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Day Two of NZ Music Week on the Drive programme - and for some reason, some pricks have decided to steal a bunch of copper from our friends at Stardome Observatory! :(
Day One of NZ Music Week at bFM Drive and we go back to 2001 - where Goodshirt played us some hits from their latest (at the time) self-titled album. That and we look at Death Cults, speak with Maria Williams ahead of their comedy show, and see how the environment faired with Budget 2023.
Why the heck is the Fast & Furious movie franchise still being made? And we do more hehe's for What's Cooking - as the NZ International Comedy Festival plays out.
It's Monday - and Saudi Arabia have got some interesting rules regarding religion. We also ask if Chris Bishop's in-law's are pissed about their son-in-law's comment on them as "not family".
Former lead vocalist of The Instigators and Kiwi music stalwart - Sonya Waters, shared a number of alternative songs by Kiwi artists that you should know about.
Josh discusses the rescue mission underway for the astronauts stranded at the Tiangong space station, NASA's plans in early 2026 to send a space mission to the moon, and new images of the interstellar comet, 3I/ATLAS.
Molly is joined in the studio by Toody Cole, the aptly dubbed 'Godmother of Rock n Roll'. Toody has returned to Aotearoa to play music from the catalogue of the infamous garage-rock pioneers Dead Moon and Pierced Arrows. Toody played bass and sung in both bands alongside her husband Fred Cole, who passed away in 2017. This time around, Toody's band is comprised of Pierced Arrows bandmate Kelly Haliburton, as well as Kelly's bandmate, Christopher March, from Jenny Don't & The Spurs. Toody plays Tāmaki tonight before heading across the country and then making a final stop back at Galatos for The Others Way 2025. Whakarongo mai nei!
Molly speaks with Craig Robertson, a professor in Media Studies at Northeastern University over in the U.S., former writer for Aotearoa’s longest running music mag Rip It Up, who's back in Aotearoa to tour his newly published book, Chris Knox: Not Given Lightly. Published via Auckland University Press, the biographry is a comprehensive account of Knox's life and career from Invercargill to current day. It's an honest account of an artist who's innumerable creative outputs since the '70s have cemented his place as behemoth in the musical landscape and cultural history of this country.
You'll be able to catch Craig in conversation with Russell Brown at Real Groovy from 6pm, alongside Don McGlashan and SJD, Groopchat and Gemma Gracewood.