Listen back to feature interviews and performances from the 95bFM Breakfast Show. Weekly features (such as Loose Reads or Travelling Tunes) all have their own feeds, so to listen or subscribe, pick and choose from the bCasts list on the right.
I tēnei ata Penelope Noir phones up for Fashion; deadforest chats about his rad debut album, Plastic; Jenna pops in for Loose Reads; and Justine is outraged with us about the state of employment on Red Dead Redemption. Mondays, you know?
I tēnei ata Penelope Noir chats about Buffy The Vampire Slayer on Fashion; Ethan Moore from Dirty Pixels chats about the bands new single and recording in a hot car on the side of the road; Suri has your book-life sorted with some Loose Reads; and Salene helps you out with all tenancy hell-scape on A Room of One's Own. Whakarongo mai!
Playlist
Cate Le Bon - Moderation
Ibeyi - Made of Gold feat. Pa Salieu
Kody Nielson - Barry's Birthday
Myele Manzanza - Ancestral Mathematics
Don McGlashan - Dominion Rd (Acoustic for bFM)
Coco - One Time Villain
Big Thief - Time Escaping
FABLE - Aroha
Marlin's Dreaming - Pink Frost - Live (The Chills cover)
I tēnei ata David Slack keeps us up to date with some Political Commentary; Sam Low chats about knives on Breakfast Food; and the epic Fable phones up for a first spin of one of the tracks off his new EP 'I'll See You In Hawaiki', out tomorrow! Whakarongo mai!
Jonny chats to Suri about the book recommendation of the week. The latest book from Ta-Nehisi Coates titled The Message. The book contains three interweaving essays that investigate how fictional and factual narrations distort and expose our realities.
This week on From The Crate Cam picks out tracks from Black Star, The Specials and The Smashing Pumpkins' new album Aghori Mhori Mei. Thanks to Southbound Records.
Jonny chats to Green Party MP Steve Abel about the Toitu Te Tīriti Hīkoi that reached Pārameti yesterday and the constitutional changes posed by the Treaty Amendment Bill.
Just like humans, honey bees have a complex social structure controlled by a circadian rhythm. Guy Warman's research focuses on this clock at the heart of the colony structure, as without it, a colony cannot function.
The University of Auckland Chronobiology group uses cutting-edge technology to non-invasively study the bee clock and understand ways to manipulate it to improve the health and management of bees in Aotearoa.