12:00am - 1:00am

Turtle Island

Contemporary Native American and First Nations music from a wide range of indigenous musicians in North America, selected by multi-disciplinary sculptor Andrew Graves-Johnston (aka DJ Droid), who first came across it when researching the Standing Rock protests of 2016/17. Visit facebook.com/turtleislandradio for more information. [Repeated Saturday 12.30am.]

1:00am - 2:30am

Artrocker

[Repeated from Tuesday 10.30pm.] Paul and Lewis from the influential Artrocker magazine previews all the latest releases from London and the UK's thriving indie rock scene and beyond. To listen to past shows visit Paul's Mixcloud page

2:30am - 3:30am

Ross's Cantina

[Repeated from Sunday 8pm.] Ross Forrest walks us through the shadier side of roots, country and Americana. Today: new music from the likes of Logan Ledger, Jamie Wyatt, Charley Crockett, Emily Nenni and Yola. Contact the show at cantinacomms@gmail.com.

3:30am - 4:00am

Arty Facts

[Repeated from Sunday 1.30pm.] Arty Facts with Master J is a show about working in the arts. Today: Master J is joined by West End musical theatre performer Karen Holmes. This is the first of three shows where at the beginning Karen will be given 5 songs she has never sung before – she can refuse one but will have to sing the others. To bring some fun and light to these sad and tough times, there will be loads of silly facts about the songs, and they will all have a positive or uplifting feel to them. The nature of this live challenge makes it very likely there will be some ‘car crash’ moments. For more information visit Master J on Facebook.

4:00am - 5:00am

Definitely Dylan

[Repeated from Sunday 4pm.] Taking Tom Waits' description to heart - “Dylan is a planet to be explored” - Laura Tenschert presents a series dedicated to the planet that is Bob Dylan and his musical and cultural orbit. For more information visit www.definitelydylan.com.

5:00am - 6:00am

Isotopica

[Repeated from Sunday 7pm.] Cultural sonic detours with artist Simon Tyszko. Visit theculture.net/ for more information. 

6:00am - 7:00am

Modulisme

[Repeated from Friday 11.30pm.] Modulisme (which translates as Modularism) is a series devoted to out of leftfield modular synthesis, with a different sound-designer playing live or offering studio recordings of their choice each week. For more information visit modulisme.info/sessions.

7:00am - 7:30am

L'alternative

[Repeated from Wednesday 7.30pm.] Eleonore Desnos explores French audio oddities and delights "a la carte".

7:30am - 8:00am

Dig That Treasure

[Repeated from Tuesday 7.30pm.] Will Hall presents 30 minutes of forgotten, underrated and underappreciated pop and folk music from across the world. International scenes are at home alongside outsider musics, demos and covers, film and game soundtracks, and long-lost rarities in this decentred selection. Follow @digthattreasure on Instagram.

8:00am - 9:00am

The Organ presents The Other Rock Show

[Repeated from Sunday 8pm.] Marina Organ presents an hour of music that uses unconventional structures and 'other' time signatures – gathered from the worldwide undergrounds of math rock, avant prog, weird electronica and strange pop. This week: music from Pasteur, Infix, Cardiacs, Her Stems Spiral, Bob Drake, Gryphon, Pasteur, The R6 Implant, a.P.A.t.T, Circus Flabbergast, Koenjihyakkei, 108Gs, Bangladeafy and Lapsus Linguae. Visit otherrockshow.wordpress.com for more information.

9:00am - 10:00am

The Naked Short Club

[Repeated from Monday 9pm.] Dr. Stu and his expert guests dance around alternative investments, markets, the economy and wider world with psychedelic sounds and sometimes poetry. Guests: David Gray, Global Sustainable Farmland Income Trust; Sean Kiernan, Greengage.

10:00am - 11:00am

Studio Visit

[Repeated from Wednesday 8pm.] An in-depth interview based programme presented by Morgan Quaintance, featuring international contemporary artists, writers and theorists as guests. This month: Morgan talks to innovative literary theorist Sianne Ngai about her new book, Theory of the Gimmick. The last in her landmark and essential trilogy on affect and new aesthetic categories under late capitalism, Ngai discusses why gimmicks are both comedic and terrifying, and how the teen horror film, It Follows could really be an allegory about student loans. For more information visit studiovisitshow.com.

11:00am - 12:00pm

Ireland's Eye

Johnny Jameson presents a weekly show dedicated to the latest from the Irish country music scene plus requests, dedications, news and more. Contact johnnyjameson@hotmail.co.uk

12:00pm - 1:00pm

The London Ear

Ghostwriter and critic Ben Thompson presents a DFS Algonquin Table for the post-thought era. This week: a lot has happened in the year since this November 2019 interview with author Emma Warren, but nothing to make her book, Make Some Space's topographical analysis of the origins of the Total Refreshment Centre jazz uprising any less pertinent. First broadcast 14 November 2019. For further information visit @btfoshizzle on Twitter and find playlists at Ben Thompson's Facebook page. [Repeated Tuesday 7am.]

1:00pm - 2:00pm

Talking Africa

A magazine show covering African development issues hosted by Sonny Decker. This week: Greenpeace Africa new report on air pollution in South Africa – thousands die each year as a result of air pollution from coal-fired power plants. South Africa State owned and controlled electricity supply commission, ESKOM, the largest operator of coal-fired power plants in the country, is held largely culpable for excessive emissions of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and excessive volumes of waste coal ash dust into the atmosphere. See mixcloud.com/talkingafrica for more Talking Africa shows. [Repeated Tuesday 9am.]

2:00pm - 3:00pm

The Traditional Music Hour

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: as it was St Andrew's Day on Monday, today's show has a Scottish theme. [Repeated Monday 12pm.]

3:00pm - 3:30pm

Palimpsest

[Repeated from Tuesday 5pm.] A soundwalk collage, exploring a particular place each episode. Presented by Georgina Bowden. This month: Storm. A recording of one of South Australia’s lightning storms.

3:30pm - 4:00pm

Art Then And NowHighlight

A discussion of art from the past and the present with Anna Gammans. This week: Why Don’t You Love Me? Anna speaks to singer, songwriter and X Factor star Melanie Masson about her single ‘Why Don’t You Love Me?', female empowerment through music, and her new label, All About Eve Records. To get in touch visit Instagram @annagammansart or Facebook theartthenandnowshow. [Repeated Monday 2.30pm.]

4:00pm - 4:30pm

Smashing Records

Abs Tripp from DASL (Disability Advice Service Lambeth) discusses how music fires people up to jump higher, ride further and shout louder. This week: Terry, Paige and Lucy talk to Trevor, Peter, Lauren and Ebenezer from DASL. They discuss what DASL do, how they support disabled people in looking for work, and what happens at their AGM. Their music choices include Brixton's very own David Bowie. Contact abs.tripp@disabilitylambeth.org.uk. [Repeated Monday 2pm.]

4:30pm - 5:00pm

Previously On Resonance FM

A gem plucked from our archive. Today: novelist (and former Chair of Resonance's board of trustees) Tony White introduces a reading from his climate change novel 'Shackleton's Man Goes South,' published by the Science Museum as their Atmosphere Commission for 2013, and the first novel they have ever published. First broadcast 11 June 2014.

5:00pm - 5:30pm

Meet Me On The Radio

[Repeated from Tuesday 11.30am.] A series created by Meet Me at the Albany members, artists and collaborators. This week: Do frogs hibernate? We hear a selection of North American frogs recorded by herpetologist Charles M. Bogert in the 1950s, and are joined by a special guest, Emily from the Froglife project. Ros and Ron share memories in this wintery episode; hedgehogs shuffle around the show, a doormouse snores and the wind howls. We hear concerns from Inuit and indigenous people about ice breaking and listen to Antarctic underwater sounds. Presented by Ron Savill and Rosaline Muirhead. Produced by Hannah Kemp-Welch and Grant Smith. A co-production by the Albany and Entelechy Arts with Soundcamp.

5:30pm - 6:00pm

Pull the Plug

Promos and new releases spun and sometimes speared by Johnny Seven. Email pulltheplugseven@gmail.com. [Repeated Saturday 11am.]

6:00pm - 6:15pm

Drift Shift

Found sound and found text collected to form drifts that shift, produced and presented by Franziska Lantz. Visit driftshift.blogspot.com from more information. [Repeated Saturday 11.30am.]

6:15pm - 6:30pm

Into The Moss

A sunken raft of weeds woven into a verdant morass of sound, song and story by the whinnying horses of the Ear Pocket hotel. This week: Passages rob their wanderers. Gourds wheeze. New job at Lofties. Young lights flicker over pine. Show archive at soundcloud.com/into-the-moss. Contact intothemossradio@gmail.com. [Repeated Saturday 11.45am.]

6:30pm - 7:30pm

The OuterglobeHighlight

Debbie Golt takes African music and wider arts and culture as her starting point. This week: Debbie interviews Jabu Morales, co-founder of Barcelona-based Ayom, with Brazilian, Angolan and Italian members. Jabu is forthright about combining motherhood with her music activities, her longstanding study and sharing of Candomblé and the Orishas, and her fresh steer on male/female equalities. Visit outerglobe.co.uk for more information. Tweet to @outerglobe. [Repeated Monday 4am.]

7:30pm - 8:00pm

Hot Club du Monde

A Baedeker tour of international musical curiosities from the 78rpm era with Oliver Carter-Wakefield. This week: we embark on an alternative musical tour of Chicago to hear butchers turned saxophonists and accordion playing tea merchants. Featuring hot jazz from Muggsy Spanier and Frank Teschemacher, scuffling blues from Casey Bill Weldon, Irish reels and tub-thumping ragtime from a mystery orchestra. [Repeated Friday 2pm.]

8:00pm - 9:00pm

Clear Spot

Doss - A Brief History of Rave, is an exploration of collective joy and spaces for communal celebrations, how they have been shaped and how they have been resisted. Part audio essay, part soundscape, part mix, it includes music by AceMo, DJ Marcelle, Fauzia, Leyland Kirkby, Malibu, Meddle, Remarc, Sky H1 and others. For more follow @JCHignett on Instagram. First broadcast 16 September 2020. [Repeated Friday 10am.]

9:00pm - 10:30pm

Adventures in Sound and Music

New music with The Wire magazine. This week's show is hosted by Shane Woolman who presents an exclusive guest mix from Masma Dream World as well as new tracks by Ergo Phizmiz, Farhot, DJ Earl, Gaye Su Akyol and more. Visit thewire.co.uk for more information. Contact theconduit@thewire.co.uk. [Repeated Sunday 1am.]

10:30pm - 11:00pm

SHAPEHighlight

New music from the SHAPE platform. This month: multidisciplinary artist and musician Elina Waage Mikalsen from Tromsø, Sápmi/Norway. Her work explores the frictions and connections between the female body and the voice. SHAPE is supported by the Creative Europe programme of the European Union.

11:00pm - 12:00am

Grime for the Unconverted

Presented and mixed by DJ BPM and Sharon-Rose (on alternate weeks), showcasing Grime classics, unreleased promos and new releases. Listen to archive shows on Mixcloud. Twitter: @djbpm and @sharonrose__. [Repeated Sunday 12am.]

12:00am - 1:00am

Club Integral Radio Show

[Repeated from Wednesday 9.30pm.] The Earl of Killorglin and Andrew Scott-Bolton of Club Integral - London's long-running "home to the uncategorisable" - explore the music that informs its long running (but currently suspended) concert series in London.