian – Fly Too High
Yes - Roundabout