Monday 22nd May
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12:00am - 1:00am
The Rob Simone Talk Show
Interviews with a wide range of alternative thinkers by the Los Angeles-based investigator of anomalous phenomena. This week: author David Wilcox discusses his research into the origins of life in the universe. Visit robsimone.com/ for more information. [Repeated Friday 7am.]
1:00am - 2:00am
Sleeping Dogs Lie
Ambient music selected by Miguel Santos to help night owls relax and canines carry on slumbering. [Repeated Saturday 3am.]
2:00am - 3:00am
Radio Ecoshock
[Repeated from Friday 10am.] Global environmental news with Alex Smith. This week: Double Danger Down Under - a wide discussion with radio host Vivien Langford from 3CR Melbourne. A large part of your future depends on what is happening right now in Australia! The great coral reef is dying. Australia ships killer coal to Asia and meat for billions of people. With its extreme weather events, Australia demonstrates climate disruption of a kind that is coming to the UK also. Visit ecoshock.org/ for more information. Contact radio@ecoshock.org.
3:00am - 4:30am
The Hello Goodbye Show
[Repeated from Saturday 12 noon.] Upbeat, eclectic live music show hosted by deXter Bentley. This week: Spannerman and Lewis Floyd Henry are live in session. Plus a competition to win two pairs of tickets to see the legendary NYC post-punk/hip-hop pioneers ESG live in concert in London on Friday 26 May. Visit hellogoodbyeshow.com for more information.
4:30am - 5:00am
The Truth about Markets
[Repeated from Saturday 6.30pm.] Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert ("the most dangerous people in financial media") scrutinise the markets. Visit maxkeiser.com/ for more information.
5:00am - 6:00am
Bad Punk
[Repeated from Friday 10pm.] 60 minutes in the eye of a radiophonic vortex - hosted by the Band of Holy Joy. Visit bandofholyjoy.co.uk for more information.
6:00am - 7:00am
The London Ear
[Repeated from Thursday 12 noon.] Wide ranging cultural salon hosted by ghostwriter and critic Ben Thompson. This week it's Michael Chapman and Henry Moore who are together for the first time.
7:00am - 8:00am
Novara FM
[Repeated from Friday 1pm.] A weekly show dedicated to political theory and current affairs hosted by Aaron Bastani and James Butler. Find Novara on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. E-mail info@novaramedia.com. All previous shows are available at novaramedia.com.
8:00am - 9:00am
A World in London
[Repeated from Wednesday 6.30pm.] DJ Ritu presents the UK’s definitive global music show from London. This week: drum maestro Bernhard Schimpelsberger returns to A World in London with the latest chapter for his Rhythm Diaries!
9:00am - 10:00am
Clear Spot
[Repeated from Friday 8pm.] The second of two broadcasts created by students from the School of Music & Fine Art at University of Kent in response to the now confirmed closure of the School for economic reasons by 2019. The School - based in Chatham’s Historic Dockyard - was only formed five years ago and in this very short period Fine Art achieved seventh place in the Guardian league table for 2016-17. The programme was curated by Jose Macabra, Anum Saleem and Andrew Gallacher with sound design by Jose Macabra with technical support from Frank Walker. It includes an interview conducted by students with Simon Kirchin, the Dean of Humanities, together with contributions from BA and MA students from across the fine art course.
10:00am - 11:00am
The Other Woman
[Repeated from Thursday 3.30pm.] Curated by Ruth Barnes, The Other Woman is a collective representing alternative female artists in music, comedy and performance. This week: comedian Hatty Ashdown presents with fellow funny females Hannah Warman and Katie Pritchard discuss what they love, hate and who their other woman is - and Jessica Fosterkew tell us about doing an Edinburgh show with a baby in tow! Visit ruthbarnes.co.uk for more information.
11:00am - 11:30am
East London With Charles Saumurez Smith
[Repeated from Wednesday 3.30pm.] Director of the Royal Academy and enthusiastic East London resident Charles Saumurez Smith joins friends and fellow east Londoners in a series of wide ranging discussions on the past present and future of Bow, Limehouse, Spitalfields and The Isle of Dogs. This week: Stepney and Bow with artist Yinka Shonibare; milliner Katharine Goodison and Observer architecture critic Rowan Moore.
11:30am - 12:00pm
Great Exposure
[Repeated from Wednesday 3pm.] Great Exposure offers discussion and insight into the the use of music in advertising and its effects on the music industry. Presented by music supervisor Marcus Brooke-Smith.
12:00pm - 1:00pm
The Traditional Music Hour
[Repeated from Thursday 2pm.] Reg Hall and Kevin Sheils (on alternate weeks) present an informed and judicious selection of recordings of traditional musics from Britain, Ireland and occasionally further afield. This week Kevin Sheils presents Irish field recordings made for the BBC in 1954 by collector and musician Seamus Ennis, featuring Thomas Moran from County Leitrim amongst others.
1:00pm - 2:00pm
Calling All Pensioners
Magazine programme with Tim Hamilton, addressing issues which affect pensioners across London. This week: music dedicated to DAGE’s Harry Haward, who passed away in November 2016, aged almost 84. Plus tributes from DAGE’s Kitty Finch, Barbara Banks, Kath Waldron, Robert, Winnie and Brenda, who are joined by Harry’s younger brother, Brother Bill. Produced by Deptford Action Group for the Elderly. [Repeated Sunday 2pm.]
2:00pm - 3:00pm
The Outerglobe
[Repeated from Thursday 6.30pm.] Debbie Golt explores African music and wider arts and culture. This week: Fantastic singer/composer/producer Nina Miranda (Smoke City, Zeep, Da Lata) enters the Outerglobe on the occasion of her, surprisingly only DEBUT, album 'Freedom of Movement' celebrating imaginative creativity in all its multicultural and positively political expressions and boundary crossing sounds. Visit www.outerglobe.co.uk for more information.
3:00pm - 5:00pm
The OST Show
[Repeated from Saturday 4.30pm.] Presented by Jonny Trunk, The OST Show is the only show anywhere dedicated to film music, TV music, library music and related recordings. This week: a handful of new soundtrack releases are in, including Cannabis. Also a whisper of bizarre Spaghetti Western scores based on a recent chat with Stewart Lee. Visit trunkrecords.com for more information. Contact jonny@trunkrecords.com.
5:00pm - 6:00pm
Got 2 B
Got 2 B... is a monthly programme presented by Emily Pope and Ruth Angel Edwards, artists who explore the over-proliferation of populist conversation and music through collaborative sound-work. [Repeated Saturday 7am.]
6:00pm - 6:30pm
Tin Can Review
[Repeated from Saturday 8pm.] James Hodder present melodic new music by currently touring artists. Follow updates on Twitter @TinCanReview. Visit tincanreview.com for more information.
6:30pm - 7:00pm
Nunhead American Radio
The only radio programme for Americans living in Nunhead, hosted by Lewis Schaffer and Lisa Moyle, with music from The Relatives. [Repeated Saturday 11.30am.]
7:00pm - 8:00pm
One Life Left
An award-winning show about videogames for everyone, presented by Ste Curran, Simon Byron and Ann Scantlebury. Visit onelifeleft.com for more information. [Repeated Saturday 10am.]
8:00pm - 9:00pm
Sonic Imperfections
Nigel Bryant of the South East London based monthly live experimental music night, Sonic Imperfections, plays a selection of unusual and experimental music. This show features We Claudius, Pearly Gates, Ilk, Spaceship and much more. Visit .facebook.com/SonicImperfections for more information. [Repeated Tuesday 9am.]
9:00pm - 10:00pm
The Dark End Of The Street
Cathi Unsworth presents a four-part investigation into the works of the writer seen by many as the Godfather of British Noir, Derek Raymond. Part 3: the first of Raymond’s ‘Factory’ novels, He Died With His Eyes Open (1984). Having spent years working variously as a mini-cab driver back in London and a labourer in rural France, Raymond was challenged by a neighbour that he would never write a book again. The result was his first novel to be published under the non de plume Derek Raymond. Raymond’s friend and literary executor John Williams explains the very personal true story behind this groundbreaking novel. First broadcast 2007. [Repeated Friday 12am.]
10:00pm - 11:00pm
Spool's Out Radio
Tristan Bath (of The Quietus) delves into music from the cassette tape underground. This week: #104 Midnight Circles is a self-described "Xerox cassette label from Germany with a focus on sound and occasional music". Since 2014, the imprint has issued a slew of monochromatic fringe sound experiments. This week they've provided a mix of picks from their catalogue, old, new, and upcoming, to give you a peek into their bleak yet compelling sound world. Artists and labels can send their tracks to compilation@spools-out.com. Visit spoolsoutradio.wordpress.com for more information. [Repeated Saturday 12.30am.]
11:00pm - 12:00am
Queer Temporalities
A radiophonic journey through the queer time frame with Ennoia Neoptolomus, which challenges the commercialized, commodified and hyper-objectified view of identity projected by the mainstream (gay and straight) and to transform the way we listen to gender and sexuality. Tonight: in the fifth part of our series on Queering the Sound Archive, We ask the question: Where is the current queer feminist position located? To begin to unpack this question we take a radiophonic journey to Sweden, to listen to Sarah Ahmed, who as committed anti-racist feminist practitioner and activist discusses current Queer feminist Person of Colour discourses and Academic frameworks. This discussion was a collaboration between the Centre for gender research and the Centre for Multidisciplinary Research on Racism at Uppsala University and Tankekraft Förlag. If you missed the previous broadcast, you can listen to it at the Resonance FM Queer Temporalities Mixcloud page. [Repeated Friday 1am.]
12:00am - 1:00am
Grime for the Unconverted
Presented and mixed by DJ BPM, showcasing Grime classics, unreleased promos and new releases. This week: a unique showcase of mostly exclusive tracks by Grime legend JT the Goon, a founding member of Slew Dem - whose earliest Grime track was made on a Playstation in 2000! "I have my own unique relationship with music," JT has said, "to me it's alive, and responds to emotions better than humans, it's my friend when no one cares, music talks to me and always listens, wakes me up and sends me to sleep." For a full set list and links to all the artists, including many legal free downloads visit Grime for the Unconverted on Facebook. [Repeated Sunday 2.30am.]