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Many Moons Of Music

Finally getting round to updating this. Will try to be more regular. TWS was a bit excited to have authentic bluegrass band from outta Taranaki The Federal String Band as its first ever live guest and they sure delivered.

Meantime, here’s some of the stuff that’s featured on the show in recent months:

Wreck On The Highway – Dixon Brothers
Cowboys Lullaby – Goebel Reeves
Don’t forget The Flowers – Wilco
A Dream By The Sea – The Renderers
Reckoning – Mount Moriah
Waltz Of The Angels – Jean Shepherd
Banks Of The Ohio – Dolly Parton
Queen Bee – Chuck Prophet
Storms Never Last – Phosphorescent
When The Levee Breaks – Kansas Joe McCoy and Memphis Minnie
No More Auction Block For Me – Sweet Honey In The Rock
You’ve Got To Walk That Lonesome Valley – Mississippi John Hurt
I Held Her In My Arms- Violent Femmes
Let Your Heart Break – Ark Life
Lorena – Waylon Jennings
Hang Me, Oh Hang Me – The Deep Dark Woods
Goodnight Irene – Ry Cooder
Maple On The Hill – Carter Family
Trouble in Mind – Bob Wills and The Texas Playboys
Te In Te Kuiti – Ash Burton and the Nightcaps
E Pari Ra – Ana Hato and Deane Waretini
Darcy Clay – Ian Morris and Dave Dobbyn
Living In A Trance – Ferlin Husky
Wouldn’t Cry – Sneaky Feelings
Black Sheep Boy – Scot Walker
Big Red Sun Blues – Lucinda Williams
Acony Bell – Gillian Welch
Mansion On A Hill – Crooked Fingers
Dead Flowers – Townes Van Zandt
Westbound Train – Christopher Denny
City of New Orleans – Steve Goodman
Sam Stone – John Prine
Hello Stranger – The Flatlanders
Crime of Passion – Bhi Bhiman
Crying Steel Guitar – Hank Snow
Isa Lei – Vishwa Mohan Bhatt and Ry Cooder
Weighted Sin – Chad Van Gaalen
You Lie – Tami Neilson
Now Is The Hour – Marty Robbins
Pale Blue Eyes – Sheryl Crow and Emmylou Harris
Minglewood Blues – Gus Cannon
Catahoula Stomp – Cleoma Breax Falcon
Marie Marie – Dave Alvin
Milk Cow Blues – Sleepy John Estes
Knoxville Girl – Louvin Brothers
Uneasy Peace – Wooden Wand
Wasteland of the Free – Iris Dement
Cover Me Up – Jason Isbell
Hangi – Dennis Marsh
Magdalene Laundries – Joni Mitchel
My Desert – The Jazz Butcher
Loving Her Was Easier – Kris Kristofferson
Snowin on Raton – Townes Van Zandt
California – George Jones and Tammy Wynette
Oh Dem Golden Slippers – Carson Robinson and Vernon Dalhart
Milwaukee Blues – Charlie Poole
Old Paint – Andy Parker and The Plainsmen
The Searchers – Sons Of The Pioneers
My Darling Clementine – The Be Good Tanyas
Red River Valley – Stevie Nicks and Chris Isaak
Still Drunk, Still Crazy, Still Blue – Scott H. Biram
Show Me The Place – Leonard Cohen
Traitor – Martha Wainwright
Waltz of The Wind – Windy City Strugglers
It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels – Kitty Wells
Farther Along – Trio
Won’t You Let Her Lilies Grow – The Unfaithful Ways
Heaven For You , Prison For Me – Marlon Williams
Radio Song – Felice Brothers
Desert Raven – Jonathan Wilson
Canyon Ride – Beachwood Sparks
Return Of The Grievous Angel – Gram Parsons
That’s The Way Love Goes – Lefty Frizell
Jesus and Elvis – Greg Brown
Through The Morning Through The Night – Dillard and Clark
From a Silver Phial – Hamilton Leithauser/The Gene Clark No Other Band
She Darked the Sun – Linda Ronstadt
Give My Love to Marie – Gene Clark
Dixie Darling – Bill Fox
My Dixie Darling – Anita Carter
No Depression In Heaven – Uncle Tupelo
Careless Love – Odetta
Deportee – The Highwaymen
Whispering Pines – Johnny Horton
The Storms Are On The Ocean – Great Lake Swimmer
Take Me Down To The Murray River – Archer
Calling Card – Neko Case
Nobody’s Darlin But Mine – Merle Haggard
Long Time Gone – Everly Brothers
Song To Bobby – Cat Power
Song To Woody – Bob Dylan
Give Back The Key To My Heart – Doug Sahm & The Texas Tornados
Clay Pigeons – Ronnie Fauss
Waves – Sam Baker
LA Freeway – Guy Clark
TB Blues – Jimmie Rodgers

Green Tea June 2014: Wind Energy & Rats!

This show first broadcast on 3rd June 2014. Click here to listen to the podcast: GREEN TEA JUNE 2014 SoundCloud

This month Geoff Osgood tells us about the Ratpack project. You can check out the Wellington Road North, Greenest Street blog with lots of great pictures here. Please contact them for more info on getting your own tunnel trap and keeping Paekakariki rat free!

Greenest Neighbourhood - Wellington Road North's Ratpack in action

Greenest Neighbourhood – Wellington Road North’s Ratpack in action

 

We have an extended feature interview where I speak to the visionary and utterly inspirational Scott Willis who is Project Manager at Blueskin Energy Ltd, a community wind farm project in Blueskin Bay, Dunedin, New Zealand. Scott is also manager of the Blueskin Resilient Communities Trust. This in-depth interview covers the history and scope of the Dunedin wind project, the current state of wind, renewables politics, and industry in New Zealand, challenges faced by community based projects such as this, the importance of meaningful community consultation & increasing energy literacy, other environmental considerations effecting wind projects, and his vision that goes way beyond mere clean energy production!

Blueskin Energy Project members (from left) Scott Willis, Chris Freear and Chris Le Breton (photo ODT)

Blueskin Energy Project members Scott Willis, Chris Freear and Chris Le Breton    (photo ODT)

 

The Avant Gardener Hannah Zwart talks us through her best advice on winter in the Paekakariki edible garden, and gives us a preview of her upcoming trip to California, Cuba & Mexico to visit community gardens. Click here to check Hannah’s KCDC Green Gardener page.

This month’s playlist includes Deep Down & Dirty by Stereo MC’s. This song is dedicated to the incredible Greenpeace activists aboard Esperanza who are currently out protesting at the Statoil drilling rig in the Hoop Oil Fields in Norway. Read their blog here – it’s quite breathtaking!

Title theme: Mardi Gras BB , ‘Down Down Down’.

Green Tea March 2014: Ames St Party & Hugh Brown goes plastic free!

Our second Green Tea show broadcast on 4th March 2014. Here’s the podcast: Green Tea March 2014 SoundCloud

This month I spoke with Ames Street residents at their street party as they celebrated coming together for the KCDC Greenest Neighbourhood Competition. The blog with loads of photos and stories can be read here: Greenest Neighbourhood blog

Local band playing at the Ames Street Party!

Local band “The Land Of Plenty” provided the entertainment at the Ames Street Party!

The Allotment... Fast becoming the choice neighbourhood gathering space.

The Allotment… Fast becoming the choice neighbourhood gathering space.

Abundance at the Ames Street roadside community garden

Abundance and generosity at the Ames Street roadside community garden

 

Our regular guest, The Avant Gardener Hannah Zwartz gives us advice on what we should be doing in our gardens during March. You can book in free workshops with her for 5+ people through the KCDC call center Ph: 296 4700

And the inspirational Hugh Brown tells us about the trials and tribulations of doing his Plastic Free Challenge! The article that proved to be the catalyst for him to take action can be read here: The Ocean Is Broken article. Hugh also donated his sponsorship money to the Paekakariki Orchard & Gardens group (POG). More info about them here: POG on facebook

Title theme: Mardi Gras BB , ‘Down Down Down’.

‘Green Tea’ debuts February 2014 -Featuring White Roofs & Edible Garden Tours

Kia ora koutou, the first program of Green Tea was broadcast on 4th February and we have a few links to share from some of the items.

To listen to the program here’s a Soundcloud: Listen to Feb 2014 show

For our feature item on White Roofs we spoke to  Nicky Walker and Ian Montanjees both of whom mentioned the White Roofs NZ website.

For more on the local Paekakariki WR story: Kakariki Street White Roofs

Juan Carlos from White Roof Project in New York has this inspiring website: White Roof Project New York. Also watch their roof painting volunteers in action video.

Nicky Walker's White Roof is one of several at the North end of Tilley Road. Just 100m2 reduces planetary heating equivalent to taking approx. 2.5 cars off the road each year!

Nicky Walker’s White Roof is one of several at the North end of Tilley Road. Just 100m2 of white roof reduces planetary heating equivalent to taking approx. 2.5 cars off the road each year!

 

A bit later on Nicky Walker also told us about her song choice, Jack Johnson’s ‘All At Once’. Here’s a ton more info about Jack’s Greening Tours and the non-profit’s he supports. He’s even had an App designed so that concert goers can find carpooling rides to his shows!!! Jack Johnson Greening info

Tina Pope walks us through her edible garden. For more info on Paekakariki Edible Garden Tours happening on 9th March see The Local Table

Tina Pope's 'Kiaora' berm garden.

Tina Pope’s ‘Kiaora’ berm garden.

 

Hannah Zwartz is our regular adviser on Green Gardening and you can book in free workshops with her for 5+ people through the KCDC call center Ph: 296 4700

Title theme: Mardi Gras BB , ‘Down Down Down’.

New Reptiles

This month’ll be a New Wavey kinda show with Italy’s Queen of rock Gianna Nannini, Japan’s Stance Punks, London’s old part New Wave/part New Romantic duo Intaferon, US basketball player Jim Carrol, land speed record holders Husker Du, Dunedin’s Toy Love, fake Japan/Korean movie band Paran Maum (featuring Shiori Sekine from Baseball Bear), US skasters Rancid and maybe even Burma’s Side Effect.
The latter, along with lots of other Punk, Gothic, and Metal bands can be found on leading Burmese alternative music site http://www.myanmarxbands.org

November

 

Juanita Aparicio, Bullfighter Juanita Aparicio, bullfighter b. January 27, 1935.

Song to Bobby – Cat Power

Yah Hey – Phosphorescent

Desperadoes Under The Eaves – Madeleine Peyroux

Fugitive – Merle Haggard

Jesus and Elvis – Greg Brown

The Church In The Wildwood – Loretta Lynn

Down By The Riverside – Mahalia Jackson

Careless Love – Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash

I Hope That I Don’t Fall in Love With You – Arrica Rose

Stagolee – Beck

Islands In The Stream – Feist & the Constantines

Loving Him Was Easier – Anita Carter

Mansion On The Hill – Sharon White

Who’s Gonna Shoe Your Pretty Little Feet – The Everly Brothers

Pale Blue Eyes/Buckets of Rain – Ben Harper/Joshua Arthur/Dhani Harrison

If You See Her – Johnny Rodriguez

Making Believe – The Whites

Old Gospel Ship – Iris Dement

Long Time Gone – Billie Joe Armstrong & Norah Jones

 

August 2013: Steeping grains: method and recipes

How to steep grains (and why)

 

Steeped grains add flavour, body, colour, body and head retention.

 

You can steep any of the following grains:

  • Roasted grains: eg, chocolate malt, black malt, roast barley. These give the black colour and characteristic roasty/chocolate/coffee flavours to stouts, porters and other dark beers.
  • Crystal malts: usually British malts, available in pale, medium, and dark. These give different degrees of amber colour, toffee flavours, and sweetness and help provide head retention and body. Good for bitters and pale ales. Can also be included in darker beers for flavour, sweetness, head retention, and body.
  • Caramel malts: the continental European version of crystal malt (basically any malt with “cara” in the name).

 

The grains must be milled (cracked open) before steeping. Some home brew shops will mill grains for you on request, or you can pulse them in a coffee grinder, or put them in a plastic bag and crack them by rolling them with a rolling pin or glass bottle.

 

The grains are steeped in hot water for 20 to 30 minutes to extract their flavour and colour. Here is the process:

  1. Heat 3 or 4 litres of water to 75C.
  2. Pour in milled grains, cover pot with a lid, and leave 20 minutes or more.
  3. Strain through a sieve or colander into another pot. Let as much liquid as possible trickle out.

 

The resulting liquid is then used for the boil (instead of water), as in previous recipes. The spent grains can be composted or fed to your chickens.

 

A simpler and less messy method is to use a grain bag instead of straining the liquid through a sieve. To steep grains using a grain bag:

  1. Heat 3 or 4 litres of water to 75C.
  2. Take the pot off the heat (you don’t want to burn the bag on the bottom of the pot), and line the inside of the pot with the bag.
  3. Pour the grains into the bag.
  4. Cover pot with a lid and steep 20 minutes or more.
  5. Lift the bag from the pot and allow the liquid to drain off into the same pot.

 

A grain bag costs about $25 from a home brew shop, or you can sew one up from very fine mesh polyester Swiss voile curtain material. After use, empty out the grains, rinse the bag thoroughly, and stick it in the washing machine along with your clothes.

 

 

Recipes

 

RA Yak

 

This was an attempt to come up with something roughly like Fat Yak pale ale using a Coopers Real Ale kit (hence the name). It follows the same process as July’s Ale Ordinaire recipe, except that grains are steeped for 20 minutes beforehand, and the hops are added at different times. The beer has plenty of flavour and a nice fruity hop character.

 

Nelson Sauvin is a New Zealand hop variety that has an intense flavour with overtones of passionfruit and white wine. Cascade is an American variety with a citrus fruit flavour. Nelson Sauvin can be overpowering if you’re not careful. A blend of 1/3 Nelson Sauvin and 2/3 Cascade works very well.

 

As before, wait 3 weeks after bottling for best results. As it ages, the malt becomes drier, and the hop flavours recede noticeably and become better balanced and more integrated with the malt.

 

Ingredients

 

1 x Coopers Real Ale kit

1.5kg light liquid malt extract

200g medium crystal malt

20g Cascade hops (10 mins)

10g Nelson Sauvin hops (5 minutes)

US05 yeast

 

Method

 

  1. Steep crystal malt 20 minutes (as per instructions above).
  2. Put unopened can of malt extract in sink of hot water for 10 minutes to soften extract and make pouring easier.
  3. While the liquid is coming to the boil, sanitise fermenter, airlock, grommet, a stirrer, and a clean sieve.
  4. When liquid is boiling, take pot off heat and slowly pour in the malt extract, stirring constantly to minimise caramelisation on the bottom of the pot.
  5. Bring back to boil (will froth up at first, so watch carefully in case it boils over).
  6. Boil wort for 20 minutes.
  7. 10 minutes before the end of the boil, add the Cascade hops.
  8. 5 minutes before the end of the boil, add the Nelson Sauvin hops.
  9. Meanwhile, soften unopened kit in hot water bath as per step 1. Pour into fermenter just before the 20 minutes is up.
  10. When the 20 minutes is up, switch off heat, strain wort through the sieve to remove the hops (optional) and into the fermenter, stir with sanitised stirrer to dissolve the kit.
  11. Top up with cold water to 23 litres, pitch yeast if below 24C, fit lid and airlock, and leave in a warm place for about 10 days to ferment.

 

 

Good as Golding

 

This recipe takes things a step further again. There is no kit to provide the bittering hops, so the wort needs to be boiled longer to extract enough bitterness from the hops. You need to allow about 3 hours for this one (including preparation and tidying up), but the results are worth it. This is a lovely lush and malty bitter that wouldn’t be out of place in an English pub.

 

Notes:

 

Malt: I made this recipe several times using English Muntons malt extract, which, although expensive, consistently gave me better pale ales and bitters than any other malt extract. However, to my dismay the importer has stopped bringing in Muntons extract and it can no longer be found in any brew shops in the Wellington area. I have therefore substituted Black Rock light extract. I’m sure the recipe will still work out fine but haven’t had a chance to try it with the Black Rock yet.

 

I also used the late extract method, which involves adding half the malt extract at the beginning of the boil and leaving the other half til 15 minutes from the end of the boil. This gives better hop utilisation, ie, allows more bitterness and flavour to be extracted from a given amount of hops. (The more malt extract is in a given amount of water, the lower the hop utilisation.)

 

Hops: East Kent Goldings is not always in stock. If you can’t find any, substitute NZ grown Goldings or UK or NZ Fuggles. Note the alpha acid level (6.75%AA), which is a measure of the bittering potential of the hops and is usually stated on the packaging. Even for the same hop variety, this varies from year to year and batch to batch. If your hops are (eg) 5.0%AA, you will need to add more hops to get the same bitterness (6.5/5.0 = 1.3, therefore multiply the weight of hops in the recipe by 1.3).

 

Ingredients

 

2 x Black Rock light liquid malt extract

250g medium crystal

125g dark crystal

100g carapils

25g East Kent Goldings (6.75%AA) (60 mins)

15g East Kent Goldings (6.75%AA) (15 mins)

Gervin ale yeast (or Nottingham or SO4)

 

 

Method

 

  1. Steep malt grains 20 minutes (as per instructions above).
  2. Meanwhile, put one unopened can of malt extract in sink of hot water for 10 minutes to soften extract and make pouring easier.
  3. Before bringing the liquid to the boil pour in the malt extract, stirring to dissolve.
  4. Add the first batch of hops.
  5. Bring wort to boil (will froth up at first, so watch carefully in case it boils over).
  6. Boil wort for 45 minutes.
  7. Meanwhile soften up the second can of extract as per step 2 above.
  8. After 45 minutes, remove kettle from heat, add the second can of malt extract and the second batch of hops.
  9. Bring back to the boil and boil a further 15 minutes.
  10. When the 15 minutes is up, switch off heat, strain wort through the sieve to remove the hops (optional) and into the fermenter.
  11. Top up with cold water to 20 litres, pitch yeast if below 24C, fit lid and airlock, and leave in a warm place for about 10 days to ferment.

 

July’s recipe: Ale Ordinaire

This is a much nicer brew than just using a kit plus sugar, without requiring much more time and effort (which means you can knock off a brew on a weeknight after the kids are in bed). Good for day to day drinking. Amber coloured, malty, not too bitter, but with a touch of earthy/herbal flavour from the hops. Styrian Goldings, Goldings, and Fuggles will all work well and give subtly different but broadly similar results. For best results, leave 3 weeks after bottling. It’s drinkable before then, but the flavours really come together and integrate after 3 weeks. Try one every week and see how it develops in the bottle.

 

Ingredients

 

1 x Coopers Real Ale kit

1.5kg light liquid malt extract

15g hops (Styrian Goldings, Goldings, or Fuggles) (20 mins)

US05 or SO4 yeast

 

Method

 

  1. Put unopened can of malt extract in sink of hot water for 10 minutes to soften extract and make pouring easier.
  2. Meanwhile bring 3 or 4 litres of water to the boil in a large pot. Make sure the pot is about double that capacity, because adding the malt extract will raise the level and the wort will foam and froth when it comes to the boil and also when the hops are added.
  3. While the water is coming to the boil, sanitise fermenter, airlock, grommet, a stirrer, and a clean sieve.
  4. When water is boiling, take pot off heat and slowly pour in the malt extract, stirring constantly to minimise caramelisation on the bottom of the pot.
  5. Bring back to boil, add hops (will froth up alarmingly at first then settle down, so watch carefully in case it boils over).
  6. Boil wort for 20 minutes.
  7. Meanwhile, soften unopened kit in hot water bath as per step 1. Pour into fermenter just before the 20 minutes are up.
  8. When the 20 minutes is up, switch off heat, strain wort through the sieve to remove the hops (optional) and into the fermenter, stir with sanitised stirrer to dissolve the kit.
  9. Top up with cold water to 23 litres, pitch yeast if below 24C, fit lid and airlock, and leave in a warm place for about 10 days to ferment.

 

Reptile Radio Caribbean Super Special!

Next week (Saturday) Reptile Radio will have an almost all Caribbean show, a departure from the Reptile norm, with not much from the 80’s New Wave stable. Instead, we got Toots and the Maytals, Brute Force Steel Band of Antigua BWI, Fonclaire, Peter Tosh, Lord Melody, something from 1955 Cuba, a bit of British two-tone from The Specials, The Selecter and The Beat, and maybe something from these guys – Hell’s Gate Steel Band, formed in 1945 and winner’s of last week’s 2013 Panorama competition…

Reptile Radio

Reptile Radio plays a wide range of music of appeal to nostagia freaks, retro hipsters and ageing punks. Everything from the early 1950s to the present day gets a look-in, but it tends to be heavy on the golden age of music from late 70s and 80s, plus more recent material from local bands.

There’s lots of rock’n’roll, new wave, easy listening punk, ska, some pop, the odd bit of country, reggae, and occasional oddities such as J-punk, Taqwacore (Islamic punk) Bollywood covers, Abba, steel band or whatever I come across. My favourite bands and musicians include The Users, Delaney Davidson, The Raskolnikovs, The Clash, Blondie, Prince Buster, The Beat, Wazzo Ghoti, Vicous Rumour, Tall Dwarfs, The Clean, The Hard Skins, Buddy Holly, Slim Chants, Hans Blix and the Inspectors, Spelling Mistakes, Peter Tosh, The Scavengers and the Shangri-Las.

Hosted by Sam Buchanan, each show follows a theme – love songs, sad songs, Kiwiana etc. Shows are broadcast at 8pm on Saturdays and 3pm on Sundays. Follow us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/243513302457637/