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:
09 May 2015
===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 Music Feature (RNZ); 3:05 The Captive Wife, by Fiona Kidman (4 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=
Down by the Old Wood Heap, written and told by Apirana Taylor; Basketball's Biggest Fan, by Iona McNaughton, told by Joanne Simpson; Salevao and the Sleepers, by David Somerset, told by Fiona Samuel; Leaps and Bounds, by Robin Nathan, told by Lloyd Scott; A Boy for a Pet, by Joy Cowley, told by Desmond Kelly; Mum on the Run, by Hineani Melbourne, told by Glynnis Paraha (RNZ)
===7:08 AM. | Country Life===
=DESCRIPTION=
Memorable scenes, people and places in rural NZ (RNZ)
===8:10 AM. | Saturday Morning===
=DESCRIPTION=
A mixture of current affairs and feature interviews, until midday (RNZ)
=AUDIO=
08:10
Alex Massie: UK election fallout
BODY:
Scotland Editor of The Spectator, who also writes for The Times and is a regular contributor to the Scottish Daily Mail, discussing the unexpected election result in the United Kingdom
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Scotland, England
Duration: 27'28"
08:40
Ali Al-Ahmed: Saudi royal reshuffle
BODY:
Director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs in Washington DC, discussing the international significance of the repositioning of power in Saudi Arabia.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Saudi Arabia, USA
Duration: 20'50"
09:10
Jack Baker: V.E. Day
BODY:
New Zealand sailor in London on 7 May 1945, when the war with Germany was declared over.
EXTENDED BODY:
V.E. Day Celebrations in London 8 May 1945 A truck of revellers passing through the Strand, London. Public Domain
New Zealand sailor Jack Baker was in London on 7 May 1945, when the war with Germany was declared over.
Seventy years later he reminisces with Kim Hill.
Winston Churchill waves to crowds in Whitehall, London on the day he broadcast the news that the war with Germany was over. Public Domain.
Topics: author interview, history, science, technology
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 7'58"
09:15
Philip Ball: invisibility and curiosity
BODY:
Editor for Nature magazine for over 20 years, and author of Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything, Serving the Reich: The Struggle for the Soul of Physics Under Hitler, and Invisibility: the Dangerous Allure of the Unseen. He will visit New Zealand for the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival and two Royal Society of New Zealand talks.
EXTENDED BODY:
Science writer Philip Ball was editor for Nature magazine for over 20 years, and is the author of a number of books, including Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything (2013, Vintage), Serving the Reich: The Struggle for the Soul of Physics Under Hitler (2014, Vintage), and Invisibility: the Dangerous Allure of the Unseen (Bodley Head).
Philip Ball talks to Kim Hill about the ways social media influences the ways invisibility - or anonymity - and morality interact; the learning which has seen 'magic' evolve into science, and the understanding that the more we know, the more we know we don't know... and how far away are we from having an invisibility cloak?
Philip Ball will visit New Zealand for three events at the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival (13-17 May), and give two Royal Society of New Zealand talks: Bright Earth: the Invention of Colour (21 May, Wellington), and Invisibility: a Cultural History (22 May, Christchurch)
Photo: Richard Haughton.
Topics: author interview, history, science, technology
Regions:
Tags: invisibility, curiosity
Duration: 34'53"
09:45
Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins: Cellini Salt Cellar
BODY:
District Court Judge, and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group. He has a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces, and will discuss the 2003 theft of the Cellini Salt Cellar, a part-enamelled gold table sculpture completed in 1543 for Francis I of France by Benvenuto Cellini.
EXTENDED BODY:
The "saliera" (saltcellar in Italian). Now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.
Arthur Tompkins discusses the 2003 theft of the Cellini Salt Cellar, described by Kim Hill as the wedding present from hell and an early example of an abdominal exercise for two people.
The part-enamelled gold table sculpture was completed in 1543 for Francis I of France by the colourful 16th century Tuscan goldsmith, sculptor and painter, Benvenuto Cellini.
Arthur Tompkins is a district court judge, and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group. He has a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces.
Detail of the "saliera" .
Topics: arts, crime, history
Regions:
Tags: Benvenuto Cellini
Duration: 9'51"
10:05
Playing Favourites with Girol Karacaoglu
BODY:
Chief Economist and Deputy Secretary, Macroenomic, International and Economic Research, at the New Zealand Treasury.
EXTENDED BODY:
Dr Girol Karacaoglu has worked at the Treasury since 2012, where he is now Chief Economist and Deputy Secretary, Macroenomic, International and Economic Research.
Born in Turkey, Dr Karacaoglu also studied in Hawaii, gaining a PhD in Economics and a Master’s degree in Business Administration. He moved to New Zealand to lecturer in economics at Victoria University of Wellington (during which time he met his wife) and went on to hold senior roles in the banking industry before his move to Treasury in 2012. He has three adult children.
Topics: business, economy, education, history, housing, money, music, refugees and migrants
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: Reserve Bank
Duration: 52'52"
11:05
David Mitchell: extended web version
BODY:
Author of six novels, most recently The Bone Clocks, and translator with his wife Keiko Yoshida of The Reason I Jump, written at the age of 13 by autistic child Naoki Higishida. David Mitchell will visit New Zealand for the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival, and a WORD Christchurch Autumn Season event.
EXTENDED BODY:
David Mitchell. Photo (c) Paul Stuart.
David Mitchell is the author of six novels, two of which have been shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
He lived and taught in Japan for many years, and now lives in Ireland. His most recent novel is The Bone Clocks (2014, Sceptre), and with his wife Keiko Yoshida he translated The Reason I Jump (2013, Hachette), written at the age of 13 by autistic child Naoki Higishida.
He talks to Kim Hill.
(During the interview, Kim and David discussed the poem Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy's Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota by James Wright, from his collection The Branch Will Not Break.)
David Mitchell will visit New Zealand for the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival (13-17 May), holding a (sold-out) workshop and speaking at two events, before heading south for a WORD Christchurch Autumn Season event (17 May).
Topics: author interview, books, language, technology
Regions:
Tags: James Wright, Keiko Yoshida, Naoki Higishida, autism
Duration: 50'46"
11:45
Phil Manning: dinosaur discoveries
BODY:
Professor of Natural History at the University of Manchester and Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre of Ancient Life Phil Manning, who is speaking about the mummified remains of a 67-million-year-old hadrosaur at a series of public talks for Museums Aotearoa and the Royal Society of New Zealand.
EXTENDED BODY:
Palaeontologist and writer Dr Phil Manning is Professor of Natural History at the University of Manchester and Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre of Ancient Life, and blogs at Dinosaur CSI.
He and his team used scanning equipment normally used on space shuttles at NASA to examine the mummified remains of a 67-million-year-old hadrosaur, “Dakota”.
Dr Phil Manning will speak about his work in a series of public talks for Museums Aotearoa and the Royal Society of New Zealand, in Christchurch (11 May), Wellington (12 May), and Napier (13 May).
He is also keynote speaker at MA15: Communicating Culture, the Museums Aotearoa conference in Dunedin (6-8 May).
Topics: environment, history, science
Regions: Otago
Tags: evolution, dinosaurs, palaeontology
Duration: 15'38"
=SHOW NOTES=
8:15 Alex Massie: UK election fallout
Alex Massie is Scotland Editor of The Spectator. He also writes for The Times and is a regular contributor to the Scottish Daily Mail. With the UK election delivering casualties in a result the polls didn't predict, he will look at the potential for Scottish nationalists to have a significant voice in opposition in a government they want no part of.
8:40 Ali Al-Ahmed: Saudi royal reshuffle
Saudi journalist Ali Al-Ahmed is director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs in Washington DC. He will discuss the international significance of the repositioning of power in Saudi Arabia, where King Salman has abandoned the traditional brother-to-brother lineage, replacing his half-brother with his American-backed nephew Mohammed bin Nayef as crown prince, and elevating his youngest son to deputy crown prince.
9:05 Jack Baker: VE Day
Jack Baker was in London on 7 May 1945 as a member of the New Zealand defence forces, when the war with Germany was declared over.
9:15 Philip Ball: invisibility and curiosity
Science writer Philip Ball was editor for Nature magazine for over 20 years, and is the author of a number of books, including Curiosity: How Science Became Interested in Everything (2013, Vintage), Serving the Reich: The Struggle for the Soul of Physics Under Hitler (2014, Vintage), and Invisibility: the Dangerous Allure of the Unseen (Bodley Head). He will visit New Zealand for three events at the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival (13-17 May), and give two Royal Society of New Zealand talks: Bright Earth: the Invention of Colour (21 May, Wellington), and Invisibility: a Cultural History (22 May, Christchurch)
Photo: Richard Haughton
9:45 Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins: Cellini Salt Cellar
Arthur Tompkins is a District Court Judge, and member of Interpol’s DNA Monitoring Expert Group. He has a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces, and will discuss the 2003 theft of the Cellini Salt Cellar, a part-enamelled gold table sculpture completed in 1543 for Francis I of France by Benvenuto Cellini.
Photo: Jerzy Strzelecki
10:05 Playing Favourites with Girol Karacaoglu
Dr Girol Karacaoglu has worked at The Treasury since 2012, where he is now Chief Economist and Deputy Secretary, Macroenomic, International and Economic Research.
11:05 David Mitchell
David Mitchell is the author of six novels, two of which have been shortlisted for the Booker Prize. He lived and taught in Japan for many years, and now lives in Ireland. His most recent novel is The Bone Clocks (2014, Sceptre), and with his wife Keiko Yoshida he translated The Reason I Jump (2013, Hachette), written at the age of 13 by autistic child Naoki Higishida. David Mitchell will visit New Zealand for the 2015 Auckland Writers Festival (13-17 May), holding a (sold-out) workshop and speaking at two events, before heading south for a WORD Christchurch Autumn Season event (17 May). (During the interview, Kim and David discussed the poem Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy's Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota by James Wright, from his collection The Branch Will Not Break.)
11:40 Phil Manning
Palaeontologist and writer Dr Phil Manning is Professor of Natural History at the University of Manchester and Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre of Ancient Life, and blogs at Dinosaur CSI. He and his team used scanning equipment normally used on space shuttles at NASA to examine the mummified remains of a 67-million-year-old hadrosaur, “Dakota”, and he will speak about this at a series of public talks for Museums Aotearoa and the Royal Society of New Zealand, in Christchurch (11 May), Wellington (12 May), and Napier (13 May). He is also keynote speaker at MA15: Communicating Culture, the Museums Aotearoa conference in Dunedin (6-8 May).
This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Associate producer: Melanie Phipps
Wellington engineer: Lianne Smith
Dunedin studio: Martin Balch
Research by Infofind
=PLAYLIST=
Artist: Adnan Yavuzer
Song: Dönülmez Akşamın Ufkundayız
Composer: Münir Nurettin Selçuk
Album: Volunteers – Our Song
Broadcast: 10:15
Artist: Bob Dylan
Song: Like a Rolling Stone
Album: Highway 61 Revisited
Label: Columbia,1965
Broadcast:10:25
Artist: Julio Iglesias
Song: Caruso
Album: Crazy
Label: Columbia, 1994
Broadcast:10:35
Artist: Charles Aznavour
Song: Il Faut Savoir
Album: Charles Aznavour: Ses Plus Grands Succes
Label: EMI, 2002
Broadcast:10:55
===12:11 PM. | This Way Up===
=DESCRIPTION=
Exploring the things we use and consume. Some content may offend (RNZ)
=AUDIO=
12:15
Medical detection dogs
BODY:
Using dogs to sniff out diseases like like cancer and diabetes. Dr Claire Guest is the co-founder of the UK charity Medical Detection Dogs.
EXTENDED BODY:
Dogs save lives, but can a dog also warn you if you've got a disease?
Yes according to a recent study in Italy where two German shepherd dogs successfully identified prostate cancer in 98 percent of cases, with 900 men included in the study.
A UK charity called Medical Detection Dogs is training dogs to identify human diseases, including cancers, by their smell. It's still in the early days of trials and testing but its co-founder Dr Claire Guest told This Way Up's Simon Morton that the initial results are very exciting.
Pictured: Dr Claire Guest with her pooch. Image: Janine Warwick.
Med detection dog. Image: Emma Jeffery.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: dogs
Duration: 14'17"
12:30
Norman Doidge: Neuroplasticity
BODY:
Norman Doidge, author of 'The Brain's Way of Healing', argues that the brain is neuroplastic and capable of significant self-repair and healing.
EXTENDED BODY:
Norman Doidge is a Canadian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who challenges the traditional Western medical doctrine that the brain is a machine made up of a fixed number of brain cells all with very specific functions.
In his book The Brain's Way of Healing (Scribe) he argues that the brain is neuroplastic; capable of significant self repair and healing. He has stories of people that have achieved this by changing their behaviour. As a result he claims they've rewired their brains and even overcome conditions like stroke, Parkinson's disease, autism and blindness.
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: neuroscience, neuroplasticity
Duration: 29'46"
13:10
Tech news
BODY:
Technology news with Peter Griffin. So why is Spark protesting about possible price hikes for access to the copper broadband network? Also the rise and fall of anonymous messaging apps, and why Apple wants your DNA!
EXTENDED BODY:
Technology news with Peter Griffin. So why is Spark protesting about possible price hikes for access to the copper broadband network? Also the rise and fall of anonymous messaging apps, and why Apple wants your DNA!
Topics: technology, internet
Regions:
Tags: braadband, messaging apps, Yik Yak, Secret
Duration: 12'22"
13:25
Naked Science
BODY:
Naked Science with Dr Chris Smith and how newborn babies feel pain. Also Facebook gives us some solid evidence of the "echo chamber" effect online, and scientists unveil the prospect of a more personalised approach to treat cancer.
EXTENDED BODY:
Naked Science with Dr Chris Smith and how newborn babies feel pain. Also Facebook gives us some solid evidence of the "echo chamber" effect online, and scientists unveil the prospect of a more personalised approach to treat cancer.
Topics: science, technology, health
Regions:
Tags: babies, online, social media, cancer, treatments
Duration: 11'20"
13:35
AFRIpads
BODY:
In Africa a reusable sanitary pad is transforming young womens' lives for the better. With Sanne Bolkenstein of AFRIpads.
EXTENDED BODY:
The sanitary pad is an unlikely sounding tool for changing people's lives for the better.
In rural Uganda the embarassment associated with having a period without access to proper sanitary products means that many girls choose to stay out of school for 4 or 5 days every month.
And if you're missing say 40 school days every year that seriously increases the chances that you'll fall behind with your schoolwork, and even drop out of school altogether.
The AFRIpad is a low cost sanitary pad that can be washed and reused. So far more than 500,000 of them have been distributed in 20 different countries.
Sanne Bolkenstein of AFRIpads spoke to This Way Up's Simon Morton.
Topics: international aid and development
Regions:
Tags: Africa, Uganda, sanitary products
Duration: 7'46"
13:50
Spain: shorter working hours
BODY:
Ashifa Kassam lives and works in Spain where the working day could be getting shorter. Also horses are becoming the latest casualties of the economic crisis that's hit the country,
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Spain
Duration: 9'06"
=SHOW NOTES=
Quick hits
12:15 Medical detection dogs
12:30 Neuroplasticity
13:15 Tech News
13:25 Naked Science
13:35 AFRIpads
13:50 Spain: shorter working hours
The small print
12:15pm, using dogs to sniff out diseases like cancer and diabetes. We speak to Dr Claire Guest, co-founder of the UK charity Medical Detection Dogs.
12:30pm we speak to Norman Doidge author of 'The Brain's Way of Healing'. In the book he argues that the brain is neuroplastic and capable of significant self-repair and healing. So could this radically change the way we treat stroke, Parkinson's disease and autism?
1:10pm, technology news with Peter Griffin. So why is Spark protesting about possible price hikes for access to the copper broadband network? Also the rise and fall of anonymous messaging apps, and why Apple wants your DNA!
1:25pm Naked Science with Dr Chris Smith and how newborn babies feel pain. Also Facebook gives us some solid evidence of the ‘echo chamber’ effect online, and scientists unveil the prospect of a more personalised approach to treat cancer.
1:35pm, we head to Africa where a reusable sanitary pad is transforming young women’s lives for the better.
1:50pm, why are the Spanish living in a state of constant jet lag? Well you can blame General Franco who back in 1942 synchronised the national clock with its ally Germany. Now there's a plan to roll back the clocks one hour, shorten the working day, and forget about the siesta!
We're playing these tracks too...
Artist: Best Coast
Track: So Unaware
Composers: Bethany Cosentino
Album: California Nights
Label: VIRGIN
Broadcast: 12:25
Artist: Club Cheval
Track: From the Basement to the Roof
Composers: Club Cheval
Album: From the Basement to the Roof EP
Label: Parlophone France
Broadcast: 13:22
Artist: Public Service Broadcasting
Track: Spitfire
Composers: Public Service Broadcasting
Album: Rough Trade Shops: Counter Culture 12
Label: ROUGH TRADE 372353
Broadcast: 13:45
And our theme music is:
Artist: Jefferson Belt
Track: The Green Termite
Composer: Jefferson Belt
Album: Table Manners
Label: Round Trip Mar
===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=
12:00
Charli XCX
BODY:
Charli XCX says she is “not losing sleep” over the leak of her new Giorgio Moroder collaboration ‘Diamonds’.
EXTENDED BODY:
Charli XCX says she is “not losing sleep” over the leak of her new Giorgio Moroder collaboration ‘Diamonds', which leaked this morning.
The track is due to appear on Moroder’s new album Déjà Vu,
In an interview with Music 101 in Auckland today, Charli XCX explained, "I have a weird relationship and thoughts on music and the internet, and free verses not free... I haven't really sat down and given it much thought."
Charli XCX, who is yet to meet Moroder in person, collaborated with the Italian producer over email, sending him a 7 year old acapella from her True Romance writing sessions after he 'reached out' to her.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags: Charli XCX
Duration: 01"
23:00
Music 101 Pocket Edition 38
BODY:
Charli XCX hears colours, A$AP Ferg on Harlem history and dark Dunedin dance with Strange Harvest.
EXTENDED BODY:
Strange Harvest / Photo by by Emily Berryman and Phoebe MacKenzie
In the Music 101 Pocket Edition 38: Charli XCX on hearing colours, A$AP Ferg gives us a Harlem history lesson and dark Dunedin dance with Strange Harvest.
Topics: music
Regions: Otago
Tags: synesthesia, Music 101 podcast, Pocket Edition, pop music, hip hop, New York, Harlem Renaissance
Duration: 48'30"
=SHOW NOTES=
2–3pm
Charli XCX
Schooled in the anarchic spirit of the East London rave scene, Charli XCX went on to trouble the UK and US pop charts with her heady mix of sugar-coated pop and Ramones-referencing rock’n’roll. In town this week for a one-off show at Auckland’s Powerstation, she talks to Emma Smith about her rave beginnings, succinct lyric writing and synaesthesia.
A$AP Ferg
Marcus Garvey, Louis Armstrong, Puffy Daddy… The New York neighbourhood of Harlem has long been home to seminal African-American leaders and trendsetters. Most recently A$AP Mob, the collective that includes A$AP Rocky and A$AP Ferg – in its ranks has been setting a style and sound agenda in hip hop. Sam Wicks talks to Ferg about his hometown’s cultural impact.
A$AP Ferg.
Strange Harvest
Skye and Justin Strange of Dunedin duo Strange Harvest on creativity, the Dunedin gothic and the evolution of their sound.
3–4pm
Princess Chelsea
This past week saw Chelsea Nikkel aka Princess Chelsea release her second album, complete a nationwide tour, and appear on The New Zealand Herald’s front page. She meets with Tony Stamp to chat about her signing to Flying Nun, clocking up 20,000,000-plus YouTube views, and the process behind writing a 21st century concept album.
Princess Chelsea / Photo by Brad Fafejta.
Terror of Deep
Wellington’s Terror of the Deep have just released their third full-length album, Space Epic. Yadana Saw talks to drummer William Daymond about making a 1970s-inspired prog rock concept album, on-stage instrument swapping and how it’s impossible to say Uranus with a straight face.
Terror of The Deep (L-to-R: William Daymond, Taipua Adams and Oliver Dixon) / Photo by David James
The Sampler: Sam Hunt and David Kilgour – The 9th
Six years ago, poet Sam Hunt and guitarist David Kilgour married their skills for the album, Fallen Debris. On their latest set, rather than Kilgour singing Hunt’s words, Hunt takes the mic backed by Kilgour. Nick Bollinger checks out the result.
Introducing: Pesk
Pesk's Raff and Amee Parker / Photo by Troy Naumoff.
Gig Guide
4–5pm
Anthonie Tonnon live at the Kings Arms
Following the release of Anthonie Tonnon’s latest set, Successor, he took to the road with his newly named band, The Successors, for a 14-date run of shows through the North and South islands. Up last on the tour was a Kings Arms appointment - Radio New Zealand’s Andre Upston was there to capture Tonnon and his road-honed Successors perform live.
Anthonie Tonnon / Photo by Michelle Deiss.
The Sampler: Shilpa Ray – Last Year’s Savage
Nick Bollinger assesses an album from Nick Cave-endorsed New York singer and harmonium player Shilpa Ray.
Mary Ocher
The Moscow born musician and performance artist on standing out and staying fresh.
=PLAYLIST=
2-3pm
Artist: Leno Lovecraft
Song: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Composer: Leno Lovecraft
Album: EP#1
Label: A Low Hum
Charli XCX Interview
Artist: Charli XCX
Song: Break The Rules,
Composer: Aitchison/Steve Mac/Tor E. Hermansen/Mikkel S. Eriksen/Dan Omelio/Magnus August Høiberg
Song: Boom Clap
Composer: Aitchison/P. Berger/Fredrik Berger/Gräslund
Album: Sucker
Label: Atlantic
Artist: Icona Pop
Song: I Love It
Composer: Charlotte Aitchison/ Patrik Berger/ Linus Eklöw
Album: Icona Pop
Label: Ten
Artist: Iggy Azalia
Song: Fancy
Composer: Amethyst Kelly/ Charlotte Aitchison/ George Astasio/ Jason Pebworth/ Jon Shave/ Kurtis McKenzie
Album: The New Classic
Label: Island
Artist: Snoop Dogg
Song: This City
Composer: Calvin Broadus Jr., Kelly Sheehan, Pharrell Williams
Album: Bush
Label: Columbia
A$AP Ferg Interview
Artist: A$AP Ferg ft. Twista
Song: Fergsomnia
Composer: Brown, Carl Terrell Mitchell, Chris Basham, Tashfiqur Patwary, Jeff Washington, Tyree Cinque Simmons
Album: Ferg Forever
Label: ASAP Worldwide
Artist: A$AP Ferg
Song: Didn't Wanna Do That
Composer: Brown, Luis Gonzalez, Parra, Toledano Salinas
Album: Trap Lord
Label: ASAP Worldwide, Polo Grounds, RCA
Artist: A$AP Ferg
Song: Dope Walk, Doe Active
Composer: Brown, Phili
Album: Ferg Forever
Label: ASAP Worldwide
Artist: A$AP Ferg
Song: Perfume
Composer: Darold Brown, Philo$ Cult
Album: Ferg Forever
Label: ASAP Worldwide
Artist: A$AP Ferg ft. A$AP Rocky
Song: Shabba
Composer: Brown, Herschell Gordon Lewis, Rakim Mayers, Curtis Samuel, Matthew Washington
Album: Trap Lord
Label: ASAP Worldwide, Polo Grounds, RCA
Artist: A$AP Ferg
Song: Talk It
Composer: Brown, Volpe
Album: Ferg Forever
Label: ASAP Worldwide
Artist: A$AP Ferg
Song: Let It Go
Composer: Darold Brown, Vaquan Wilkins
Album: Trap Lord
Label: ASAP Worldwide, Polo Grounds, RCA
Artist: A$AP Ferg ft. Tinashe
Song: Thug Cry
Composer: Brown, Tinashe Kachingwe, Michael Williams, Mike Will Made It
Album: Ferg Forever
Label: ASAP Worldwide
Artist: Heavy
Song: Kush Mansion ft. L*V*J*
Composer: R. Nabhani, L. Dargaville E. Alfaro
Album: Lock In
Label: Heavy
Artist: She's So Rad
Song: Kick Out Of Life
Composer: Toy, Sami
Album: Tango
Label:
Strange Harvest Interview
Artist: Strange Harvest
Song: Colonies
Composer: Strange Harvest
Album: Pattern Recognition
Label:
Artist: Strange Harvest
Song: The Sky Is On Fire
Composer: Strange Harvest
Album: Here Is Where You Are
Label: Lil Paisley
Artist: Strange Harvest
Song: Dominican, Astronaut
Composer: Strange Harvest
Album: Pattern Recognition
Label:
3-4pm
Princess Chelsea Interview
Artist: Princess Chelsea
Song: Too Many People, We Are Very Happy, No Church On Sunday, We’re So Lost
Composer: Chelsea Nikkel
Album: The Great Cybernetic Depression
Label: Lil Chief/ Flying Nun
Artist: Chronixx
Song: Spirulina
Composer: Chronixx
Album: Dread And Terrible
Label: Chronixx Music
Terror Of The Deep Interview
Artist: Terror of the Deep
Songs: Into the Unknown, When the Planets Align, The Asteroid Belt, Uranus, Neptune, Into the Unknown (Reprise)
Composer: Dixon, Daymond (The Asteroid Belt)
Album: Space Epic
Label: Private
The Sampler: Sam Hunt & David Kilgour and the Heavy 8s - The 9th
Artist: Sam Hunt with David Kilgour & the Heavy 8s
Songs: Rainbows & A Promise Of Snow, Wavesong, A New Plateau Song, When Morning Comes
Composer: Hunt/Kilgour/Heavy 8s
Songs; Jerusalem Blues, The Gunner’s Lament
Composer: Baxter/Kilgour/Heavy 8s
Album: The 9th
Label: Bandit King
Introducing: Pesk
Artist: Pesk
Songs: Tyranny
Composer: Pesk
Album: Single
Label: Pesk
Gig Guide
Artist: Spandau Ballet
Song: True
Composer: Kemp
Album: Once More
Label: Mercury
Artist: Roni Size and Reprazent
Song: Brown Paper Bag
Composer: Size
Album: New Forms
Label: Talkin' Loud
4-5pm
Anthonie Tonnon LIVE At the King's Arms
Artist: Anthonie Tonnon
Song: The Best Ever Death Metal Band In Denton
Composer: The Mountain Goats
Album: RNZ Music Recording
Label: RNZ Music Recording
Artist: Anthonie Tonnon
Song: Railway Lines, Water Underground, Bird Brains, Marion Bates Reality
Composer: A. Tonnon
Album: RNZ Music Recording
Label: RNZ Music Recording
The Sampler: Shilpa Ray- Last Year's Savage
Artist: Shilpa Ray
Songs: Burning Bride, Pop Song For Euthanasia, Shilpa Ray On Broadway, Johnny Thunders Fantasy Space Camp, Sanitary I-Pad, Moksha, Hymn
Composer:
Album: Last year's Savage
Label: Northern Spy
Interview: Mary Ocher
Artist: Mary Ocher
Song: Rules, Guidelines and The Law, The Sound of War,
Composer: Ocher
Album: War Songs
Label:
Artist: Mary Ocher
Song: I Am A Tree (Don't Trust Your Government)
Composer: Ocher
Album:
Label:
Artist: Mary Ocher
Song: On The Streets of Hard Labour
Composer: Ocher
Album: War Songs
Label:
Artist: Mary Ocher
Song: Kill The Messanger (por favor)
Composer: Ocher
Album:The Fictional Biography of Mary Ocher. The Home Recordings Vol. 1
Label:
Artist: Paperghost
Song: The Once Great City Now Cannibalising Its Smaller Buildings
Composer: Paperghost
Album: Signal Fingers
Label: Sonorous Circle
===5:11 PM. | Focus on Politics===
=DESCRIPTION=
Analysis of significant political issues presented by Radio New Zealand's parliamentary reporting team (RNZ)
===5:45 PM. | Tagata o te Moana===
=DESCRIPTION=
Pacific news, features, interviews and music (RNZ)
===6:06 PM. | Great Encounters===
=DESCRIPTION=
In-depth interviews selected from Radio New Zealand National's feature programmes during the week (RNZ)
===7:06 PM. | Saturday Night===
=DESCRIPTION=
An evening of requests, nostalgia and musical memories (RNZ)
=AUDIO=
=SHOW NOTES=
7pm – 8pm
Paul Robeson - John Brown’s Body
Harry Lauder - Keep Right On To The End Of The Road
Gil Dech - The Robin’s Return
Foster & Allen - I Will Love You All My Life
Judy Garland & Johnny Mercer - Friendship
Maureen Kingi with The Harrison Triplets, Ivor Fisher & The Satellites - Last date
Kiri Te Kanawa - O Mio Babbino Caro
Fats Waller - 12th Street Rag
Pink Turtle - Money, Money, Money
Bernard Cribbins - Right Said Fred
Malvina Reynolds - Little Boxes
Hayley Westenra - Bright Eyes
Burl Ives - On Top Of Old Smokey
Bing Crosby & Mary Martin - Lily Of Laguna
Being There - Adam Saunders & Mark Cousins
Buddy Knox - Hula Love
8pm – 9pm
Fred Astaire - Cheek To Cheek
Peter Posa - White Rabbit
Julie Andrews - The Sound Of Music
The cast Of The Beautiful Game - God's Own Country
The Carter Family - Are You Tired Of Me My Darling
Andy Stewart - A Scottish Soldier
Kathy Kirby - Secret Love
Slade - Far Far Away
Billy Paul - Me & Mrs Jones
Crosby Stills Nash & Young - Our House
Ray Davies and The Crouch End Festival Choir - Waterloo Sunset
The Animals - Let The Good Times Roll
Hot Chocolate - Emma
Samantha Barks - On My Own
George Jones - She Thinks I Still Care
9pm – 10pm
Robert Johnson - Cross Road Blues
Johnny Mathis - The Twelfth Of Never
Gravel Road - Ralph’s Story
Ronan Keating - Somebody Else
Engelbert Humperdinck - The Last Waltz
B A Robertson - The Living Years
Nick Lowe - I Read A Lot
Bobby Bare - Detroit City
Johnny Mercer - Midnight Sun
Takeshi Teriachu - Caravan
Kate Bush - Wuthering Heights
10pm – 11pm
Donovan - Sunshine Superman
ELO - Mr Blue Sky
The Motels - Total Control
Tierney Sutton - What A Little Moonlight Will Do
Gillian Welch - Elvis Presley Blues
Al Kooper - Salmon Falls
Paul Kantner Jefferson Starship - Have You Seen The Stars Tonite
Robert Palmer - Pressure Drop
The Neville Brothers - Doo Wop Medley
11pm – Midnight
Stornoway - Get Low
Eric Clapton and J J Cale - Danger
Darius Rucker - Baby I'm Right
Boz Scaggs and Lucinda WIlliams - Whispering Pines
Boz Scaggs and Bonnie Raitt - Hell To Pay
Stornoway - Josephine
Dwight Yoakam - A Man Of Constant Sorrow
Boz Scaggs - Last Tango On 16th Street
Stornoway - When You're Feeling Gentle
Eric Clapton and J J Cale - Ride The River
Jeff Beck - People Get Ready