Wednesday 13th July
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12:00am - 1:00am
Is Black Music
The world's first Alternative Black Music Show, with Art Terry. This week: An exploration of the recent police shootings; A history of the Police State and its relationship with the Black community. Artists featured include D'Angelo, The Negro Problem and The Chuch Of P. [Repeated Sunday 3.30am.]
1:00am - 2:30am
The Sound Projector Radio Show
[Repeated from Friday 5.30pm.] An "aural appendix" to The Sound Projector Music Magazine, presented by Ed Pinsent. This week: new and recent-ish records from Tetrix, Mark Kate, Antanas Rekasius, Chris Abrahams, Large Unit, the "Foreign Correspondents" set by Ryu Hankil, Noid, Matija Schellander et al, Serge Baghdassarians/ Boris Baltschun/ Burkhard Beins, erikm, Ben Lawless, Manas, Dredd Foole, and Ruth Garbus. Visit thesoundprojector.com/radio-show/ for more information.
2:30am - 4:00am
Sine of the Times
[Repeated from Saturday 9.30pm.] Rita Maia presents the underground of new electronic and dance music. Visit mixcloud.com/RitaMaia/ for archived shows.
4:00am - 5:00am
Flomotion
[Repeated from Saturday 8.30pm.] A hand-picked mix of the most dynamic and exciting new electronic music and beyond from veteran DJ and droadcaster Nick Luscombe. For archived programmes visit mixcloud.com/FlomotionRadio/ and keep in touch via twitter @nickluscombe and @flomotion_radio.
5:00am - 6:00am
framework
[Repeated from Sunday 11pm.] The best from a world of field recordings, curated by Patrick McGinley. This week: Framework:afield. Produced in Baltimore, USA by Jason Sloan. For more info on his work see Jason Sloan. Visit http://www.frameworkradio.net for more information and/or contact info@frameworkradio.net.
6:00am - 7:00am
Lucky Cat
[Repeated from Saturday 3.30pm.] Presented by Zoë Baxter, Lucky Cat focuses on Chinese and East Asian culture with a varied mixture of music. This week: From the archive, a repeat one of Zoë's favourite shows from 2014. Chinese Jamaican Reggae History. Zoë investigates the Jamaican Reggae rhythm Shank I Shek, named after Chinese generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek. Beijing snacks are in the dim sum lunch box.
7:00am - 8:00am
Literary London
[Repeated from Friday 7pm.] Nick Hennegan explores the literary life of London and celebrates the popular cultural life and literary history of the city. For more information visit LondonLiteraryPubCrawl.com.
8:00am - 9:00am
Nostalgie Ya Mboka
[Repeated from Saturday 1.30pm.] Classic Congolese dance music of the two Congos with Vincent and Koffi.
9:00am - 10:00am
Clear Spot
[Repeated from Tuesday 8pm.] Panel Borders: Gay Manga. Alex Fitch talks to artists Ilya, Inko, Chie Kutsuwada and Emma Vieceli about gay representation in manga and Japanese style comics, including the phenomenon of Yaoi, titles that have inspired them, and LGBT characters in their own work. Recorded at Graphic Brighton 2015, University of Brighton.
10:00am - 10:30am
Speakers' Corner
[Repeated from Sunday 6pm.] Recordings of voices, meetings, views, and soundscapes from in and around Speakers' Corner, the world's oldest location for free speech.
10:30am - 11:00am
Hot Club du Monde
[Repeated from Thursday 7.30pm.] A Baedeker tour of international musical curiosities from the 78rpm era with Oliver Carter-Wakefield.
11:00am - 12:00pm
Little Atoms
A talk show about ideas and culture, produced and presented by Neil Denny. This week: Marcus Du Sautoy OBE on his latest book What We Cannot Know. Marcus Du Sautoy is Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford. In 2008 he was appointed to Oxford University’s prestigious professorship as the Simonyi Chair for the Public Understanding of Science, a post previously held by Richard Dawkins. Marcus is the author of The Music of The Primes, Finding Moonshine and The Story of Maths and in 2006 gave the Royal Institution Christmas Lectures.
Visit www.littleatoms.com for more information and/or contact littleatomspodcast@gmail.com. [Repeated Saturday 9am.]
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Farside Radio
Music from the catalogues of Far Side Music, the world's primary source for East Asian sounds, presented by Paul Fisher. Visit www.farsidemusic.com/ for more information. [Repeated Sunday 8am.]
1:00pm - 2:00pm
The News Agents
[Repeated from Saturday 2.30pm.] Experiments in news and arts with Jude Cowan Montague. This week: The Strand Magazine is famous for bringing Sherlock Holmes's stories to a wide circulation but it did much more. Writers like Arthur Morrison and artists like J. A. Shepherd contributed to its unusual combination of fancy, trivia, 'small news', story, celebrity and whimsy. A leaf through the pages of this influential and well-loved London periodical which ran from 1891 to 1950. For more information see thenewsagents.blogspot.com.[Repeated Wednesday 1pm.]
2:00pm - 3:00pm
Late Lunch with Out to Lunch
Polemic, politics, mouth jazz and spontaneous music with Ben Watson. [Repeated Tuesday 1am.]
3:00pm - 3:30pm
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.
3:30pm - 4:00pm
Pass Word
An exploration of current affairs and new technology presented by the award-winning journalist Peter Warren, editor of Future Intelligence and chair of the Cyber Security Research Institute. [Repeated Monday 10am.]
4:00pm - 4:30pm
Kitchen Magic Time
Recipes in sound from Mama Dolores, Mistress of the Deep Soul Kitchen. "Like Mary Berry, only without the cotton wool." [Repeated Tuesday 10.30am.]
4:30pm - 5:30pm
Bonanza and Son
Martyn Bonanza explores Country Music and Americana past, present, and future. Visit bonanzablues.blogspot.co.uk for more information. [Repeated Friday 12am.]
5:30pm - 6:00pm
The Atomic Drop
[Repeated from Friday 5pm.] A series about the world of professional wrestling with news, features and music, hosted by Tariq Haque. Email theatomicdrop@hotmail.com or tweet to @theatomicdrop.
6:00pm - 6:30pm
Six Pillars to Persia
New series in which Fari Bradley focuses on areas that in antiquity touched the Persian Empire via contemporary Iranian, Middle Eastern, North African and South Asian sound, art and culture. This week: the first of a series of three broadcasts made at Malja studios in the Kingdom of Bahrain by Fari Bradley and Chris Weaver, in the form of a travel soundscape. Visit sixpillars.org for more information. Six Pillars is in its usual 9pm slot from next week. [Repeated Friday 3.30pm.]
6:30pm - 11:00pm
Live To Air
This evening Resonance comes Live To Air from East Tower, TV Centre, White City, as part of White Noise's East Tower Residencies. At 6.30pm in A World In London special DJ Ritu presents music from veteran Calypso star Alexander D Great and steel pan virtuoso Debra Romain. At 7.30pm, in Encounter, John Escolme explores the modernist design of TV Centre with architect Arthur Hayes and tv producer Emma Cashmore. At 8.30pm, Joe Boyd, the legendary producer and promoter, presents a specially themed West London Edition (UFO Club, Caribbean music, the Profumo Affair) of Joe Boyd's A to Z. Plus live performances by Howlround: a new musique concrète commission of Robin The Fog, using sounds recorded exclusively in TV Centre; Sam Conran: premieres a Resonance Extra radio art commission, deploying radio signals from deep space, supported by the Jerwood Charitable Foundation; and the Resonance Radio Orchestra featuring Dudley Sutton, offers a site-specific radiophonic extravaganza with the cult TV actor, supported by PRS for Music Foundation. Live visuals by Superlative Television.
11:00pm - 1:00am
Global Globules With Baconface
The barely present cult Canadian stand-up comedian Baconface plays lengthy and mainly uninterrupted selections from his late brother's extensive record collection of '60s and '70s psychedelia, progressive rock, free jazz, folk, acid folk, folk rock, acid rock, electronic music, and ethnoforgeries. In association with the Chilliwack Office of Leisure. [Repeated Saturday 4am.]