Radio New Zealand National. 2015-06-06. 00:00-23:59.

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2015
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274353
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Rights Information
Year
2015
Reference
274353
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online

This content is for private viewing only. The material may not always be available for supply.
Click for more information on rights and requesting.

Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Duration
24:00:00
Broadcast Date
06 Jun 2015
Credits
RNZ Collection
Radio New Zealand National, Broadcaster

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

06 June 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 Live (RNZ); 3:05 Between the Lines, written and read by Elisabeth Easther (F, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC); 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)

===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 Between the Lines, written and read by Elisabeth Easther (F, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC) 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)

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

Lost At Sea, by Susan Devereux, told by Claire Dougan; The Fish Shop Fire, by Robin Nathan, told by Michael Haigh; The Check Shirt Bird, by David Somerset, told by Peter Vere-Jones; Nuku's Ghost, by Glenys Syrett, told by Dick Weir; The Hodja and the Judge, by David Somerset, told by Fiona Samuel; Climbing The Vine, by Apirana Taylor, told by Miriama Ketu, Apirana Taylor and Ella Marsh (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=

08:15
Dave Goulson: bumblebees and flowers
BODY:
Professor of biology at the University of Sussex, founder of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust, and author of A Sting in the Tale, and A Buzz in the Meadow.
EXTENDED BODY:

Dave Goulson is a professor of biology at the University of Sussex and the founder of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust.
His first book, A Sting in the Tale (2013), looked at the decline of the short-haired bumblebee population in the UK. It has been followed by A Buzz in the Meadow (Jonathan Cape), which tells how Goulson transformed a rundown farm in France into a place where wild bees and other insects thrive.
Dave Goulson talks to Kim Hill about an unsuccessful project to repatriate short-haired bumblebees from New Zealand to the UK and other buzzy stuff.
Related stories

The Backyard Bee Team - How to set up beehives at home with the This Way Up team.
Bumble bees export - New Zealand bumble bees sent on rescue mission to bring their UK cousins back from the brink of extinction.

Bees found to be attracted by certain flowers - Gardeners can attract bumble bees by growing red flowers and flowers with stripes.
Bumblebee vs. honey bee - Dr Nigel Raine speaks about the differences between honey bees and bumble bees and the navigational systems they use.

Topics: author interview, environment, farming, food, health, history, rural, science
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: bees, pesticides, bumblebees
Duration: 48'15"

09:05
Vincent O'Sullivan: poets and poetry
BODY:
Dunedin novelist, biographer, playwright, short story writer, and New Zealand Poet Laureate, whose new collection, Being Here: Selected Poems, covers the range of his poetry from 1973 to new work published for the first time.
Topics: arts, author interview, books, history, language
Regions: Auckland Region, Waikato, Wellington Region, Otago
Tags: poetry, WW1, Allen Curnow, Anton Chekhov, Philip Larkin, Robert Graves, WH Auden, Ernest Dowson, Alexander Aitken, Rupert Brooke
Duration: 48'03"

10:05
Playing Favourites with Neil Ieremia
BODY:
Founder, CEO and artistic director of the dance company Black Grace, which celebrates its 20-year anniversary this year. He has choreographed and designed a new work, Passchendaele, for the Royal New Zealand Ballet.
Topics: arts, life and society, music, te ao Māori
Regions: Wellington Region, Southland
Tags: dance
Duration: 53'04"

11:05
Dame Margaret Sparrow: contraception history
BODY:
One of New Zealand's leading sexual health doctors and birth control advocates, who donated most of her collection of nearly 1000 contraceptive devices to Te Papa Tongarewa; selected items are on display in a new exhibition.
EXTENDED BODY:

Dame Margaret Sparrow is one of New Zealand’s leading sexual health doctors and birth control advocates. She pioneered contraception and abortion services for students in Wellington, established a low-cost vasectomy clinic at Family Planning and was one of the first doctors to prescribe the emergency contraceptive pill.
Most of her collection of nearly 1000 contraceptive devices was donated to Te Papa Tongarewa in 2011, and selected items from the collection are on display in the exhibition Contraception: Uncovering the Collection of Dame Margaret Sparrow (on until January 2016).
Kim Hill talks to Dame Margaret Sparrow about her life's work.
From condoms to consumer rights
Dame Margaret Sparrow talks about her work
Topics: education, health, history, law, politics
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: sex, contraception, abortion
Duration: 24'29"

11:30
Peter McKenzie: debating
BODY:
Year 12 student at Scots College, member of the Wellington team that won the 2015 Russell McVeagh New Zealand Schools' Debating Championships, and member of the team representing New Zealand at the 2015 World Schools Debating Championship in Singapore.
Topics: education, language, media, politics
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: debating, Shortland Street
Duration: 9'17"

11:45
Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins: The Scream
BODY:
District Court Judge, and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group, with a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces. He discusses the two thefts of two versions of Edvard Munch's The Scream from two different museums in Oslo.
EXTENDED BODY:

The Scream, by Edvard Munch. This version, executed in 1910 in tempera on cardboard, was stolen from the Munch Museum in 2004, and recovered in 2006.
District Court Judge and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group, Arthur Tompkins discusses the two thefts of two versions of Edvard Munch's The Scream from two different museums in Oslo.
Topics: arts, crime, history
Regions:
Tags: Edvard Munch
Duration: 13'26"

11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 6 June 2015
BODY:
Kim Hill reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of 6 June.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: butchers, bees
Duration: 7'12"

=SHOW NOTES=

8:15 Dave Goulson: bees and flowers
Dave Goulson is a professor of biology at the University of Sussex and the founder of the Bumblebee Conservation Trust. His first book, A Sting in the Tale (2013), looked at the decline of the short-haired bumblebee population in the UK. It has been followed by A Buzz in the Meadow (Jonathan Cape), which tells how Goulson transformed a rundown farm in France into a place where wild bees and other insects thrive.
9:05 Vincent O’Sullivan: selected writings
Vincent O’Sullivan is a Dunedin novelist, biographer, playwright, short story writer, and New Zealand Poet Laureate. He is joint editor of the five-volume Letters of Katherine Mansfield (Oxford University Press), and has edited a number of anthologies. His new collection, Being Here: Selected Poems (VUP), covers the range of his poetry from 1973 to new work published for the first time. He is currently in the United Kingdom, as a guest writer at the 2015 Australia and New Zealand Festival of Literature & Arts. His new opera with composer Ross Harris, Brass Poppies, will debut at the New Zealand Festival in 2016.
10:05 Playing Favourites with Neil Ieremia
Neil Ieremia is the founder, CEO and artistic director of the dance company Black Grace, which celebrates its 20-year anniversary this year. He has choreographed and designed a new work, Passchendaele, performed to a score by New Zealand Army Band composer Dwayne Bloomfield by dancers of the Royal New Zealand Ballet. It is one of four dance works in Salute, a special Royal New Zealand Ballet programme remembering the First Word War, which is on a nationwide tour, and still to play at Hamilton Founder’s Theatre (10 June), Takapuna Bruce Mason Centre (13-14 June), Auckland ASB Theatre (17 -20 June), and Napier Municipal Theatre (24-25 June).
Photo: Kristian Frires for Urbis
11:05 Margaret Sparrow: contraception history
Dame Margaret Sparrow is one of New Zealand’s leading sexual health doctors and birth control advocates. She pioneered contraception and abortion services for students in Wellington, established a low-cost vasectomy clinic at Family Planning., and was one of the first doctors to prescribe the emergency contraceptive pill. Most of her collection of nearly 1000 contraceptive devices was donated to Te Papa Tongarewa in 2011, and selected items from the collection are on display in the exhibition Contraception: Uncovering the Collection of Dame Margaret Sparrow (at Te Papa to January 2016).

11:30 Peter McKenzie: debating
Peter McKenzie is a Year 12 student at Scots College in Wellington, and a member of the Wellington Black team that won last month’s Russell McVeagh New Zealand Schools' Debating Championships. He and one of his two Wellington teammates will be part of the five-student team representing New Zealand at the 2015 World Schools Debating Championship in Singapore in July.

11:45 Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins: The Scream
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 two thefts of two versions of Edvard Munch's The Scream from two different museums in Oslo.

This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Associate producer: William Ray
Wellington engineer: Carol Jones
Auckland engineer: Tony Stamp
Research by Infofind

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: Yo-Yo Ma and Bobby McFerrin
Song: Flight of the Bumblebee
Album: Hush
Label: Sony, 1992
Broadcast: 9:05
Artist: The New Zealand Army Band
Song: Passchendaele
Composer: Dwayne Bloomfield
Recorded by Radio New Zealand for the Royal New Zealand Ballet production of Salute, 2015
Broadcast: 10:20
Artist: Bill Withers
Song: Grandma's Hands
Album: Just As I Am
Label: Sussex, 1971
Broadcast: 10:30
Artist: The Estonian National Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Paavo Järvi
Song: Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten
Composer: Arvo Pärt
Album: The Best of Arvo Pärt
Label: EMI, 2002
Broadcast: 10:45
Artist: D'Angelo
Song: Devils Pie
Album: Voodoo
Label: EMI, 1999
Broadcast: 10:55
Artist: Ron Ragin and the Soweto Gospel Choir with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Lucas Richman
Song: Baba Yetu
Album: Christopher Tin – Calling All Dawns: A Song Cycle
Label: Tin Works, 2009
Broadcast: 11:30

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

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

=AUDIO=

12:15
Tech: Google Photos
BODY:
Peter Griffin reviews Google Photos, the relaunched photo app challenging iPhoto and Flickr.
EXTENDED BODY:
Google Photos is a newly launched photo storage, search and management tool to rival the likes of Flickr and Apple's iPhoto.
It's free, easy to use, and boasts sophisticated photo recognition software to search and sort you photos by subject matter.
But could there be a catch? In particular, how much of your privacy are you giving up when you use this new photo storage and back up service?
This Way Up's technology correspondent Peter Griffin reviews Google Photos.
Links

The Google Photos Moment | Gizmodo Australia
The Pogue Review: Flickr vs. Google Photos - Which Free Photo App Is Better?
Apple Photos vs Google Photos comparison - Review - Macworld UK
Tossed all your snaps into the new Google Photos? You read the terms, right? ... RIGHT? The Register

Topics: technology
Regions:
Tags: photos, Google, Apple, Flickr, cloud computing, storage
Duration: 12'19"

12:25
Recycling prosthetics
BODY:
Janette Searle runs Take My Hands, a charity recycling prosthetic limbs and other medical equipment and sending them to the Pacific and Asia.
EXTENDED BODY:
Across New Zealand we dump the equivalent of about 60,000 boxes of used medical equipment into the landfill.
That's according to Janette Searle, the founder of Take My Hands, a charity that collects and redistributes artificial limbs, orthotics, and other medical equipment to people in need across Asia and the Pacific.
Not only is she getting support from generous donors but she's also harnessing spare capacity in the transport network. So far she's managed to get 1500 kgs of useable medical gear to people in need in three different countries for just a few hundred dollars.
Topics: international aid and development, health, Pacific, disability
Regions:
Tags: medical equipment, prosthetics, adaptive technology
Duration: 13'26"

12:40
Naked Science: viral CV
BODY:
Dr Chris Smith of The Naked Scientists on the development of a 'viral CV' that charts all the viruses you've been exposed to over your lifetime.
EXTENDED BODY:
Scientists can now work out all the viruses you've been exposed to over your lifetime.
The resulting 'viral CV' could be used to show how infections interact and be linked to specific diseases, or protect us from other diseases like cancer or asthma.
Dr Chris Smith of The Naked Scientists told This Way Up's Simon Morton that humans can succumb to many viral infections during their lives. Although the majority of these viruses are transient and cleared by the immune system, they could still have a lasting health legacy and alter the risk that a person will develop certain diseases later in life.
Harvard scientist Stephen Elledge and his colleagues, writing in the journal Science, have devised a test that can 'read' the immune memory to reveal all of the viral infections a person has encountered.
Topics: science, health
Regions:
Tags: viruses, genetics
Duration: 9'47"

12:50
Betablockers
BODY:
John Ashton of the University of Otago looks at betablockers, a commonly prescribed class of drug used to treat everything from high blood pressure to migraines and glaucoma.
EXTENDED BODY:
John Ashton of the University of Otago looks at betablockers, a commonly prescribed class of drug used to treat everything from high blood pressure to migraines and glaucoma.
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: drugs, medicine, betablockers
Duration: 9'39"

13:10
Using spider silk for knee replacements
BODY:
Nick Skaer is the CEO of Orthox, a British company trying to cope with the surge in knee replacement surgery by using regenerative silk implants based on the silks spun by silkworms and spiders.
EXTENDED BODY:
Like it or not we're getting older, and fatter too; that's bad news for our knee joints that are giving up on us like never before.
Nick Skaer is the CEO of Orthox, a British company trying to cope with the surge in knee replacement surgery by using regenerative silk implants based on the silks spun by silkworms and spiders.
Topics: health, science
Regions:
Tags: surgery, knee replacements, silk
Duration: 12'12"

13:25
Social enterprise coffee
BODY:
Wellington has its first 'social enterprise' coffee bar. With barista trainer and cafe manager Kirk Hodgson and Georgia Leigh-Hudson from Stories Espresso Bar. Also Zeal social enterprise developer Scottie Reeve and course coordinator Henare McLuskie-Kaa. And budding baristas Jordan Quain, Josie Sharman, Jozafina Gloria and Kaea Kerkin.
EXTENDED BODY:
Wellington has just got its first 'social enterprise' coffee bar. We find out what that means with the young baristas getting a leg up for a career pouring our espressos.
Topics: education, business
Regions:
Tags: training, youth, coffee
Duration: 11'49"

13:40
Your inner ecosystem
BODY:
In his book 'I, Superorganism' (Icon Books) the science writer Jon Turney goes on a journey through our inner ecosystem. On the way he he finds out there's lots to love about the hidden microbial communities we play host to.
EXTENDED BODY:
The microscope gave humans our first glimpse into the hidden world of microbes. Then along came germ theory, and war was declared against these invisible organisms.
Fast forward to today and we're starting to realise how much we need bacteria and yeast to stay healthy; they could even be important to our mood and mental health.
In his book I, Superorganism (Icon Books) the science writer Jon Turney goes on a journey through our inner ecosystem. On the way he finds out there's lots to love about our the hidden microbial communities we play host to.
Topics: author interview, health, science
Regions:
Tags: microbes, bacteria
Duration: 21'41"

=SHOW NOTES=

Quick hits
12:15 Tech: Google Photos
12:25 Recycling prosthetics
12:35 Naked Science: viral CV
12:50 Betablockers
13:10 Replacing knees using spider silk
13:25 Social enterprise coffee
13:40 Your inner ecosystem
The small print
At 12:15pm, technology news with Peter Griffin and Google launches a new photo app to challenge iPhoto and Flickr. It's free, easy to use and boasts some pretty kinky photo recognition software to categorise you photos by subject matter. But what about privacy? So how much are you really paying for this snappy new photo storage and back up service?
The Google Photos Moment | Gizmodo Australia
The Pogue Review: Flickr vs. Google Photos - Which Free Photo App Is Better?
Apple Photos vs Google Photos comparison - Review - Macworld UK
Tossed all your snaps into the new Google Photos? You read the terms, right? ... RIGHT? The Register

Then at 12:25pm we meet Janette Searle of Take My Hands, a charity that's recycling prosthetic arms and legs and other medical supplies and sending them to the Pacific and Asia.
At 12:35pm Naked Science with Dr Chris Smith, and scientists can now work out how many viruses you've been exposed to over your whole lifetime. This viral CV could show how infections interact and are linked to specific diseases, or protect us from others like cancer.

And at 12:50pm, beta blockers. Pharmac funded nearly $15 million worth of them in 2014; so what are beta blockers, and why would you want to block a beta anyway?!
After the 1pm news like it or not we're getting older, and fatter too; that's bad news for our knee joints that are giving up on us like never before. Now a British company's trying to cope with the surge in knee replacement surgery, using regenerative silk implants that are based on natural silks spun by silkworms and spiders.
Then at about 1:25pm Wellington has just got its first 'social enterprise' coffee bar. We find out what that means with the young baristas getting a leg up for a career pouring our espressos.

And before we go, at 1:40pm, in his book 'I, Superorganism' (Icon Books) the science writer Jon Turney goes on a journey through our inner ecosystem. On the way he he finds out there's lots to love about our the hidden microbial communities we play host to.
We're playing these tracks too...
Artist: Django Django
Track: First Light
Composers: David Maclean, Thomas Grace, Vincent Neff and Jim Dixon
Album: Born Under Saturn
Label: WARNER 215605
Broadcast: 13:25
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=

23:00
Music 101 Pocket Edition 42
BODY:
Shamir Bailey- living in the shadow of Vegas, Pikachunes on broken hearts and busted elbows and "shorecore" with Racing.
EXTENDED BODY:
In the Music 101 Pocket Edition 42: Shamir Bailey- living in the shadow of Vegas, Pikachunes on broken hearts and busted elbows and "shorecore" with Racing.
Topics: music
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: music podcast, Music 101 podcast, Pocket Edition
Duration: 50'13"

=SHOW NOTES=

2–3pm
Shamir
With a self-penned Twitter bio positioning him as a “musician, comedian, singer, rapper, twerker, chef, writer, filmmaker, tumblr, skinny fat ass”, multitasking Las Vegas, Nevada native Shamir is the latest addition to the XL Recordings roster. He talks to Emma Smith about mashing styles and influences on his first LP, Ratchet.
[image:40557:full]
Pikachunes
Miles G. Loveless releases his second album as Pikachunes this week for free through Vice/Noisey. Samuel Scott catches up Loveless to find out why Allely isn’t for sale and hear about his long, slow recovery from a skateboarding injury that clouded his life and musical career.
[image:40555:full]
3–4pm
Oscar Key Sung
Australian Oscar Key Sung has developed quite a name for himself through collaborations with likes of Ghostpoet, Banoffee and Andras Fox. But how does he work in a solo environment and what kind of emotion goes into the six intimate tracks that appear on his Altruism EP? Zac Arnold catches up with Oscar Key Sung to find out more.
[image:40850:full]
Racing
Auckland four-piece rock’n’roll outfit Racing find their creative nucleus in the partnership between Ed Knowles and Sven Pettersen, the North Shore schoolmates turned bandmates who came up in blues-driven rhythm’n’blues band, The Checks. With the release of Racing’s EP debut, Knowles and Pettersen tell us about their festival-ready batch of songs.
[image:40569:full]
Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Wellington punk rock trio Hollywoodfun Downstairs recently released their second album, Reactions, recorded in Wellington and mastered in New York by famed studio wizard Alan Douches. Craig Hayes catches up with the band to find out about their all-important New York connection and the meaning behind their mischievous moniker.
[image:40720:full]
Introducing: Mr Amish
[image:40634:full]
Gig Guide
4–5pm
Secret Life of Stolen Instruments
The relationship between a musician and their instrument is intimate, to the point where it is often described as an extension of their own bodies. But what happens when that bond is broken and the instrument is stolen? Zac Arnold investigates the alliance musicians have with their instruments and the grim emotional toll when they are forced apart.
[image:40849:full]
Bill Morris
Dunedin’s Bill Morris was nominated for the APRA Best Country Music Song at this year’s Country Music Awards for ‘Hinterland’. He checks in from the Chatham Islands to talk to Music 101 about the characters and daydreams that make up his modern folk songs.
The Sampler: Eliza Carthy and Tim Eriksen – Bottle
Nick Bollinger reviews a set of trans-Atlantic folksongs from Eliza Carthy and Tim Eriksen.

=PLAYLIST=

2-3pm
Artist: Career Girls
Song: Down (Still Hard)
Composer: L. Goodwin
Album: Still Hard
Label: Kerosene Comic Book

Interview: Shamir
Artist: Shamir
Songs: Vegas, On The Regular, Call It Off, Make A Scene
Composer: Bailey, Sylvester
Album: Ratchet
Label: XL Recordings

Artist: Peaches
Song: Boys Wanna Be Her
Composer: Peaches
Album: Impeach My Bush
Label: XL Recordings

Artist: The Internet
Song: Special Affair
Composer: S. Bennett, M. Martin
Album: Ego Death
Label: Odd Future Records

Interview: Pikachunes
Artist: Pikachunes
Song: Intro
Composer: Miles G. Loveless
Album: Allely
Label: Self released

Artist: Pikachunes
Song: Writers Block
Composer: Miles G. Loveless
Album: Allely
Label: Self released

Artist: Pikachunes
Song: Just A Boy
Composer: Miles G. Loveless
Album: Pikachunes
Label: Self released

Artist: Pikachunes
Song: Had To Go
Composer: Miles G. Loveless
Album: Allely
Label: Self released
Show more

Artist: Tokimonsta
Song: Rella ft. Anderson Paak
Composer: Tokimonsta
Album: Desiderium
Label: Young Art Records

Artist: Holly Herndon
Song: Morning Sun
Composer: H. Herndon
Album: Platform
Label: 4AD

Artist: Beirut
Song: No No No
Composer: Z. Condon
Album: No No No
Label: 4AD

3-4pm

Interview: Oscar Key Sun
Artist: Oscar Key Sung
Song: Altruism
Composer: Oscar Key Sung
Album: Altruism
Label: Warner Music Australia Pty. Limited

Artist: Oscar Key Sung
Song: Skip
Composer: Oscar Key Sung
Album: Altruism
Label: Warner Music Australia Pty. Limited

Artist: Oscar Key Sung
Song: Brush
Composer: Oscar Key Sung
Album: Altruism
Label: Warner Music Australia Pty. Limited

Artist: Oscar Key Sung
Song: Light
Composer: Oscar Key Sung
Album: Altruism
Label: Warner Music Australia Pty. Limited

Artist: Dudley Benson
Song: Muscles
Composer: D. Benson
Album: Zealandia
Label: Dudley Benson
Artist: Birdation
Song: Alison 3-0-
Composer: H. Roberston
Album: Birdation single
Label: Birdation

Interview: Racing
Artist: The Checks
Song: Candyman Shimmer
Composer:
Album: Deadly Summer Sway
Label: Full Time Hobby, Pie Club Records

Artist: Racing
Song: Sex in the Summer, All Night Long, Shades of Light
Composer: Racing
Album: Checks EP
Label: Grammarphonic

Artist: Chastity Belt
Song: Drone
Composer: Chastity Belt
Album: Time To Go Home
Label: Hardly Art

Interview: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Artist: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Song: Her Venomous Ways
Composer: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Album: Reactions
Label: Self-released

Artist: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Song: The Postal Service
Composer: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Album: Reactions
Label: Self-released

Artist: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Song: Maxine Caffine
Composer: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Album: Reactions
Label: Self-released

Artist: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Song: Ice Cold Factory
Composer: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Album: Reactions
Label: Self-released

Artist: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Song: Plastic Fascinations
Composer: Hollywoodfun Downstairs
Album: Reactions
Label: Self-released
Introducing: Mr Amish
Artist: Mr Amish
Song: what you've said you've seen
Composer: H. Kyle
Album: Do you know where to suss? (happiness)
Label: Mr Amish

4-5pm
The Secret Life of Stolen Instruments
Artist: Cheats
Song: Bugs
Composer: L. Goodwin
Album: Come Back Here!
Label: Cheats

Artist: Cheats
Song: Leave To Get A Living
Composer: L. Goodwin
Album: Come Back Here!
Label: Cheats

Artist: The Admiral
Song: Hangin' Around
Composer: S. Ralston, M. Rapley,
Album: Tramadol Knights
Label: The Admiral

Artist: Don McGlashan
Song: Lucky Stars
Composer: Don McGlashan
Album: Lucky Stars
Label: Don McGlashan

Artist: Yumi Zouma
Song: Catastrophe
Composer: Yumi Zouma
Album: EP II
Label: Cascine

Artist: Cheats
Song: Peach Pit
Composer: L. Goodwin
Album: Come Back Here!
Label: Cheats

Artist: Placebo
Song: Teenage Angst
Composer: B. Molko
Album: Placebo
Label: Elevator Music

Artist: Don McGlashan
Song: Girl, Make Up Your Own Mind
Composer: Don McGlashan
Album: Lucky Stars
Label: Don McGlashan
Artist: Ngahiwi Apanui
Song: Wharikihia
Composer: Apanui
Album: E Tau Nei
Label: Jayrem

Interview: Bill Morris- Hinterland
Artist: Bill Morris
Song: House By The Highway, Gold Light (In The Palms Of My Hands), Remnants of Ruminants, Hinterland
Composer: Morris
Album: Hinterland
Label: self

Artist: San Fermin
Song: The Woods
Composer: San Fermin
Album: Jackrabbit
Label: Downtown

The Sampler: Eliza Carthy and Tim Eriksen
Artist: Eliza Carthy and Tim Eriksen
Songs: Prodigal Son,Buffalo, Cats and Dogs, Castles By The Sea, Sweet Susan, The Traveller
Composer: Trad Arr Carthy, Eriksen
Album: Bottle
Label: Hem Hem

===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
Dean Martin- Everybody Loves Somebody
North Wales Association Of Male Voice Choirs - Land Of My Fathers
Academy & Chorus Of St Martin In The Fields/Neville Marriner - Hallelujah Chorus
Henry Hall - Teddy Bears Picnic
Stanley Holloway - Old Sam: Pick Oop Tha’ Musket
Paul Robeson - Mah Lindy Lou
Tennessee Ernie Ford - Mule Train
Cassandra Wilson - Crazy He Calls Me
Andy Stewart - Dr Finlay
Kenny Ball - Bourbon St Parade
Peggy Lee & Mel Torme - The Old Master Painter
Amy Winehouse - Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow
The Andrews Sisters - Rum & Coca-Cola
Van Morrison and George Benson - Higher Than The World

8pm – 9pm
Anne Shelton- Coming In On A Wing & A Prayer
The Rumour - L’amour Est L’enfant De La Liberte
Marilyn Monroe - Diamond Are A Girl's Best Friend
Elvis Presley - Blue Suede Shoes
The Four Lads - Put A Light In The Window
Aaron Neville featuring Chris Botti - Rainy Night In Georgia
Terry Scott - My Brother
Cliff Richard - Bachelor Boy
Shangri-Las - Leader Of The Pack
The Dtergents - Leader Of The Laundromat
Rosemary Clooney - When October Goes
Pat Boone - September Song
Stevie Wonder - I Just Called To Say I Love You
Fleetwood Mac - Albatross
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band - Opus 36

9pm – 10pm
Tom Jones - Tower Of Song
Brooke Fraser - Something In The Water
Johnny Horton - North To Alaska
Art Garfunkel - Perfect Moment
The Association - Never My Love
Pink Turtle - Nothing From Nothing
Keely Smith - You Go To My Head
Ray Charles - Look What They've Done To My Song Ma
Elvis Costello - Oliver’s Army
Teddy Thompson - Right
Steve Cropper, Pop Staples and Albert King - What'd I Say
Leonard Cohen - Alexandra Leaving

10pm – 11pm
The Four Tops - Baby I Need Your Loving
Peter & The Wolves - Promises
ELO - Hall Of The Mountain King
Van Morrison - Natalia
Tom Waits - I Hope That I Don’t Fall In Love With You
Jimi Hendrix - The Burning Of The Midnight Lamp
Sufjan Stevens - A Free Man In Paris
Jethro Tull - Inside
Gene Clarke - Del Gato

11pm - Midnight
Marlon Williams – I’m Lost Without You
Public Service Broadcasting – The Race For Space
Eilen Jewell – Rio Grande
JD McPherson – Precious
JD McPherson – Let The Good TImes Roll
Dick Rivers – Pas de Vainquer
Richard Thompson – She Never Could Resist A Winding Road
The Gloaming – The Girl Who Broke My Heart
Marlon Williams – Everyone’s Got Something To Say
Bic Runga - No Crying No More
Danny Gatton – Canadian Sunset
Public Service Broadcasting – Sputnik