Love Me Truly - Cocoa Tea & Shabba Ranks
Children of the Ghetto - Cocoa Tea
Oil Ting - Cocoa Tea
Boom Sound - El Fata
Red Mustang - Kiki Hitomi
Somethin Else (inst) - Wrongtom
Bright Light Dub - Wrongtom Meets Dubblestandart
Thief - Nazamba
Tidal Wave (Raggattack Disco Dub) - Pupajim
cosa rara (Matias Aguayo's dopamine dub) - Lucrecia Dalt + David Sylvian
Gastonia (Al Wootton Dub) - Aristidez
El nuevo Prometeo - Los Pirañas
Serenata Guajira - Celia Cruz
Dulce guajira - Los Kintos
Mapambazuko - Ale Hop & Titi Bakorta
Amniotico (Multi Culti Dub) - Aristidez
Auf Log - bambinodj
Funk Kraut - Zombie Zombie
Ghost Town - JB Dunckel + Jonathan Fitoussi
Oiseau - Laurent Bardainne & Tigre d'Eau Douce + Bertrand Belin
Densite - Zombie Zombie
Scaring 1100 Chickens To Death - Time Cow
Cat Riddles & Ginnels Juice - Brassfoot
Marginalia - Goose & Hosca
PicL - Cousin
Wet FX - TBC
Endryu's Love Theme - Fulvio/Treasure Island
cosa rara - Lucrecia Dalt, David Sylvian
Count Me Out - Emily Jeanne
Wheeling - TRAKA/Muadeep
Fresh Fields - Mr Beatnick
RF Conga - Sordid Sound System
The Ocean - Sordid Sound System
Hell suite, Pt. I - DARKSIDE
Hell suite, Pt. II - DARKSIDE
Où va la chance - The Liminanas
Catherine - The Limiñanas + Anna Jean
Iris - JB Dunckel + Jonathan Fitoussi
Tanzanite - JB Dunckel + Jonathan Fitoussi
Đông Ba Market - Le Motel/Hoang Tuan/Yvonne Quỳnh-Lan Dương
A Nation, No Flag - Brassfoot
Đồ Sơn At Night - Emily Jeanne
Nick and Rosetta are back for another epic Tuesday Drive! Today on the show, we listen to Nick's catch up with Durand Jones & The Indications ahead of their show at The Powerstation - and their new album Flowersout June 27! For AudioCulture, the duo catch up with local legend and owner of Whammy Bar Lucy Macrae about the history of Save Our Venues, now known as Independent Music Venues Aotearoa. Plus news, weather, surf, prizes, SRN Top 10 recap, and more!
Today on Audio Culture, Nick and Rosetta chat with local legend and owner of Whammy Bar Lucy Macrae about the Save Our Venues movement that made waves across the Aotearoa Music Scene throughout Covid-19 - and went on to become the organisation Independent Music Venues Aotearoa, providing support and strengthening community amongst independent music venues across the motu.
Durand Jones & The Indications have built an international fanbase due to their endearing approach to contemporary soul music. Their music has the unique quality of sounding anachronistic without being derivative. Nicholas caught up with the soul-band before their show at the Powerstation in Tāmaki Makaurau. The conversation began with a discussion on the impact of recently passed artists Roberta Flack and Angie Stone. Listen along as the band discusses a range of topics from their favourite animals to the correlation between James Baldwin's writing and Durand Jones' music.
Last week the ACT Party announced that they were going to stand candidates in the local elections for the first time.
The party is calling for a ‘clean out’ of councils, slating them for failing to make change. The claims have been met with backlash from councillors who say David Seymour and the party don’t understand the work that goes into local government.
For our weekly catch up Producer Evie spoke to the ACT Party’s Simon Court about what decisions lead to the move, and what the party hopes to achieve in local government.
They also discussed ACT MP Mark Cameron who made headlines last week for saying National was leaving farmers and rural communities worse off than James Shaw did due to their higher emission reduction promises.
And finally we also discussed David Seymour failing to inform Education Minister Erica Stanford that a key school lunch provider was going into liquidation.
For our weekly catch up with Te Pāti Māori’s Takutai Kemp, News and Editorial Director and Monday Wire Host, Joel, spoke to her about the Winston Peters meeting with his US counterpart, Marco Rubio, the recent Ipsos Issues Monitor Survey findings, and the recent developments in Israel’s war on Gaza.
For our weekly catch up Producer Evie spoke to the ACT Party’s Simon Court about the ACT party entering candidates into local elections, ACT MP Mark Cameron criticising National’s approach to rural communities, as well as David Seymour failing to inform the Education Minister that a key school lunch provider was going into liquidation.
Evie also spoke to Geopolitical Analyst at the University of Otago, Geoffrey Miller about Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters recent trip to the US, and what outcomes this achieved for US New Zealand relations.
Joel spoke to the Political Marketing Expert from the University of Auckland Edward Elder about the most recent Ipsos Issues Monitor Survey, which recorded the government as having the lowest score since the survey started collecting data in mid-2017.
And Global Innovator, Matt Hart, joins us in studio today to discuss the new tv series ‘Adolescence’, and how this relates to creativity and innovation.
Last week Foreign Minister Winston Peters made a trip over to the US to meet with the new Trump administration.
On the trip, Peters carried out a number of meetings with officials such as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio. Peters has since revealed very little about what was discussed or achieved in these meetings, instead simply stating he was ‘very pleased’ and ‘more confident going out than coming in.’
The main questions ahead of the trip were around what effect Trump’s tariffs may have on Aotearoa, as well as what trade with the US will look like moving forward. However little has been revealed following the trip.
Producer Evie spoke to Geopolitical Analyst at the University of Otago Geoffrey Miller about the trip and what Aotearoa can expect to come out of it.