RNZ National. 2016-02-20. 00:00-23:59, [Category 5 Cyclone Winston strikes Fiji].

Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288133
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.

Ask about this item

Ask to use material, get more information or tell us about an item

Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288133
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.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Broadcast Date
20 Feb 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:

20 February 2016

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

Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight (RNZ); 12:30 Laugh Track ( RNZ); 1:05 From the World (BBC); 2:05 NZ Live (RNZ); 3:05 Enemy Territory, by Elspeth Sandys (11 of 15, RNZ); 3:30 The Week (RNZ); 4:30 Global Business (BBC)

===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 Enemy Territory, by Elspeth Sandys (11 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=

We meet Biff Paddington, by Jack Lasenby, told by Stuart Devenie; Listening to my Shell, by Jack Lasenby, told by Lorae Parry; The Jumper, by Feana Tu'akoi, told by James Ashcroft; Iris La Bonga and the Boomerzoomer, by Margaret Mahy, told by Donna Akersten ; Little Kiwi Looks After the Egg, by Bob Darroch, told by Simon Vincent ; Climbing The Vine, by Apirana Taylor, told by Miriama Ketu, Apirana Taylor and Ella Marsh

===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
Ron Layton: intellectual property in Africa
BODY:
Founder and CEO of LightYears IP, board member of the African IP Trust, and a fellow of Ashoka, the largest worldwide network of social entrepreneurs.
EXTENDED BODY:
Ron Layton is an expatriate New Zealander who is the founder and CEO of LightYears IP, a board member of the African IP Trust, and a fellow of Ashoka, the largest worldwide network of social entrepreneurs.
He is creating global mechanisms that provide poor producer businesses in developing countries with a full range of intellectual property tools that allow them to re-position for higher and more stable incomes.
He talks to Kim Hill.
Topics: business, economy, farming, history, inequality, international aid and development, law, money, politics, world
Regions:
Tags: Africa, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, trade, coffee
Duration: 44'14"

09:06
Pam Warhurst: eating the city
BODY:
British food activist who founded and chairs voluntary gardening initiative Incredible Edible, in Todmorden, West Yorkshire. She is visiting Christchurch to deliver her talk, Eating the Garden City.
EXTENDED BODY:
"It's about growing people's self-belief that they can create a kinder world using the Trojan horse of food."

Pam Warhurst's 2012 TED Talk How We Can Eat Our Landscapes has been viewed over a million times. The British food activist, community leader and CBE is founder and chair of Incredible Edible, a voluntary gardening initiative Incredible Edible in Todmorden, West Yorkshire.
She visits Christchurch as a guest of Incredible Edible Geraldine and Edible Canterbury, and delivers her talk Eating the Garden City at CPIT-Aoraki on 22 February.
Pam Warhurst talks with Kim Hill about how it all started and her hopes for a world with food at its heart:
Topics: economy, education, environment, farming, food, health, history, life and society, politics
Regions:
Tags: Todmorden
Duration: 35'21"

09:45
Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins
BODY:
District Court Judge, and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group, who has a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces. He discusses the loss, theft and recovery of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, the 1783 painting by Thomas Gainsborough.
EXTENDED BODY:
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 loss, theft and recovery of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, the 1783 painting by Thomas Gainsborough.
He talks to Kim Hill.

Topics: arts, crime, history
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Thomas Gainsborough
Duration: 14'08"

10:10
David Stuckler: health and austerity
BODY:
Professor of Political Economy and Sociology at Oxford University, where he researches how social policy and economic changes influence health across the globe, and co-author of The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills. He is visiting New Zealand for the February lecture series at the 20th Public Health Summer School, run by the University of Otago, Wellington.
Topics: author interview, business, economy, education, health, history, housing, inequality, law, media, money, politics, world
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Basu Sanjay, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, prohibition, Mark Twain, Greece, Russia, Belarus, Iceland, Robert Kennedy, UK, David Cameron
Duration: 50'13"

11:08
Courtney Durr: body love blueprint
BODY:
Personal trainer, whose Body Love Blueprint project works to change the way women think about themselves and others, while they get stronger and fitter was one of the recent Wellington ventures of social entrepreneurship and enterprise accelerator programme Live the Dream.
EXTENDED BODY:
"When someone is passionate you can see that oozing out of them, and when someone is happy, that to me is beauty" ~ Courtney Durr.

Courtney Durr is a former personal trainer and founder of The Body Love Blueprint – a community project which aims to change the way women think and feel about themselves and others, while they get stronger and fitter during a ten-week training programme.
Courtney talks with Kim Hill about her 'Body Love Girls':
Body Love Blueprint is one of the Wellington ventures of Live the Dream – the nine-week intensive social entrepreneurship and enterprise accelerator programme for New Zealanders aged 18 to 30.
Topics: business, health, identity, sport
Regions: Wellington Region
Tags: Les Mills, Hayley Freeman, Live The Dream, fitness
Duration: 21'25"

11:30
Beneath the Words, Beneath the Land
BODY:
Morgana James, Anand Rose, Peter Egli, Adrian Whelan are four of the musicians involved in the Beneath the Words, Beneath the Land (Kei raro i te kupu Kei raro i te whenua) project which crosses a Taranaki iwi with a Tipperary clan, to explore Maori and Irish cultural exchange through songs, stories, and traditional arts.
EXTENDED BODY:
The project Beneath the Words, Beneath the Land (Kei raro i te kupu | Kei raro i te whenua) crosses a Taranaki iwi with a Tipperary clan, and was conceived over Waitangi Festival Weekend in 2015, in a meeting of minds between singer Morgana James and Anand Rose, the bodhrán (Irish drum) player in the group. The exploration of Māori and Irish cultural exchange through songs, stories, and traditional arts includes Adrian Whelan (guitar, vocals), Pete Egli (uilleann pipes, low whistle), Urs Signer (clarinet) and Simon James (upright bass). The show toured the Irish counties of Kildare, Kerry and Cork last August in collaboration with Irish songwriter Sive, and comes to Auckland this weekend (Waiheke Sports Club, Ostend, 20 February), featuring guest performances from vocalist Cat Tunks and international troubadour Jon Sanders.

Topics: arts, history, language, music, te ao Maori
Regions: Auckland Region, Taranaki
Tags: Cat Tunks, Jon Sanders, Waiheke, Ireland
Duration: 28'25"

11:55
Listener Feedback to Saturday 20 February 2016
BODY:
Kim Hill reads messages from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme of 20 February.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'39"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:60192:third]
8:12 Ron Layton
Ron Layton is an expatriate New Zealander who is the founder and CEO of LightYears IP, a board member of the African IP Trust, and a fellow of Ashoka, the largest worldwide network of social entrepreneurs. He is creating global mechanisms that provide poor producer businesses in developing countries with a full range of intellectual property tools that allow them to re-position for higher and more stable incomes.

[image:59899:quarter]
9:05 Pam Warhurst
British food activist and community leader Pam Warhurst, CBE, is the founder and chair of voluntary gardening initiative Incredible Edible, in Todmorden, West Yorkshire. Her 2012 TED Talk, How We Can Eat Our Landscapes, has been viewed over a million times. She is visiting Christchurch as a guest of Incredible Edible Geraldine and Edible Canterbury, and will deliver her talk, Eating the Garden City, at CPIT-Aoraki on 22 February.

[image:60133:half]

9:45 Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins
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 loss, theft and recovery of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, the 1783 painting by Thomas Gainsborough.

[image:60132:third]
10:05 David Stuckler
David Stuckler is Professor of Political Economy and Sociology at Oxford University, where he researches how social policy and economic changes influence health across the globe. His 2013 book with Basu Sanjay, The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills (Allen Lane), has been widely acclaimed, and he is visiting New Zealand for the February lecture series at the 20th Public Health Summer School, run by the University of Otago, Wellington.

[image:60038:third]

11:05 Courtney Durr
Courtney Durr is a personal trainer who founded Body Love Blueprint to change the way women think about themselves and others, while they get stronger and fitter during a ten-week community process. Her project is one of the Wellington ventures of Live the Dream, the nine-week intensive social entrepreneurship and enterprise accelerator programme for New Zealanders aged 18 to 30.

11:25 Beneath the Words, Beneath the Land
The project Beneath the Words, Beneath the Land (Kei raro i te kupu | Kei raro i te whenua) crosses a Taranaki iwi with a Tipperary clan, and was conceived over Waitangi Festival Weekend in 2015, in a meeting of minds between singer Morgana James and Anand Rose, the bodhrán (Irish drum) player in the group. The exploration of Māori and Irish cultural exchange through songs, stories, and traditional arts includes Adrian Whelan (guitar, vocals), Pete Egli (uilleann pipes, low whistle), Urs Signer (clarinet) and Simon James (upright bass). The show toured the Irish counties of Kildare, Kerry and Cork last August in collaboration with Irish songwriter Sive, and comes to Auckland this weekend (Waiheke Sports Club, Ostend, 20 February), featuring guest performances from vocalist Cat Tunks and international troubadour Jon Sanders.
[image:60279:full]
[image:60191:full]
This Saturday’s team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Wellington engineer: Brad Warrington
Auckland (and music) engineer: Jeremy Ansell
Christchurch engineer: Andrew Collins
Research by Infofind

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: The Royal Scottish National Orchestra conducted by Elmer Bernstein
Song: Main Title theme from To Kill a Mockingbird
Album: To Kill a Mockingbird Original Soundtrack
Label: Varese Sarabande, 1997
Broadcast: 8:10
Artist: Lanu (with Melanie Pain)
Song: Fly Away
Album: The Double Sunrise
Label: Inertia, 2016
Broadcast: 9:40
Artist: Sive
Song: If I Had a Home To Go To
EP: Turn Down the Silence
Label: Self-released, 2013
Broadcast: 10:05
Artist: Morgana James (acoustic guitar, lead vocals), Adrian Whelan (vocals), Anand Rose (bodhrán, backing vocals), Peter Egli (low whistle)
Song: Parihaka
Live in the Auckland studio of Radio New Zealand
Broadcast: 11:30
Artist: Adrian Whelan (acoustic guitar, lead vocals), Morgana James (vocals), Anand Rose (bodhrán, backing vocals), Peter Egli (uilleann pipes)
Song: 100 Years
Live in the Auckland studio of Radio New Zealand
Broadcast: 11:50

===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 Part 1
BODY:
Robotic seals in rest homes, and Apple's security challenges.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 49'15"

12:15
Robotic seals
BODY:
A colony of 13 robotic seals is changing people's lives at an Auckland retirement village. With Dr Elizabeth Broadbent from the University of Auckland, Orquidea Mortera of Selwyn Village and James Waerea, Leona Stoker, Jackie McMahon and Kathleen Murray.
EXTENDED BODY:
A colony of 13 robotic seals is changing people's lives at an Auckland retirement village. These PARO seals have big soulful eyes, white artificial fur and interact with people using a network of sensors that can sense touch, sound, temperature, posture and light. The 'robopets' were invented in 2003 by the Japanese roboticist Dr Takanori Shibata and are now used as a form of animal or pet therapy in places where having live animals is challenging.
"You can have a retirement home with 100 people. Do you really think that those 100 people will actually get quality time during the day? No. So we have a lot of loneliness, a lot of helplessness, a lot of boredom, so bringing technology that is actually going to be helping us to help our people, it's amazing." Orquidea Mortera, Diversional Therapist at Selwyn Village

We dropped into Selwyn Village, a hospital and dementia day care centre operated by The Selwyn Foundation, to see the robotic seals in action.
Topics: technology, health
Regions:
Tags: ageing, aged care, robots
Duration: 30'16"

12:45
Tech: Apple security
BODY:
Our tech correspondent Peter Griffin on a big week security-wise for Apple.
EXTENDED BODY:
Our tech correspondent Peter Griffin on a big week security-wise for Apple. The FBI demands that Apple hack into an iPhone owned by one of the San Bernardino attackers, and a message that's popped up on the screens of some users. Also Spark turns 5 of its phone boxes into charging stations for electric vehicles.

Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 14'20"

13:01
This Way Up Part 2
BODY:
3D-printing human organs, the sport of freediving, a 'bionic spine' and listening to machines to detect faults.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 51'46"

13:15
Science: 3D printing human organs
BODY:
Naked Science with Dr Chris Smith and US scientists develop a technique to fight cancer by reprogramming a body's immune cells. Also a 3D bioprinter that can build life-sized human organs.
EXTENDED BODY:
3D printing human organs
US scientists have developed a 3D printer that's capable of building complex human organs and tissues.
Although 3D printing technology is widely used in science, technology and aerospace engineering, its use in medicine has so far proved fairly limited.
Dr Chris Smith of The Naked Scientists told This Way Up's Simon Morton that's because the human body is composed of many different types of living cells, and printing mixtures of cells in a way that keeps them alive and also in the right position to form a functional tissue has been impossible.
Now a team led by Wake Forest School of Medicine researcher Anthony Atala has unveiled a 3D bioprinter which can produce human scale complex tissues made up of multiple cell types.
Writing in the journal Nature Biotechnology the research raises the tantalising prospect of printing entire human organs. "With further development, this technology may produce clinically useful tissues and organs that incorporate multiple cell types at precise locations to recapitulate native structure and function," the researchers said.
Topics: science, health, technology
Regions:
Tags: cancer, immune therapy, 3D printing
Duration: 9'51"

13:25
Freediving
BODY:
In his book 'One Breath: Freediving, Death, and the Quest to Shatter Human Limits' (Penguin Viking) Adam Skolnick looks at the incredible demands that competitive freediving places on the human body.
EXTENDED BODY:
The sport of freediving, where you dive as deep as you can on a single breath without using any breathing apparatus, is a competitive sport that's also part of the curriculum at a growing number of dive schools worldwide.
New Zealanders are pretty good at it too; William Trubridge holds two current world records, and Kathryn Nevatt is a previous world record holder who is recognised as one of the world's leading female freedivers.
Adam Skolnick was covering the Vertical Blue freediving competition for The New York Times back in 2013 and found himself at the centre of a tragedy when American freediver Nick Mevoli died while attempting to set a new American record.
In his book One Breath: Freediving, Death, and the Quest to Shatter Human Limits (Viking) he looks at the incredible demands that competitive freediving places on the human body.
Topics: author interview, sport
Regions:
Tags: freediving
Duration: 19'57"

13:40
Bionic spine
BODY:
Dr Nicholas Opie of The University of Melbourne is working on a 'bionic spine' that uses electrical activity in the brain to help paralysed people operate bionic limbs and exoskeletons.
EXTENDED BODY:
Australian researchers are on a quest to help paralysed people walk using the power of thought.
The revolutionary procedure, which will be trialled in humans next year, involves implanting a tiny mesh or 'stentrode', about the length of a matchstick or a paperclip, right next to the brain via our network of blood vessels.
Once implanted, this device can pick up electrical activity in the motor cortex, the part of the brain that controls movement. It relays the signals to an implant in a patient's shoulder and then converts these signals into commands, which are then sent to bionic limbs wirelessly.
It's being called a 'bionic spine' and the approach is groundbreaking because a patient's head doesn't need to be opened up to implant a sensor.
Professor Terry O'Brien, Head of the Department of Medicine at the Royal Melbourne Hospital is working on the project. "This technology is really exciting. It's the first time that we've been able to demonstrate and develop a device that can be implanted without the need for a big operation, to chronically record brain activity," Professor O'Brien said. "The most obvious benefit is for people who are paralysed following a stroke or spinal cord injury. It is simple and non-invasive and much safer for patients."
The chief engineer behind the device is Dr Nick Opie of the Vascular Bionics Laboratory at The University of Melbourne.
"I've always been fascinated by the integration of man and machine and the ways that people and machines could function together. Fortunately, I was born in the time to do this." Dr Nick Opie, The University of Melbourne

Topics: technology, science, health
Regions:
Tags: bionics, exoskeletons
Duration: 9'00"

13:50
Listening in on machines
BODY:
Tech startup Augury wants to analyse the sounds made by machines, from air conditioners to cars to domestic appliances, to work out what is wrong with them. We talk to Saar Yoskovitz, Augury's cofounder and CEO.
EXTENDED BODY:
A tech startup wants to analyse the sounds made by machines, from air conditioners to cars to domestic appliances, to work out what is wrong with them.
As the company logo says 'Machines talk, we listen'. Saar Yoskovitz is the cofounder and CEO of Augury.
Topics: technology, internet
Regions:
Tags: listening, machines
Duration: 6'16"

=SHOW NOTES=

TRACKS
Artist: Junior Boys
Track: Big Black Coat
Composers: Junior Boys
Album: Big Black Coat
Label: City Slang
Artist: Talking Heads
Track: Crosseyed And Painless
Composers: David Byrne, Brian Eno, Chris Frantz, Jerry Harrison, Tina Weymouth
Album: Remain in Light
Label: SIRE 273300
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=

Emma Smith presents 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 74: Doprah/ Twerps/ Wellington Musical Electronics Library
BODY:
Doprah's debut - Wasting, Zac meets some Aussie Twerps, and we visit a new lending library for electronic music gear in Wellington.
EXTENDED BODY:
In the Music 101 Pocket Edition 74, Doprah on their debut - Wasting, Zac meets some Aussie Twerps, and we visit a new lending library for electronic music gear in Wellington.
Topics: music
Regions: Canterbury, Wellington Region
Tags: Music 101 Pocket Edition, Doprah, Twerps, Mel
Duration: 50'39"

=SHOW NOTES=

2-3pm
Doprah
Christchurch's Doprah release their debut LP, Wasting, this week. Indi Force joins Emma Smith to talk layering, gibberish and the emotional potential of melody.
[image:60293:full]
Introducing: Hex
Wellington's Hex introduce their hit, 'Albatross'.
[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPj6jk1P2JA
Twerps
Zac Arnold caught up with Melbourne's Twerps on a recent tour of New Zealand.
[image:60294:full]
3-4pm
Wellington Musical Electronics Library
Wellington’s enigmatic music venue the Pyramid Club has followed the Audio Foundation’s lead and set up its own musical electronics library. Samuel Scott heads along to the launch to dig deeper into the world of homemade noise machines.
[image:60009:full]
DJ Lady Flic
Wellington to Bali via London is not the usual migratory path for emigrating Kiwis, but it’s the route by which expat DJ Lady Flic arrived at Bali’s Potato Head Beach Club; here, as resident DJ and music director, she's hosted the likes of De La Soul, M.I.A. and Roy Ayers. Back home to play Splore 2016, Flic shares her expat musical adventures with Yadana Saw.
[image:60100:full]
Fis
Wellington-born electronic musician Olly Pemberton began releasing tracks under the name Fis in 2012 via drum & bass label Samurai Horo. Despite the association, Fis’ productions have never sounded much like D&B, and he was soon working with Brooklyn label Tri Angle and London’s Loopy. Tony Stamp talks to Fis in his new home of Berlin about his singular electronic music.
[image:60295:full]
4-5pm
Back on Highway 61 Part Two (audio not available for streaming)
Bob Dylan was only 24 years old when he recorded Highway 61 Revisited in June 1965, an album that Bruce Springsteen described as “like somebody kicked open the door to your mind.”
In the second of the two-part BBC series, Back on Highway 61, broadcaster Andy Kershaw hears more of the stories behind Dylan’s game-changing set.
[image:53204:full]
From Handel to Hendrix
The Handel House Museum in London has just opened its doors to the Jimi Hendrix Museum, a carefully reconstructed replica of Jimi’s former Mayfair attic flat at 23 Brook St, where he briefly lived during 1968-’69; two centuries before that, George Frideric Handel lived next door at number 25. Trevor Reekie talks to Dr Christian Lloyd, author of Hendix At Home: A Bluesman in Mayfair, and Michelle Aland, director of the Handel House Trust, about Jimi’s short but influential period of London life.
[image:60008:full]

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

Analysis of significant political issues presented by RNZ's parliamentary reporting 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=

An evening of requests, nostalgia and musical memories (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

=SHOW NOTES=

7pm – 8pm
Nancy Wilson - (You Don't Know) How Glad I Am
Nick Lucas - Tip-Toe Through The Tulips
Johnny Logan - Long Lie The Rivers
Red Hot Chilli Pipers - Crooked Bridge
Andy Stewart - Ae Fond Kiss
Glen Campbell - Rhinestone Cowboy
Band Of The Grenadier Guards - Semper Fidelis
Sandie Shaw - Lemon Tree
David Frost - Deck Of Cards
Jimmy Durante - (I'll Never Forget) The Day I Read A Book
The Kingston Trio - A Worried Man
Ronnie Ronalde - Lonely Little Robin
Jimmie Dale Gilmore - Don't Let The Stars Get In Your Eyes

8pm – 9pm
Guy Mitchell - The Roving Kind
Beth Hart and Joe Bonamassa - I'd Rather Go Blind
Joni Mitchell - You Turn Me On I’m A Radio
The Pointer Sisters - I Ain't Got Nothing But The Blues
Al Green - I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry
Jimmy Dean - Big Bad John
The Beach Boys - Daybreak Over The Ocean
Fats Waller - That Gets It Mr. Joe
Ry Cooder and V.M.Bhatt - Isa Lei
Fats Waller - Ain’t Misbehavin’
The Righteous Brothers - Unchained Melody
Caterina Valente - Secret Love

9pm – 10pm
Bobby Charles - Les Champs Elysee
Tama Waipara - Sunshine On The Water
Beautiful South - Don't Fear The Reaper
Kate Bush - Them Heavy People
Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly - True Love
Dougie MacLean - Caledonia
Phil Ochs - The Party
Graham Parker - Hey Lord Don't Ask Me Questions
George Benson - Skylark
Marlon Williams - Dark Child
Louis Jordan - Jack You're Dead

10pm – 11pm
Nina Simone - See-line Woman
Grace Jones - La Vie En Rose
Michael Jackson - Stranger In Moscow
Merced Blue Notes - Whole Lotta Nothing
Scott Bradlee's Post Modern Jukebox - Gangsta's Paradise
Madeleine Peyroux - (Getting Some) Fun Out Of Life
Madeleine Peyroux - Walkin' After Midnight
Alabama 3 - Hotel California
Australian Crawl - Unpublished Critics
Kirsty MacColl - Days

11pm – Midnight: Late Night Phil
Tonight, the Ultimate Concert - nearly an hour of some great live tracks.
Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers - Blues March
Heart - Rock And Roll
Def Leppard with Ian Hunter - All The Young Dudes
Elvis Costello - Watching The Detectives
Rolling Stones - Gimme Shelter
Delbert McLinton - Standing On Shaky Ground
Bruce Springsteen - Blinded By The Light
Hello Sailor - Blue Lady
Elton John - Funeral For A Friend