RNZ National. 2016-05-21. 00:00-23:59.

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Year
2016
Reference
288224
Media type
Audio
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288224
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
Broadcast Date
21 May 2016
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:

21 May 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; 3:05 Grievous Bodily by Craig Harrison read by John O'Leary (3 of 15, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC); 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)

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

Alien Catastrophe, by Michelanne Forster, told by Jennifer Ludlam; The McGoodys, by Joy Cowley, told by Perry Piercy; Official Welcome, by Janice Marriott, told by Tess Jameson, Phil Ward, Simon Leary, Megan Alexander; Grandpa's Trunk, by Alan Whitaker, told by Peter Hambleton; A Lion in the Meadow, by Margaret Mahy, told by Michael Hurst; Old Scar, by Kingi McKinnon, told by Willie Davis

===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=

08:15
Francisco Toro: Venezuela in crisis
BODY:
Venezuelan journalist and political scientist, who is founder and executive editor of Caracas Chronicles.com.
Topics: conflict, crime, economy, education, law, politics
Regions:
Tags: Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, Hugo Chavez
Duration: 15'41"

08:35
Gary Bolles: education and work parachutes
BODY:
Co-founder of eParachute.com who writes and lectures frequently on the future of work and learning. He is visiting New Zealand as a guest of Callaghan Innovation to deliver his talk, How To Thrive In Disruptive Times, to local business people.
Topics: books, business, economy, education, media, technology
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region, Canterbury
Tags: Dick Bolles, What Colour Is Your Parachute, globalization, Dan Ariely
Duration: 28'55"

09:10
Andrea Byrom: science challenges and pests
BODY:
Director of the Biological Heritage National Science Challenge, and an expert on pest animal ecology.
Topics: economy, education, environment, farming, health, money, politics, rural, science, technology
Regions: Hawkes Bay, Canterbury
Tags: Cape to City, mustelids, cats, Shaun Hendy, mice
Duration: 39'34"

09:50
Shakespeare with David Lawrence: King Lear
BODY:
Director of Wellington theatre company The Bacchanals, and research and development consultant for the Pop-Up Globe, discussing the Shakespeare tragedy, King Lear.
Topics: arts, history, language
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: Shakespeare, King Lear, Circa Theatre
Duration: 10'21"

10:07
Richard Mabey: the cabaret of plants
BODY:
British writer and broadcaster whose work takes a cultural perspective on the natural world. His latest book is The Cabaret of Plants: Botany and the Imagination.
Topics: arts, author interview, books, environment, farming, food, health, history, rural, science
Regions:
Tags: Darwin, Joseph Priestley, Charles Foster, marsh samphire, impressionism, olives, the Amazon, Chilterns, Norfolk, depression, Parkinson's, East Anglia, Robert Macfarlane, Mark Cocker, Kathleen Jamie, Margaret Mee, moonflower
Duration: 46'47"

11:07
Sara McIntyre: nursing and photos in Kakahi
BODY:
District nurse based in Kakahi, and a photographer whose exhibition, Observations of a Rural Nurse, is showing at Anna Miles Gallery as part of the Auckland Festival of Photography.
Topics: arts, health, history, housing, life and society, rural
Regions:
Tags: Peter McIntyre, King Country, Manu Lal, Laurence Aberhart
Duration: 27'07"

11:35
Cather Simpson: photonics and sperm
BODY:
Principal Investigator at the MacDiarmid Institute and Dodd-Walls Centre for Photonic and Quantum Technologies, and Director of the Photon Factory at the University of Auckland. Her start-up company, Engender Technologies, is competing against three US firms in the AgTech section of the Third Annual World Cup Tech Challenge.
Topics: business, economy, education, farming, money, rural, science, technology
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: nanotechnology, lasers, photonics, MacDiarmid Institute, Dodd-Walls Centre, dairy farming, Engender Technologies, cells, artificial insemination, Cows
Duration: 22'41"

11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 21 May 2016
BODY:
Kim Hill reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of 21 May.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 10'10"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:69013:quarter]

8:12 Francisco Toro
Francisco Toro is a Venezuelan journalist and political scientist who is the founder and executive editor of Caracas Chronicles.com.

[image:68763:quarter]

8:30 Gary Bolles
Gary A. Bolles leads global information-sharing platform initiative Kanect, is co-founder of eParachute.com (a startup built on the work of the world’s top career manual What Color Is Your Parachute?), and writes and lectures frequently on the future of work and learning. He is visiting here as a guest of Callaghan Innovation to deliver the talk, How To Thrive In Disruptive Times, to businesses in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch.

[image:68997:quarter]

9:05 Andrea Byrom
Dr Andrea Byrom is the director of the Biological Heritage National Science Challenge, and an expert on pest animal ecology.

9:45 Shakespeare with David Lawrence
David Lawrence is director of The Bacchanals, a Wellington theatre company he founded in 2000 to explore text-based theatre and redefine classic works , and is research and development consultant for the Pop-Up Globe. David will discuss the Shakespeare tragedy King Lear. A production directed by Michael Hurst is playing at Circa Theatre in Wellington (to 18 June) as part of its 40th anniversary celebrations.

[image:68821:third]

10:05 Richard Mabey
Richard Mabey is a British writer and broadcaster whose work takes a cultural perspective on the natural world. He has written over 30 books since his 1972 debut, Food for Free, including Flora Britannica (1996) and Nature Cure (2005). His latest book is The Cabaret of Plants: Botany and the Imagination (Profile Books).

[image:68996:quarter]

11:05 Sara McIntyre
Sara McIntyre is a district nurse based in Kakahi, and a photographer. An exhibition of her work, Observations of a Rural Nurse, is currently showing at Anna Miles Gallery (to 10 June), as part of the Auckland Festival of Photography. (The interview mentions Manu Lal’s general store, which was featured in Country Life in 2014.)

Dodd-Walls Centre for Photonics and Quantum Technology
11:35 Cather Simpson
Cather Simpson is Principal Investigator at the MacDiarmid Institute and Dodd-Walls Centre for Photonics and Quantum Technologies, and Associate Professor and Director of the Photon Factory at the University of Auckland, where she holds a joint appointment in Chemical Sciences and Physics. Her start-up company, Engender Technologies, plans to use photonics to give dairy farmers the ability to reliably and cost-effectively choose their calves’ sex. Engender is competing against three US firms in the AgTech section of the Third Annual World Cup Tech Challenge, with online voting contributing to the final judging decision on 1 June in Silicon Valley.
[thumbnail:69022:full]

This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Lianne Smith
Auckland engineer: Tony Stamp
Research by Infofind

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: The Beatles
Song: Flying
Composer: Harrison, Lennon, McCartney, Starkey
Album: Magical Mystery Tour
Label: Parlophone, 1967
Broadcast: 8:15
Artist: Guy Clark
Song: The Randall Knife
Composer: Guy Clark
Album: Hindsight 21-20: Anthology 1975-1995
Label: Raven
Broadcast: 11:30

===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 21 May 2016 Part 1
BODY:
Shoeing horses, dressage downer, and India's limb-lengthening industry.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 47'18"

12:15
Shoeing horses
BODY:
Jason Wood's a farrier (and ex-cowboy!) based in Manawatu. We join him on his daily rounds, ensuring the region's horses stay well shod.
EXTENDED BODY:
“Hi, you’ve reached Wood Farrier Services. Sorry I’m busy, underneath a horse…”
Jason Wood is a farrier (and ex-cowboy!) who ensures the horses of Manawatu are well shod. Simon Morton joins him on his daily rounds.
Topics: farming
Regions: Manawatu
Tags: horses, animals, farrier
Duration: 26'45"

12:40
Dressage downer
BODY:
A type of equestrian noseband is causing animal welfare concerns in the lead-up to the Rio Olympics. An Australian study has highlighted the stress response of horses fitted with restrictive 'crank' nosebands, and there are calls to control or even ban their use. Kate Fenner is co-author of the study, led by the University of Sydney's Faculty of Veterinary Science.
EXTENDED BODY:
A commonly used piece of equestrian equipment – the crank noseband – is raising serious concerns among animal welfare groups in the lead-up to the Rio Olympics.
An Australian study has measured the stress response of horses fitted with this gear, which clamps a horse's jaws shut and reduces yawning, licking, chewing and swallowing. The kit is widely used in dressage, as well as in show-jumping and eventing.
Now some 30 animal welfare groups from around the world, including the RSPCA in Australia, are calling on the international equestrian federation (the FEI) to control the use of crank nosebands, or even to ban them outright.
Kate Fenner is co-author of the study, led by Professor Paul McGreevy of the University of Sydney's Faculty of Veterinary Science.
"In light of the current results, horse sport administrators may need to decide which oral behaviours they can afford to see eliminated in the name of sport", said Professor McGreevy.
Meanwhile Equestrian Sports New Zealand's chief executive Vicki Glynn says New Zealand riders will be using nosebands and double bridles at the Rio games. Stewards and judges should inspect all gear used in competitions to ensure it is properly fitted and is not causing horses any distress.
"Our concern is always horse welfare and the education of riders via good stewarding," she said. "We constantly review new research and where necessary update our judges and stewards on current thinking. We align ourselves with, and take guidance from, the FEI who have a wealth of global expertise in both competition and veterinary matters."
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: equestrian, horses, animal welfare, animals, noseband, bridles
Duration: 9'28"

12:55
India's limb-lengthening industry
BODY:
India correspondent Vidhi Doshi on India's burgeoning leg-lengthening industry. People are paying serious money to be taller, and endangering life and limb(s) in the process.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: India, cosmetic surgery, medical tourism
Duration: 9'17"

13:01
This Way Up 21 May 2016 Part 2
BODY:
Tech news (Google developers' conference and the rebirth of Nokia?), handheld DNA analyser, buyer's guide to electric heaters, and adult onset ADHD/Martian tsunamis.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 51'37"

13:10
Tech: Google innovates and the rebirth of Nokia?
BODY:
Technology correspondent Peter Griffin reports on the latest ideas coming out of Google's annual developer conference in California this week. Also the Finnish handset maker Nokia's fallen on tough times since the smartphone took centre stage. But it could be poised for a rebirth.
EXTENDED BODY:
Technology correspondent Peter Griffin reports on the latest ideas coming out of Google's annual developer conference in California this week. Also the Finnish handset maker Nokia's fallen on tough times since the smartphone took centre stage. But it could be poised for a rebirth.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: handsets, smartphone, Google, Nokia
Duration: 14'38"

13:30
Handheld DNA analyser
BODY:
A handheld DNA analyser powered by the sun could revolutionise the diagnosis of diseases like cancer and TB in the developing world. We speak to Jonathan O'Halloran of QuantuMDx who's working on the device.
EXTENDED BODY:
A handheld DNA analyser could revolutionise the diagnosis of diseases like cancer, malaria, HIV and TB, particularly in the developing world.
Molecular medical testing today is not instant and requires access to a proper medical lab but a new device called Q-Poc could detect a range of diseases within 20 minutes.
Simon Morton speaks to Jonathan O'Halloran of QuantuMDx, who is working on the device.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: medicine, genetics, testing, malaria, cancer, TB, HIV
Duration: 10'23"

13:40
Electric heaters: a buyer's guide
BODY:
George Block of consumer.org.nz reviews home heating options. This week, electric heaters; what rooms are they good for and which ones are best?
EXTENDED BODY:
This Way Up reviews heating heating options and how efficient they are. First up, electric heaters – which rooms are they good for and which ones are best?
Simon Morton asks George Block from consumer.org.nz:

Heat pumps: a buyer's guide (This Way Up)
Wood burners: a buyer's guide (This Way Up)
Electric blankets: a buyer's guide (This Way Up)
Guide to buying firewood (This Way Up)
Home Heating Guide (consumer.org.nz)

Read an edited extract of the conversation:
I’m amazed that electric heaters are still relevant, because I thought a lot of the new technologies like heat pumps would have made this technology redundant, but it’s alive and well.
George Block: The reason for that is over the past few years... we have been hammering home the message that electric heaters just aren’t powerful enough to service your main source of heat and living areas, but they do have a place. So, for example, in a small area like a bedroom or small study, the amount of money you’ll spend upfront installing a heat pump just for that room is $2,000. That is a lot more than you’ll pay running an electric heater in that small space, which we found to be about $1,300 more than a heat pump.
So the low upfront cost of an electric heater and the fact that they generate just the right amount of heat for a small space means they are the right choice for anything around 15m² to 20m². That’s areas like a smaller bedroom, a study or occasional rooms like that.
You mention that $1,300 figure…
George Block: That’s a ten-year period. So you’ll be spending $ 1,300 more on power bills running one of these compared with a small heat pump. But the heat pump will cost $ 1,500 upfront and another $ 500 to install. So in a small area we think it’s probably best to go for an electric heater. But that doesn’t include things like gas central heating or heat-inducted central heating. If you have those and they’re ducted to various bedrooms they will be a lot cheaper to run than an electric heater.
There’s also another type of panel heater here, micathermic – what are these?
George Block: Micathermic heaters are a recent addition to the electric heating world. Basically, you switch them on and they act in the same way as an old column heater. You have this background, ambient heating. They don’t have a fan so they don’t provide that evenness of heating. But one advantage they do have over oil column heaters is they heat up much faster. So you switch this microthermic heater on and it’s instantly going to come up to temperature and start heating your room. Whereas this oil column is going to take five or ten minutes.
We found that in general oil column heaters are the worst performers in our test. The reason for that is that they don’t get especially hot and they quite often don’t have a fan so they don’t tend to heat that evenly and it tends to pool up at the ceiling. But we found that if you have an oil column heater with a fan or you place a small desk fan on the ground beside an oil column heater it’ll help it heat up the room three times as fast.
If you’re out there buying an electric heater, what are the key things you need to consider?
George Block: If you want fast, even room heating, you can’t go past an oscillating tower fan ceramic heater. The key to any sort of fast heating is to get a fan. But if you don’t want that whirring away in the background we think a micathermic heater is a great option.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: consumer, heating, electric heaters
Duration: 11'50"

13:50
Adult onset ADHD/Martian tsunamis
BODY:
Dr Chris Smith with news about adult onset ADHD and tsunamis on Mars.
EXTENDED BODY:
Dr Chris Smith on new research showing that despite its reputation as a childhood condition, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, often develops in adult life too. Also evidence of tsunamis on Mars
Topics: science, health
Regions:
Tags: space, Mars, astronomy, tsunamis, ADHD
Duration: 7'23"

=SHOW NOTES=

We play these tracks on the show too...
Artist: The Undercover Hippy
Track: Our Streets (Hiphoppapotamus Remix)
Composer: Billy Rowan
Album: Monkey Suit
Label: UNCIVIL RECORDS
Artist: Nap Eyes
Track: Dark Creedence
Composer: Nap Eyes
Album: Rough Trade Shops: Counter Culture 15 (off new album 'Thought Rock Fish Scale')
Label: ROUGH TRADE 399318
Artist: Huruma Boys Band
Track: Teresia
Composer: Huruma Boys Band
Album: Kenya Special: Selected East African Recordings from the 1970s and 1980s
Label: SOUNDWAY 915528

===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=

10:00
Cleve Cameron's Primal Digital
BODY:
Cleve Cameron introduces us to his new solo album, Welcome to the Primal Digital.
EXTENDED BODY:
Roping in seasoned vets like James Milne, Ed Castelow and even the Auckland Philharmonic Orchestra, Auckland-based musician and creative Cleve Cameron has struck out solo on his album, Welcome to the Primal Digital.
Exploring the teething problems of technology in the 21st century, the nine-song set is worlds removed from his future-focused ‘band from another dimension’ The Beop.
"We live in a really intense and incredible and exciting time, and it's kind of like the primal days of the digital age," Cleve says. "This is a collection of songs that's kind of [about] what it is to be human at this time I guess, just a really simple human response to a lot of the intensity of what's going on."
MUSIC DETAILS
Artist: Cleve Cameron
Song: Earthly Stuff, Primal Digital, Do, Home, My Blind Goat
Composer: C.Cameron
Album: Welcome to the Primal Digital
Label: The Beop Corporation Limited
Topics: music
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: Cleve Cameron, indie pop, The Beop
Duration: 8'33"

12:30
Introducing Space Above
BODY:
Space Above introduce their song 'Shades'.
EXTENDED BODY:
Name of project: SPACE ABOVE
Real names: Aaron Short, Sam McCarthy, Maddie North
Age (of project): 1 year
Hometown: Auckland
Associated acts: The Naked and Famous, Strange Babes,
Musical guilty pleasure: I’m pretty sure I could put that well known Enigma album on in the background and Sam wouldn’t question the situation. We’d both listen to it in full, with zero guilt.
Formative musical experience: Learnt how to play the Studio, never properly learnt how to play the Instrument. Ears do the work.
Facebook/Soundcloud

Music Details
Artist: Space Above
Song: Shades
Composer: Space Above
Album: Shades single
Label: A Label Called Success
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Introducing, Space Above, NZ Music, The Naked and Famous, Strange Babes, Kids Of 88
Duration: 7'23"

10:00
Bizzy Bone's Survivor's Story
BODY:
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony's Bizzy Bone speaks with Sam Wicks about overcoming his troubled past.
EXTENDED BODY:
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony's Bizzy Bone speaks with Sam Wicks about overcoming his troubled past.
Signed to Eazy-E's Ruthless Records in 1993, Cleveland, Ohio five-piece Bone Thugs-n-Harmony blended tag-team raps with interweaving harmonies more reminiscent of a Motown vocal group than a hip hop outfit. The uniqueness of the melody-rich sound is something that Bone Thugs' Bizzy Bone attributes to Cleveland's isolation.
"It started us chiming after each other, saying each other's raps, completing each other's raps, bringing that Motown to the forefront" he says. "And then it started rapidly changing – and then people started saying, 'You guys got a new sound, this is dope'.
"You know, it was just a good time and Cleveland played a major role in it because you really couldn't get outside of Cleveland to hear anything different; so it was just Cleveland's own sound and I think that's why it took off so much."
Bizzy Bone's high-pitch delivery is perhaps the group's most distinctive, and he has used it to voice a complicated, troubled backstory of abuse and sexual molestation at the hands of caregivers. An active member of the Make a Wish Foundation, Bizzy says it was the influence of friends and family that lead him to speak on his history of abuse.
"I think my people started telling me to do charity work, and then I started telling people my story and they were just looking at me like, for real? And then they were like, 'You need to tell the world, you need to let people know what's going on and how you overcame and triumphed'.
"There's a lot of people out there that's down and out and messed up. I just felt like it was something cool that I could do, just kind of giving back to the people."
MUSIC DETAILS
Artist: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Songs: Resurrection (Paper, Paper), Tha Crossroads, Thuggish Ruggish Bone, Get Up & Get It
Composer: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Album: Greatest Hits
Label: Ruthless
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 7'08"

12:00
Weezer's Scott Shriner on 'The White Album'
BODY:
Weezer's Scott Shriner talks to Yadana Saw about his band's new self-titled set, also known as 'The White Album'.
EXTENDED BODY:
Weezer's Scott Shriner talks to Yadana Saw about his band's new self-titled set, also known as 'The White Album'.

Weezer sprung up like spring daisies amongst the muddy mire of early nineties grunge rock, with fresh-faced jangly hits like “Buddy Holly’ and ‘Say it Ain’t So’.
The Los Angeles band reflect their sunny Californian musical heritage on their tenth album, with singer Rivers Cuomo citing The Beach Boys as a sonic influence. He collected lyrical source material talking to strangers around Venice Beach and Santa Monica, and even listed himself on Tinder to meet characters.
Bassist Scott Shriner says Rivers really made a point of putting himself out of his comfort zone in order to write - "he really went out and paid attention, and had some experiences to write from."
"Who wants to sit around hearing songs about raising your kids."

Yadana Saw finds out from bassist Scott Shriner how Weezer have maintained their musical identity this time around.
MUSIC DETAILS
Artist: Weezer
Song: California Kids, Endless Bummer, (Girl We Got a) Good Thing
Composer: Cuomo, Wilson, Bell, Russell
Album: Weezer
Label: Warner Music
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Weezer, Scott Shriner, Rivers Cuomo, Jake Sinclair, indie pop, rock
Duration: 8'00"

17:00
The Runaways’ Cherie Currie
BODY:
Cherie Currie of all-female 70s rock group 'The Runaways' talks to Kiran Dass about drugs, rock 'n' roll and sexual abuse allegations.
EXTENDED BODY:
Cherie Currie joined Los Angeles all-female rock group The Runaways when she was fifteen year old in the mid-’70s. The Runaways blazed LA’s rock circuit, before fractured relationships bought the band to a close.
"Joan [Jett] and I were very close" she tells Kiran Dass. "We were best friends, and Sandy West, the drummer. Lita [Ford] was not easy to get along with - I don't think she cared for me, and I was scared to death of her. And Jackie [Fuchs] - she was kind of a pain in the butt. We became family for each other, because we had no parental supervision on these tours, so we had to take care of each other. And we did."
Under the stewardship of 'psycho svengali' Kim Fowley, they produced four albums, and a handful of hits - 'Cherry Bomb', 'Queens Of Noise' and 'Hollywood'.
"There hadn't been young female rockers before, so we were breaking new ground."

Life on the road as a teen-rock band took its toll on the girls. "It was a drug culture. If you didn't take drugs, there was something wrong with you. Everybody that took care of the Runaways - except for Kim Fowley - did drugs. It became a way of life for me, until I was 24 and I knew I needed to stop."
Addicted to crack cocaine, she checked herself into rehab, where the doctors said she might have had a week before the drug claimed her life. "I literally ran for my life" Currie says. "I grabbed my things and ran home, I became a fitness trainer, and a drug and alcohol counsellor for drug-addicted teens. I moved on with my life."
Recent allegations of sexual assault against their late manager have made headlines, further straining friendships among the ex-bandmates.
Cherie says "I've been trying to get Jackie to talk about this since I was 25 years old. I was there. The way she approached it isn't what I saw. But it was wrong. Period. You know, I love all these girls, and I just wish them all peace. I wish she'd listened to me and talked to Kim about it before he died."
"We've all done things we're not proud of. But we should not be criticised and ridiculed and 40 years later for something that was going on all the time, with everyone. That was the culture of the time, that was what was happening."
In New Zealand playing shows this weekend, Cherie Currie talks to Kiran Dass about band’s highs and lows at the audio link above.
MUSIC DETAILS
Artist: The Runaways
Songs: American Nights
Composer: Anthony, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury
Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Cherry Bomb
Composer: Jett, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury
Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Is It Day or Night?
Composer: Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury
Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Messin' with the Boys
Composer: J.Brasler, M.Ruth
Album: Messin' with the Boys
Label: Capitol
Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Reverie
Composer: J.Hays, C. Currie
Album: Reverie
Label: Cherie Currie
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: The Runaways, Cherie Currie, Joan Jett, Kim Fowley, rock, punk, Lita Ford
Duration: 14'13"

17:00
The Mixtape: David Benge
BODY:
For New Zealand Music Month we've invited our guests to make us a mixtape of their fave local release. This week David Benge of VICE New Zealand sits down with Zac Arnold.
EXTENDED BODY:
For NZ Music Month, we invite musical guests compile a C60 of local sounds, and talk us through their selections. This week David Benge, the man behind Vice New Zealand, Drunken Piano Touring and Speak and Spell Group. As well as performing in bands like D Super, David has also managed the likes of Fur Patrol, Cut Off Your Hands and Aldous Harding.
Music Details
Artist: Bailterspace
Song: X
Composer: Bailterspace
Album: Vortura
Label: Flying Nun

Artist: HDU
Song: A Tagging Decision
Composer: HDU
Album: Sum of the Few
Label: Flying Nun

Artist: Shihad
Song: Gates of Steel
Composer: G.Casale, M. Mothersbaugh, S.Schmidt, D.Smith
Album: Gates of Steel
Label: Wildside

Artist: D-Super
Song: The Moths
Composer: D-Super
Album: Straight to the Sun
Label: Wildside

Artist: Cut Off Your Hands
Song: You & I
Composer: P.Hadfield, B.Harris, P.Wood, M.Ramirez, N.Johnston
Album: Shaky Hands EP
Label: I Am Sound Records

Artist: Aldous Harding
Song: Hunter
Composer: H.Harding
Album: Aldous Harding
Label: Lyttelton Records
Topics: music
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: The Mixtape, David Benge, Vice magazine, Bailterspace, HDU, High Dependency Unit, Devo, Shihad, D-Super, Cut Off Your Hands, Aldous Harding, St Jerome's Laneway Festival
Duration: 54'42"

12:00
Music101 Pocket Edition 87: Cherie Currie/Bizzy Bone/Space Above/Cleve Cameron
BODY:
This week's Music 101 Pocket Edition, Cherie Currie on her time fronting The Runaways, Bizzy Bone on overcoming his troubled past, Space Above introduce themselves and Cleve Cameron explores the Primal Digital.
EXTENDED BODY:
This week's Music 101 Pocket Edition, Cherie Currie on her time fronting The Runaways, Bizzy Bone on overcoming his troubled past, Space Above introduce themselves and Cleve Cameron explores the Primal Digital.
Music Details
Artist: Tobacco
Song: Gods In Heat
Composer: Tobacco
Album: Sweatbox Dynasty
Label: Ghostly
Artist: Badbadnotgood feat. Sam Herring
Song: Time Moves Slow
Composer: Badbadnotgood
Album: IV
Label: Innovative Leisure
Artist: The Runaways
Songs: American Nights
Composer: Anthony, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Cherry Bomb
Composer: Jett, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Is It Day or Night?
Composer: Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Messin' with the Boys
Composer: J.Brasler, M.Ruth
Album: Messin' with the Boys
Label: Capitol

Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Reverie
Composer: J.Hays, C. Currie
Album: Reverie
Label: Cherie Currie
Artist: Space Above
Song: Shades
Composer: Space Above
Album: Shades single
Label: A Label Called Success
Artist: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Songs: Resurrection (Paper, Paper), Tha Crossroads, Thuggish Ruggish Bone, Get Up & Get It
Composer: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Album: Greatest Hits
Label: Ruthless
Artist: Deerhoof
Song: Criminal of the Dream
Composer: Deerhoof
Album: The Magic
Label: Polyvinyl Records
Artist: Cleve Cameron
Song: Earthly Stuff, Primal Digital, Do, Home, My Blind Goat
Composer: C.Cameron
Album: Welcome to the Primal Digital
Label: The Beop Corporation Limited
Artist: Marcus Marr
Song: Rocket Ship
Composer: M. Marr
Album: Rocket Ship single
Label: DFA Records
Topics: music
Regions: Northland
Tags: Music 101 Pocket Edition, podcast, The Runaways, Cherie Currie, Joan Jett, Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, The Naked and Famous, Space Above, Kids Of 88, Cleve Cameron
Duration: 57'26"

19:30
The Sampler Summit: Radiohead - A Moon Shaped Pool
BODY:
On May 8th, genre-defying Oxfordshire quintet Radiohead released their ninth album, A Moon Shaped Pool. To explore its depths and details, Nick Bollinger has called a Sampler Summit with local musicians Dianne Swann, Sean Donnelly and Jol Mulholland.
EXTENDED BODY:
On May 8th, genre-defying Oxfordshire quintet Radiohead released their ninth album, A Moon Shaped Pool. To explore its depths and details, Nick Bollinger has called a Sampler Summit with local musicians Dianne Swann, Sean Donnelly and Jol Mulholland.
This year has seen elaborately orchestrated launches for albums by Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar, Beyoncé and Drake, all creating the intended critical and commercial stir.
Hip-hop and R&B might be dominating the media when it comes to blockbuster releases, but if there’s still a rock band anywhere that can excite a hip-hop-style response it is Radiohead. That was borne out when the Oxfordshire quintet’s new album A Moon Shaped Pool arrived with just two days notice on May 8th. Music sites and online forums went into Radiohead raptures.
In some ways the reaction was surprising, because their last album – 2011’s King Of Limbs - had been one of their least popular. And on first impressions the new one sounds like anything but a blockbuster. It is subtle, often quiet, and intricately detailed.
As listeners and critics around the world busily exchanged opinions, local musicians Sean Donnelly, Dianne Swann and Jol Mulholland gathered with the Sampler’s Nick Bollinger for a Radiohead summit.
Donnelly, who records his own albums as SJD, remarked on the subtly and unconventional nature of the songwriting. “These days it takes me three or four listens to even work out it’s a song, and that’s no offence,” he said. “So much of their songwriting is about texture and the harmonic quality of the sounds they choose. They are not songs in the traditional sense. They seem to be dissolving around the edge.”
So why does a ‘difficult’ album, without any obvious hit singles, seem to be connecting with so many people? “It’s a very human and very warm album,” said Swann, who sang on a Radiohead recording in the mid-90s, when she was based in London with her group The Julie Dolphin. “I don’t know if you can really say that about a lot of Radiohead albums. It has a vulnerable quality. It just seems a lot more direct emotionally, which is possibly why it draws you in, as well as the fantastic arrangements.”
Mulholland – producer of Anika Moa’s Queen At The Table album, agreed, noting that for personal reasons he could no longer listen to a previous favourite, In Rainbows, “so I keep going to this one because it gives me the same nice warm feeling.”
He went on to credit producer Nigel Godrich with pulling the disparate parts into its satisfying if mysterious shape. “He’s the master of ceremonies in getting what’s in all of their heads coming out of the speakers in a beautiful way.”
Songs featured: Burn The Witch, Daydreamers, Desert Island Disk, Glass Eyes, Identikit, The Numbers, True Love Waits, Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Richman Poorman Beggarman Thief.
A Moon Shaped Pool was released as a download on 8 May; CD and LP editions will be released on 17 June 2016 through XL Recordings.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: music, music review, Radiohead, SJD, Jol Mulholland, Dianne Swann, The Bads
Duration: 29'12"

=SHOW NOTES=

=PLAYLIST=

2–3pm
Artist: Radiohead
Songs: Meeting in the Aisle
Composer: Radiohead
Album: No Surprises/Running from Demons
Label: Parlophone
The Sampler Summit: Radiohead

Artist: Radiohead
Songs: Burn The Witch, Daydreamers, Desert Island Disk, Glass Eyes, Identikit, The Numbers, True Love Waits, Tinker Tailor Soldier sailor Richman Poorman Beggarman Thief
Composer: Radiohead
Album: A Moon Shaped Pool
Label: XL Recordings

Artist: Radiohead
Song: How Can You Be Sure?
Composer: Radiohead
Album: How Can You Be Sure? single
Label: Parlophone
Artist: Dion Lunadon
Songs: Paradise/Angel Wire
Composer: D.Lunadon
Album: Com/Broke
Label: Infinity Cat
The Runaways’ Cherie Currie

Artist: The Runaways
Songs: American Nights
Composer: Anthony, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Cherry Bomb
Composer: Jett, Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: The Runaways
Songs: Is It Day or Night?
Composer: Fowley
Album: The Runaways
Label: Mercury

Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Messin’ with the Boys
Composer: J.Brasler, M.Ruth
Album: Messin’ with the Boys
Label: Capitol

Artist: Cherie Currie
Songs: Reverie
Composer: J.Hays, C. Currie
Album: Reverie
Label: Cherie Currie
Artist: Ladyhawke
Songs: The River
Composer: P.Brown
Album: Wild Things
Label: Polyvinyl Records
Weezer

Artist: Weezer
Song: California Kids, Endless Bummer, (Girl We Got a) Good Thing
Composer: Cuomo, Wilson, Bell, Russell
Album: Weezer
Label: Warner Music
Artist: Car Seat Headset
Songs: Joe Goes To School
Composer: Car Seat Headset
Album: Teens Of Denial
Label: Matador Records
3–4pm
Artist: The Internet
Songs: Dontcha
Composer: S. Bennett, N.Eaholtz, D.Rosser
Album: Feel Good
Label: Odd Future Records, Sony Music Entertainment
Bizzy Bone

Artist: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Songs: Resurrection (Paper, Paper), Tha Crossroads, Thuggish Ruggish Bone, Get Up & Get It
Composer: Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
Album: Greatest Hits
Label: Ruthless
Artist: Chance the Rapper
Song: All We Got
Composer: C.Bennett, K.West
Album: Coloring Book
Label: Apple Music
Introducing: Space Above

Artist: Space Above
Song: Shades
Composer: Space Above
Album: Shades single
Label: A Label Called Success
Artist: Badbadnotgood feat. Sam Herring
Song: Time Moves Slow
Composer: Badbadnotgood
Album: IV
Label: Innovative Leisure
Cleve Cameron

Artist: Cleve Cameron
Song: Earthly Stuff, Primal Digital, Do, Home, My Blind Goat
Composer: C.Cameron
Album: Welcome to the Primal Digital
Label: The Beop Corporation Limited
Artist: Deerhoof
Song: Criminal of the Dream
Composer: Deerhoof
Album: The Magic
Label: Polyvinyl Records
4–5pm
The Mixtape: David Benge

Artist: Bailterspace
Song: X
Composer: Bailterspace
Album: Vortura
Label: Flying Nun

Artist: HDU
Song: A Tagging Decision
Composer: HDU
Album: Sum of the Few
Label: Flying Nun

Artist: Shihad
Song: Gates of Steel
Composer: G.Casale, M. Mothersbaugh, S.Schmidt, D.Smith
Album: Gates of Steel
Label: Wildside

Artist: D-Super
Song: The Moths
Composer: D-Super
Album: Straight to the Sun
Label: Wildside

Artist: Cut Off Your Hands
Song: You & I
Composer: P.Hadfield, B.Harris, P.Wood, M.Ramirez, N.Johnston
Album: Shaky Hands EP
Label: I Am Sound Records

Artist: Aldous Harding
Song: Hunter
Composer: H.Harding
Album: Aldous Harding
Label: Lyttelton Records

===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=

A work in progress - the final playlist will be online after 6pm on Saturday.

7 - 8

Jimmy Young - Eternally
John MacCormack - Love's Old Sweet Song
Barbra Streisand - Memory
Ramsey Lewis - A Hard Day's Night
Annie Crummer and Herbs - See What Love Can Do
Deanna Durbin - Can't Help Singing
Duke Ellington - Low Key Lightly
Simon And Garfunkel - The Only Living Boy In New York
Anthony Newley - That Noise
Jevetta Steele - Calling You
Bob Dylan - Melancholy Mood
Pink Turtle - Hotel California

8 -9

Terry Callier - You're Going To Miss Your Candy Man
Waylon Jennings And Mark Knopfler - Learning The Game
Terence Trent D'Arby - Let Her Down Easy
Marlon Williams - Lonely Side Of Her
Mary Gauthier - Mercy
Adam Faith - What Do You Want
Tony Bennett and Elvis Costello - They Can't Take That Away From Me
Susan Boyle - Hallelujah
Scatman Crothers - Ghost Riders In The Sky
Talking Heads - Take Me To The River
Lynda Carter - Toto (Don't It Feel Like Paradise)
Barry McGuire - Eve Of Destruction

9 - 10

Poolside - Harvest Moon
Nina Simone - Pirate Jenny
The Rolling Stones - Shine A Light
The Kenny Clarke / Francy Boland Big Band - Volcano
Lonnie Donegan and Rory Gallagher - Rock Island Line
Annie Lennox - Many Rivers To Cross
Bob Seger - The Devil's Right Hand
Rodriguez - I Wonder
The Incredible String Band - Waltz Of The New Moon
The House Of Love - The Beatles And The Stones
Stevie Wonder - Smile Please

10 - 11

Frank Sinatra - Begin The Beguine
Viv Stanshall - Terry Keeps His Clips On
Roy Head - Treat Her Right
Pentatonix - Can't Sleep Love
Billy Thorpe - Poison Ivy
Brave Combo - Holiday
Robert Plant - Big Log
The Box Tops - I Met Her In Church
The Jam - In The Crowd
Stevie Ray Vaughan - Tin Pan Alley
Steely Dan - East St. Louis Toodle-Oo

11 - Midnight: Late Night Phil
We look and listen back to the week in music history.

The Everly Brothers - Kentucky
Big Daddy - Ebony And Ivory
Jonathan Richman - Fender Stratocaster
Jonathan Richman - Vincent Van Gogh
The Beach Boys - Pet Sounds
Marv Johnson - Come To Me
Otis Redding - Try A Little Tenderness
Guy Clark - Desperadoes Waiting For A Train
The Mavericks - The Air That I Breathe
David Bowie - Space Oddity
Sting - Moon Over Bourbon Street
Joe Cocker - I Put A Spell On You
The Isley Brothers - This Old Heart Of Mine