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:
04 July 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 The Night I Got My Tucki, by Stephanie Johnson (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 The First Letter, by Stanley Makuwe (RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC); 5:10 Witness (BBC); 5:45 Voices (RNZ)
===6:08 AM. | Storytime===
=DESCRIPTION=
On Special, by David Hill, told by Roy Ward; The Visits, by Marie Stuttard, told by Alison Wall; Sebastian Sylvester Stallone, by Janice Leitch, told by Timothy Balme; Northwood, by Brian Falkner, told by Fiona Samuel; Tu Brightson, by Liebchen Tamahori, told by Kelly Tikao; Cowboys and Indians, by Norman Bilbrough, told by Jim Moriarty (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
Tim Smit: Out of Eden
BODY:
Executive Vice-Chairman and co-founder of the award-winning horticulture and architecture Eden Project in Cornwall, which has had 16 million visitors since 2000. He is visiting Christchurch with a view to establishing an Eden there.
EXTENDED BODY:
Sir Tim Smit KBE is executive vice-chairman and co-founder of the award-winning Eden Project near St Austell in Cornwall.
Since it opened to the public in 2000, it has contributed over £1 billion to the Cornish economy, with over 16 million people visiting a former clay pit turned into a cradle of life, containing world-class horticulture and startling architecture symbolic of human endeavour.
Sir Tim is visiting Christchurch with a view to establishing an Eden in the Garden City. He talks to Noelle McCarthy.
Related stories
Kennedy Warne on The Christchurch Eden Project proposal, among other things.
Topics: business, economy, environment, Canterbury earthquakes, history, housing, politics, science, te ao Māori, technology
Regions: Canterbury
Tags:
Duration: 46'04"
09:07
Jennifer Lees-Marshment and Stephen Winter: Magna Carta 800
BODY:
University of Auckland academics involved with the Magna Carta 800 Committee and lecture series.
EXTENDED BODY:
Magna Carta was written by a group of 13th-century barons to protect their rights and property against a tyrannical king. It is concerned with many practical matters and specific grievances relevant to the feudal system under which they lived. The interests of the common man were hardly apparent in the minds of the men who brokered the agreement. But there are two principles expressed in Magna Carta that resonate to this day:
"No freeman shall be taken, imprisoned, disseised, outlawed, banished, or in any way destroyed, nor will We proceed against or prosecute him, except by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land."
"To no one will We sell, to no one will We deny or delay, right or justice."
- From U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
Jennifer Lees-Marshment is an Associate Professor at the University of Auckland, researching the relationship between politicians, government and public opinion, mainly through the field of political marketing, but more recently leadership and government. She has been awarded a £10,000 grant by the UK Government's Magna Carta Trust to create and chair New Zealand's Magna Carta 800 Committee.
Dr Stephen Winter is Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Auckland, and lead organiser of the Magna Carta 800 lecture series. Previously a doctoral student and lecturer at the University of Oxford, his research includes the rule of law and the nature of the state.
Related stories
The 800th anniversary of the signing of Magna Carta
Medievalists gathered at Taupo’s Tongariro domain celebrate the signing of Magna Carta
Professor Guy Standing asks if we need a new charter representing the interests of those facing job insecurity?
The Magna Carta receives 'Memory of the World' status from UNESCO
History lecturer Lindsay Diggelmann on the Magna Carta
The Māori Magna Carta
Topics: history, politics
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags:
Duration: 33'06"
09:40
Gil Hanly: Photographing the Rainbow Warrior
BODY:
Auckland photographer who has been documenting social change for nearly 40 years, and comprehensively recorded events before and after the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland Harbour thirty years ago.
EXTENDED BODY:
Auckland photographer Gil Hanly has been documenting social change, including New Zealand protest movements, for nearly 40 years.
She was a Greenpeace photographer at the time of the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior by French secret service agents in Auckland Harbour 30 years ago, and comprehensively recorded the lead up to the bombing and its aftermath.
Topics: history, politics, te ao Māori
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: gardening, Springbok Tour, Rainbow Warrior, photography
Duration: 18'58"
10:08
Playing Favourites with Lance O'Sullivan
BODY:
GP based in Kaitaia, Northland, and author of new memoir The Good Doctor, whose work in healthcare delivery has seen him acknowledged as a Sir Peter Blake Emerging Leader, Public Health Association Public Health Champion, Māori of the Year and Kiwibank New Zealander of the Year.
EXTENDED BODY:
Dr Lance O'Sullivan. Photograph: Jane Ussher.
Dr Lance O'Sullivan (Te Rarawa, Ngati Hau, Ngati Maru) is a GP based in Kaitaia, Northland, and the founder of the Moko Foundation charitable trust.
For his work in healthcare delivery, he has been acknowledged as a Sir Peter Blake Emerging Leader, Public Health Association Public Health Champion, Māori of the Year and, most recently, Kiwibank New Zealander of the Year. In 2014, he was named the second-most trusted New Zealander by Readers Digest. He tells his story in The Good Doctor (Penguin).
Dr Lance O'Sullivan talks to Noelle McCarthy about his love, life and work, and plays some of his favorite songs.
Topics: author interview, economy, education, food, health, housing, Pacific, rural, science, spiritual practices, te ao Māori
Regions: Northland, Auckland Region, Waikato, Canterbury
Tags:
Duration: 51'20"
11:08
Tewodros Melesse: sexual health and contraception
BODY:
Ethioipian economist and Director-General of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, who has been visiting New Zealand to discuss the role of men and boys in ensuring gender equality in the realms of sexual and reproductive health.
EXTENDED BODY:
Tewodros Melesse studied economics at the Catholic University in Louvain, Belgium, and is Director-General of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the second largest NGO in the world, which deals with sexual and reproductive health and rights in 173 countries worldwide.
Born in Ethiopia and based in London, Melesse has over 25 years' experience in family planning and reproductive health, including planning, developing, monitoring, and managing large-scale development and reproductive health programmes in Africa.
He has been visiting New Zealand to discuss the role of men and boys in ensuring gender equality in the realms of sexual and reproductive health, particularly in Pacific nations. He talks to Noelle McCarthy.
Topics: education, health, Pacific, politics, spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: Ethiopia, Zambia, Niger, Africa
Duration: 23'06"
11:30
Martin Edmond: notable emigrants
BODY:
New Zealand author of over 30 publications and screenplays, who has been awarded 2015's $100,000 Michael King Writer's Fellowship, to research and write a biographical study of four largely unknown emigrant New Zealanders who played notable roles in world affairs between 1876 and 2005.
EXTENDED BODY:
New Zealand author Dr Martin Edmond won the 2013 Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in Non-Fiction and is the author of 30 publications and screenplays.
He has been awarded 2015's $100,000 Michael King Writer's Fellowship, which he plans to use to research and write a biographical study of four expat New Zealanders who played notable roles in world affairs between 1876 and 2005 and yet are little-known in their home country. He tells Noelle McCarthy about his plans.
Photograph: Liz Marsh
Topics: books, history, language
Regions:
Tags: communism
Duration: 29'58"
11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 4 July 2015
BODY:
Noelle McCarthy reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of 4 July 2015.
Topics: arts, author interview, books, business, economy, education, environment, Canterbury earthquakes, climate, crime, farming, food, health, history, housing, internet, language, law, life and society, media, money, music, Pacific, politics, refugees and migrants, rural, science, spiritual practices, sport, te ao Māori, technology, transport, weather
Regions: Northland, Auckland Region, Waikato, Bay of Plenty, East Coast, Hawkes Bay, Taranaki, Whanganui, Manawatu, Wellington Region, Nelson Region, Marlborough, Tasman, West Coast, Canterbury, Otago, Southland
Tags:
Duration: 4'10"
=SHOW NOTES=
8:15 Tim Smit: Out of Eden
Sir Tim Smit KBE worked for ten years in the music industry as composer and producer. He is Executive Vice-Chairman and co-founder of the award-winning Eden Project near St Austell in Cornwall. Since it opened to the public in 2000, it has contributed over £1 billion to the Cornish economy, with over 16 million people visiting a former sterile pit turned into a cradle of life, containing world-class horticulture and startling architecture symbolic of human endeavour. Sir Tim is visiting Christchurch with a view to establishing an Eden in the Garden City.
9:05 Jennifer Lees-Marshment and Dr Stephen Winter: Magna Carta 800
Jennifer Lees-Marshment is an Associate Professor at the University of Auckland, researching the relationship between politicians, government and public opinion, mainly through the field of political marketing, but more recently leadership and government. She has been awarded a £10,000 grant by the UK Government's Magna Carta Trust to create and chair New Zealand's Magna Carta 800 Committee. Dr Stephen Winter is Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Auckland, and lead organiser of the Magna Carta 800 lecture series. Previously a doctoral student and lecturer at the University of Oxford, his research includes the rule of law and the nature of the state.
9:40 Gil Hanly: Photographing the Rainbow Warrior
Auckland photographer Gil Hanly has been documenting social change, including New Zealand protest movements, for nearly 40 years. She was a Greenpeace photographer at the time of the sinking of the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland Harbour 30 years ago, and comprehensively recorded the lead up to the bombing, alongside Fernando Pereira, and its aftermath.
[gallery:1247] Photo gallery by Gil Hanly
10:05 Playing Favourites with Lance O'Sullivan
Dr Lance O'Sullivan (Te Rarawa, Ngati Hau, Ngati Maru) is a GP based in Kaitaia, Northland, and the founder of the Moko Foundation charitable trust. For his work in healthcare delivery, he has been acknowledged as a Sir Peter Blake Emerging Leader, Public Health Association Public Health Champion, Māori of the Year and, most recently, Kiwibank New Zealander of the Year. In 2014, he was named the second-most trusted New Zealander by Readers Digest. He tells his story in The Good Doctor (Penguin).
Photograph: Jane Ussher
11:05 Tewodros Melesse: sexual health and contraception in men and boys
Tewodros Melesse studied economics at the Catholic University in Louvain, Belgium, and is Director-General of the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the second largest NGO in the world, which deals with sexual and reproductive health and rights in 173 countries worldwide. Born in Ethiopia and based in London, Melesse has over 25 years' experience in family planning and reproductive health, including planning, developing, monitoring, and managing large-scale development and reproductive health programmes in Africa. He has been visiting New Zealand to discuss the role of men and boys in ensuring gender equality in the realms of sexual and reproductive health, particularly in Pacific nations.
11:45 Martin Edmond: notable ex-pats
New Zealand author Dr Martin Edmond won the 2013 Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in Non-Fiction and is the author of 30 publications and screenplays. He has been awarded 2015's $100,000 Michael King Writer's Fellowship, which he plans to use to research and write a biographical study of four expat New Zealanders who played notable roles in world affairs between 1876 and 2005 and yet are little-known in their home country.
Photograph: Liz Marsh
This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Melanie Phipps
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Brad Warrington
Auckland engineer: Tony Strong
Research by Infofind
=PLAYLIST=
Artist: Talking Heads
Song: (Nothing But) Flowers
Album: Naked
Label: Sire
Broadcast: 8:55
Artist: The Temptations
Song: Lady Soul
Album: Anthology
Label: Motown
Broadcast: 10:15
Artist: Bob Marley
Song: One Love
Album: Legend
Label: Island
Broadcast: 10:30
Artist: Carly Simon
Song: Jesse
Album: Come Upstairs
Label: Warner Bros.
Broadcast: 10:50
===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 4 July 2015: Part 1
BODY:
A vital question- how life on earth began- and a review of Apple Music, the new streaming music service.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 49'15"
12:15
The Vital Question
BODY:
How did life begin? That's 'The Vital Question' biochemist Nick Lane poses in his new book.
EXTENDED BODY:
Have you ever wondered how life here on planet earth began?
Did multi-cellular organisms somehow emerge and evolve from the 'primordial soup'? Or were seeds from outer space, an asteroid or lightning strike, or the benign presence of some superior being involved in some way?
A biochemist at University College London, Nick Lane, ponders the mysteries of human evolution in his book The Vital Question - Why is Life the Way it Is?
He's intrigued by how and why complex life only arose once in four billion years, and he argues that electrical energy could provide the key to finding an answer.
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags: evolution, biochemistry, biology
Duration: 28'13"
12:45
Tech: Apple Music review
BODY:
We review Apple's new music streaming service Apple Music with tech correspondent Peter Griffin.
EXTENDED BODY:
Apple launched Apple Music this week along with Beats1 radio. It enters a crowded marketplace with Google, Tidal, RDIO, Pandora and Spotify all wanting your cash for music.
How does Apple's new offering stack up? We look at some of the pros and cons for consumers and music lovers.
Link
How to easily cancel your Apple Music subscription
Topics: technology, internet, media
Regions:
Tags: music, radio, streaming, Apple
Duration: 15'15"
13:01
This Way Up 4 July 2015: Part 2
BODY:
Early antibiotic use and obesity, kombucha and sleeping pills.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 51'45"
13:10
Antibiotics and obesity
BODY:
Dr Chris Smith of the Naked Scientists. Do women change colour when they ovulate? Also could antibiotic use in childhood be making us heavier in later life?
EXTENDED BODY:
Dr Chris Smith of the Naked Scientists with the latest science headlines from around the globe.
This week, how women change colour when they ovulate. Also could antibiotic use in childhood be contributing to obesity in later life?
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags: biology, ovulation, antibiotics, obesity
Duration: 6'53"
13:20
Kombucha
BODY:
Jo Bind of Wabi O Kombucha makes kombucha in Christchurch. It's a drink made from tea, sugar, bacteria and yeast, that's riding the wave of popular enthusiasm for all things fermented.
EXTENDED BODY:
Kombucha is a fermented drink made with tea, sugar, and a starter colony of bacteria and yeast called a SCOBY.
The slightly fizzy, acidic beverage has been around for thousands of years. But a recent wave of interest in fermented foods and home food production means that kombucha's experiencing a bit of a resurgence.
Images courtesy of Wabi O Kombucha.
Jo Bind of Wabi O Kombucha is making kombucha in Christchurch. He showed This Way Up's Simon Morton how it's done and shows us his symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast.
How to brew your own kombucha
Topics: food
Regions:
Tags: kombucha
Duration: 26'48"
13:45
Zopiclone
BODY:
Zopiclone is one of New Zealand's most commonly prescribed drugs. John Ashton of the Otago School of Medical Sciences tells us what it's used for.
EXTENDED BODY:
Zopiclone is "a cyclopyrrolone derivative...a short-acting hypnotic" that acts as a "hypnotic, sedative, anixolytic, anti-convulsant and muscle-relaxant"; at least that's what it says on the packet!
Prescriptions for this little blue pill have more than doubled since 2000. Today more than 500,000 scripts for zopiclone are handed out every year, making it one of New Zealand's most-prescribed medicines.
John Ashton is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology at the Otago School of Medical Sciences. He looks at what zopiclone does, how it works, why you'd be taking it, and why there are concerns over its use and overuse.
Links
Overuse of benzodiazepines: still an issue?
Zopiclone and next-day impairment
Topics: health
Regions:
Tags: medicine, sleeping pills, zopiclone
Duration: 13'18"
=SHOW NOTES=
Quick hits
12:15 The Vital Question
12:45 Tech: Apple Music review
13:10 Antibiotics and obesity
13:20 Kombucha
13:50 Zopiclone
The small print
At 12:15pm, how did life begin? That's 'The Vital Question' Nick Lane' asks in his new book. Nick's a biochemist at University College London and he reckons it's all electrical rather than something to do with life starting in a primordial soup.
Then at 12:45pm technology news with Peter Griffin, and this week Apple launched Apple Music along with Beats1 radio. It enters a crowded marketplace with Google, Tidal, RDIO, Pandora and Spotify all wanting your cash for music. So how does Apple's new offering stack up? We look at some of the pros and cons for consumers and music lovers. How to easily cancel your Apple Music subscription.
At 1:10pm Dr Chris Smith of the Naked Scientists with the latest science headlines from around the globe. This week, how women change colour when they ovulate. Also could antibiotic use in childhood be contributing to obesity in later life?
Then at around 1:20pm, kombucha's a unique fermented drink that's in high demand around the world. Jo Bind makes it in Christchurch and he shows us his SCOBY, or symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast.
Then before we go at about 1:45pm, zopiclone is one of New Zealand's most commonly prescribed drugs. Prescriptions for this little blue pill have doubled since 2000 to exceed 500,000 scripts every year. John Ashton is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology at the Otago School of Medical Sciences tells us what zopiclone is used for.
We're playing these tracks too...
Artist: Captain Sensible
Track: Wot
Composers: Captain Sensible
Album: Captain Sensible: The Collection
Label: SPECTRUM 631932
Broadcast: 12:40
Artist: Petite Noir
Track: Down
Composers: Yannick Ilunga
Album: La Vie Est Belle / Life Is Beautiful (released 11th September 2015)
Label: DOMINO
Broadcast: 13:15
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=
14:00
Music 101 Pocket Edition 46: Apple Music/Rackets/Eyeliner/Land
BODY:
Apple Music gets a test drive, Rackets' HQ, Eyeliner and consumer alienation and Land of the Long White Stain, a documentary on touring the Auckland gothic.
EXTENDED BODY:
In the Music 101 Pocket Edition 46: Apple Music gets a test drive, Rackets' HQ, Eyeliner and consumer alienation and Land of the Long White Stain, a documentary on touring the Auckland gothic.
Topics: music
Regions: Auckland Region, Wellington Region
Tags: Apple Music, Eyeliner, Rackets, I.E. Crazy
Duration: 1h 08'27"
=SHOW NOTES=
2–3pm
Apple Music Roundtable
Apple’s new streaming and curated content service, Apple Music, launched this week, along with Beats 1, a 24/7 radio station broadcast worldwide that features ex-pat broadcaster Zane Lowe at the helm plus a selection of high profile DJs hosting speciality music shows. The M101 team and guests take Apple Music for a test drive to let you know whether it lives up to the hype.
[image:42343:full]
Miguel
A move to his hometown of Los Angeles precipitated R&B sensualist Miguel’s new album, Wildheart, and the spectre of the city haunts his latest set. The LA native talks to Sam Wicks about his dual identity as a Mexican-African American and how this steers his soulful genre hopping.
[image:42346:full]
Eyeliner
While attempting a deep squat midway through a Disasteradio set in 2012, Luke Rowell tore the meniscus in his right knee. The injury lead to the creation of Eyeliner, a project rooted in nostalgia for 80s/90s capitalism and smooth electronic sounds. The now healed Rowell breaks down the 1000 hours spent making his latest release, Buy Now.
[image:42605:full]
3–4pm
Headquarters: Rackets
For the latest instalment of Headquarters, where we drop by the creative spaces of local musicians, Emma Smith visits Oscar, Vince and Jeremy – the rock’n’roll trio known as Rackets – at Frisbee Studios, their HQ on Auckland’s Karangahape Road.
[image:42365:full]
Land of the Long White Stain
Land of the Long White Stain is a short film documenting the travels and performances of an Aotearoa tour by Girls Pissing on Girls Pissing, Seth Frightening, I.E. Crazy and Shab Orkestra. Zac Arnold is with director Claire Duncan as they discuss the difficulties of capturing the essence of live performance and what it means to be a musician on the margins.
[video] https://vimeo.com/132416631
End of the Alphabet Records
Auckland based label End of the Alphabet Records has only been active since September 2014, but in that time the label has released a run of acclaimed recordings from local and international sound art and experimental musicians. Music 101’s Craig Hayes talks with label founder Noel Meek, Wellington-based musician Antony Milton, and up and coming noisemaker Fergus Nelson Moore (aka Mischancerie) about the ethos driving End of Alphabet.
[image:42347:full]
4–5pm
Rob Ruha live at Te Mahurehure Marae
To celebrate Matariki, Te Whanau a Apanui/Ngāti Porou singer-songwriter and APRA Maioha award-winner Rob Ruha is embarking on Matariki on the Move, a traveling concert series that will visit marae and community halls. For the shows, Ruha reworks his own waiata with the help of Black Quartet, in a fusion of Māori and classical music. Their first stop on Matariki on the Move was Te Mahurehure Marae, Auckland – Radio New Zealand’s Andre Upston was there to capture a musical meeting of worlds.
[image:42469:full]
Christoph El' Truento
Beat-maker turned experimental sound artist Christoph El Truento talks us through his chaos-embracing creative process, which includes homemade shakers, ping pong on kick drums and fist fulls of white sage.
[image:42586:full]
Introducing: Gasp
=PLAYLIST=
2-3pm
Artist: Disasteradio
Song: Charisma
Composer: Rowell
Album: Charisma
Label: A Low Hum
Artist: Beach House
Song: Sparks
Composer: Beach House
Album: Depression Cherry
Label: Sub Pop
Miguel Interview
Artist: Miguel
Song: DEAL
Composer: M.Pimentel, B.Cartwright, N.Pimentel
Album: Wildheart
Label: ByStorm, RCA
Artist: Miguel
Song: Hollywood Dreams, what's normal anyway
Composer: M.Pimentel
Album: Wildheart
Label: ByStorm, RCA
Artist: Miguel
Song: ...goingtohell
Composer: M.Pimentel, B.Levin, M.Høiberg
Album: Wildheart
Label: ByStorm, RCA
Artist: Miguel
Song: damned
Composer: M.Pimentel, C.Martin
Album: Wildheart
Label: ByStorm, RCA
Artist: D'Angelo
Song: Lady
Composer: D'Angelo, Muhammad
Album: Brown Sugar
Label: EMI
Eyeliner Interview
Artist: Eyeliner
Song: Sneakers For Men, Pinot Noir, Toy Dog, Showbiz
Composer: L. Rowell
Album: Buy Now
Label: Beer On Rug
Artist: Nozinja
Song: Xihukwani
Composer: Nozinja
Album: Nozinja Lodge
Label: Warp Records
Artist: Rackets
Song: Wash My Brains Out, End of an Age
Composer: Rackets
Album: Unreleased
Label: RNZ Recording
3-4pm
HQ: Rackets
Artist: Rackets:
Song: Slippin' Away
Composer: Merritt
Album: Unreleased
Label: RNZ Recording
Land of the Long White Stain
Artist: Girls Pissing On Girls Pissing
Song: Out Of Zone (Live at Chick's Hotel)
Composer: Girls Pissing On Girls Pissing
Album: Land of the Long White Stain OST
Label: Lumiére Industries
Artist: Seth Frightening
Song: I Left It When The Water Broke (Live at Chick's Hotel)
Composer: Seth Frightening
Album: Land of the Long White Stain OST
Label: Lumiére Industries
Artist: I. E. Crazy
Song: Body of Debt
Composer: I. E. Crazy (Live at The Wine Cellar)
Album: Land of the Long White Stain OST
Label: Lumiére Industries
Artist: Shab Orkestra
Song: I Will Not Take You Back To The Water (Live at Newtown Community Centre)
Composer: Shab Orkestra
Album: Land of the Long White Stain OST
Label: Lumiére Industries
Artist: New Gum Sarn
Song: Saigon - Paris
Composer: New Gum Sarn
Album: New Gold Mountain
Label: Spunk
End of the Alphabet Records
Artist: Antony Milton
Song: A Prayer For More, A Prayer For Less
Composer: Antony Milton
Album: No Fi Rainbow Vol. 1
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Antony Milton
Song: Surface Sign
Composer: Antony Milton
Album: There are Other Possibilities
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Samin Sun
Song: Yesterday’s Sudden Death
Composer: Samin Sun
Album: No Fi Rainbow Vol. 1
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: MIR
Song: Thousand Yard Stare
Composer: MIR
Album: Thousand Yard Stare
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Mischancerie
Song: Balcony
Composer: Fergus Nelson Moores
Album: No Fi Rainbow Vol. 1
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Mischancerie
Song: Photon Smasher
Composer: Fergus Nelson Moores
Album: KK Null/Mischancerie Split
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Antony Milton
Song: Fallen Heart
Composer: Antony Milton
Album: There are Other Possibilities
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: Noel Meek
Song: Mara Staggers
Composer: Noel Meek
Album: (Unreleased)
Label: End of the Alphabet
Artist: REO Speedwagon
Song: Keep On Loving You
Composer: Cronin
Album: The Essential REO Speedwagon
Label: Epic
4-5pm
Rob Ruha, Live at Te Mahurehure Marae
Artist: Rob Ruha
Song: Tiki Tapu, Takoto Rawa Iho, Whakapuakina, Whisper, Kai Te Haramai Te Wa
Composer: R.Ruha
Album: RNZ Music Recording
Label: RNZ Music Recording
Artist: @peace
Song: Gravity
Composer: @peace
Album: @Peace And The Plutonian Noise Symphony
Label: Private
Christoph El Truento
Introducing: Gasp
Artist: Gasp.
Song: You Know
Composer: E. Burns
Album: You Know single
Label: Gasp.
Artist: Chelsea Jade
Song: Low Brow
Composer: C. Metcalf, S McCarthy
Album: Low Brow single
Label: Chelsea Jade
===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
Doris Day - Tea For Two
Keath Barrie - Autumn Of My Days
Al Bowlly - Isle Of Capri
Kenny Rogers - Through The Years
Bryn Terfel - Calon Lan
Val Doonican - Walk Tall
The Original Movies Orchestra - No Quarter (From The Alamo)
The Wurzels - Combine Harvester
Pee Wee Hunt - 12th Street Rag
Michael Crawford - Love Changes Everything
The Ink Spots - Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall
Kenneth McKellar - The Crookit Bawbee
Peggy Lee - Is That All There Is
8pm – 9pm
Fontella Bass - Rescue Me
Larry’s Rebels - I Feel Good
Joe Cocker - You Are So Beautiful
Mongo Santamaria - Watermelon Man
Bobby Darin & Johnny Mercer - Who Takes Care Of The Caretakers Daughter
Vin Garbutt - Fell Off The Back Of A Boat
Big Daddy - A Day In The Life
Robert Johnson - Cross Road Blues
Bob Dylan - Nashville Skyline Rag
Julius LaRosa - Three Coins In The Fountain
Billy Paul - Me & Mrs Jones
Eva Cassidy - Fields Of Gold
Zarif - Box Of Secrets
9pm – 10pm
Mississippi John Hurt - Candy Man
The Easybeats - Friday On My Mind
Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood - Summer Wine
Joni Mtichell - Carey
Enya - Orinoco Flow
Dusty Springfield - Goin' Back
Ella Fitzgerald - Midnight Sun
Van Morrison - Snow In San Anselmo
Sinead O’Connor - Scorn Not His Simplicity
Vintage Trouble - Blues Hand Me Down
The Blind Boys Of Alabama - Higher Ground
Marlon Williams - I'm Lost Without You
10pm – 11pm
Bill Withers - Grandmas Hands
Gretchen Peters - When All You Got Is A Hammer
Golden Earring - Radar Love
Ian Hunter - Once Bitten Twice Shy
The Nice - Ars Longa Vita Brevis
Gene Clark and Carla Olsen - Almost Saturday Night
Neil Innes - How Sweet To Be An Idiot
11pm – midnight
Dave Edmunds - Symphony No. 40 in G Minor
The Big Bright - Walk Like An Egyptian
Gilbert O'Sullivan - Made In Love
George Thorogood - One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer
Dale Watson - Mama's Don't Let Your Cowboys Grow Up To Be Babies
Dave Edmunds - Classical Gas
The Big Bright - Johnny And Mary
Ruthie Foster - My Kinda Lover
Celine Dion - Le Ballet
Peter Skellern and Richard Stilgoe - The Big Finish