Author Archives: robin

Sine of the Times 15/01/2011

Exploring the past, present and future of London’s underground dance music scene with Thomas Lee and Rita Maia.

This weeks opening edition of the show sees Rob Bignell from Rough Trade East dropping in to chat about his favourite bass driven tracks of 2010. For More details check http://sineofthetimes.tumblr.com

Tracklist
Rustie – Neko
Mount Kimbie – Carbonated
Commix – How you gonna feel (Pedestrian Remix)
Joker – Tron
Ramadanman- Work Them
SBTRKT & Sampha – Break Off
Breach – Fartherless
Pariah – Orpheus
Fantastic Mr Fox – Evelyn
Lorne – None an Island
Adele – Rolling In The Deep (Jamie XX Remix)
James Blake – Unluck

OST 15.01.2011 – Trish Keenan Tribute

This week’s edition of the Original Soundtrack show with Jonny Trunk is a repeat of the 22 December 2007 show with special guests Broadcast, in tribute to the band’s singer, Trish Keenan who died on Friday 14 January 2011.

Yummy Mummy: Series 1, episode 3

This week in the latest of our podcasts exhuming the original and somewhat different 2008 series of YMSR; the team are learning all about music. A rather strange woman called Miss Ding-Dong (who sadly didn’t have the mileage to become a regular character) presents her own completely mis-leading history of music in a little under two minutes, and world famous jazz musician Art Farnaby drops into the studio to give us a demonstration of the saxophone. But evil station manager Thomas Weaver-Baxter is up to his old tricks again and poor Art soon finds himself having to contend with a Parsnip blockage…

Slightly appalling fun for children of all ages.

Yummy Mummy: Series 1, episode 2

Continuing with our archive podcasts of the original and rather different Yummy Mummy School Run series in 2008, this week’s episode sees the team learning how to make tie-dye t-shirts with a little help from the nice people at www.pollyandjago.com. The evil Station Manager Thomas Weaver-Baxter, here using his famous ‘Curse you’ catchphrase for the first time, is full of plans to sabotage the whole thing, with relatively hilarious consequences. Proof, if any was required, of just how dangerous arts and crafts can be when using explosives, and worth listening to just for the musical contributions from Roosevelt Franklin and The Free Design.

Happy New Year, everyone! Will there be a new series in 2011? And will anyone listen if there is? Who knows?

Yummy Mummy: Series 1, episode 1

Whilst the, ahem, ‘masterminds’ behind Yummy Mummy plot their next move in a top secret bunker somewhere, we thought now might be a good time to re-open the files on the original and rather different Yummy Mummy School Run series from 2008.  And so, here it is- the very first episode. How different it all was then, back in the days when they genuinely were trying to make a bona-fide children’s programme rather than just using the premise as an excuse to be silly.  Thomas Weaver-Baxter has only a single line (and a very different voice with which to speak it) and the whole thing has a decidedly wonky feel around the edges. Still, when has that ever stopped Resonance? Plus there’s a visit from those lovely folks at the Puppet State Theatre Company (www.puppetstate.org), a mass tidying spree with a little help from the Barcelona Pavilion and an amusing attempt at multiplication using farmyard animals. By which, of course, I mean an exercise in elementary mathematics. All the close-to-the-wind stuff came later…

Yummy Mummy: Series 2, episode 6

Resonance FM’s high-octane, low-concept children’s light entertainment bonanza for forward-thinking little people and backward-thinking big people. This week finds evil Station Commander Thomas Weaver-Baxter unable to endure another serving of Resonance’s most childish children’s show and so decides to find out what the other stations in the fair city of London have to offer. To his extreme chagrin all they seem able to offer is yet more Yummy Mummy, whose rapidly accelerating fame has forced him to shop around for further endorsements. Yes, for one shining and final moment, every other station in London is going to sound just a little but like Resonance FM. What better way to end the series, other than a sincere promise that it won’t happen again?

Originally broadcast 08/11/2010

Yummy Mummy: Series 2, episode 5

Resonance FM’s high-octane, low-concept children’s light entertainment bonanza for forward-thinking little people and backward-thinking big people. Today’s show and indeed the whole of Resonance FM from this moment on is being brought to you by the terrifyingly heavenly taste of Popsi Cola, the sparkling newly-crowned champion of the carbonated beverage world. This means your weekly dose of post-modern childish hijinks will now be even more lip-smackingly thirst-quenching! And what better way to celebrate this happy union than a peaceful punt down the river Thames aboard historic pirate vessel Radio Coraline? A refreshing time is promised for all. Don’t fight the feeling, you’ll never get away!

Originally broadcast 01/11/2010

OST 27.11.2010 – Robin the Fog

This weekly programme is dedicated to film, TV and library music, and is hosted by Jonny Trunk. But this week Jonny’s got the builders in, so long-standing OST engineer Robin the Fog is taking the hotseat to present two-hour smorgasbord of the funky, the strange and the diabolically instructional.  Features a world exclusive from Basil Kirchin, the wonderful Loretta Long, a tour of Jim Henson’s brain,  an overly-perky gent known only as the K-Tel Exercise Man; an awful lot of awkward 60’s small-talk and some screaming. Also features Alex Fitch, host of Resonance’s Panel Border’s show discussing the merits of Cilla Black. Fun for all the family!

Appears here ‘warts-and-all’ as it originally went out on 27/11/2010, so feel free to skip through the talky bits.  Here’s what we played:

Loretta Long: ABC Song (from the LP ‘Susan Sings Songs from Sesame Street’, Scepter Records, 1970)

Bob Dorough: Ready or Not, Here I Come (from the LP ‘Multiplication Rock’, Captiol, 1973)

Electric Company Cast: Electric Company Main Theme (Warner Brothers 7″, 1972)

Loretta Long: Right in the Middle of My Face (from the LP ‘Susan Sings Songs from Sesame Street’)

Bert: Clink, Clank (Columbia Records 7″, 1972)

Jim Henson: Tick Tock Sick (Signature Records 7″, 1960)

Bob Dorough: Four-Legged Zoo (from the LP ‘Multiplication Rock’)

Loretta Long: Three of These Sounds (from the LP ‘Susan Sings Songs from Sesame Street’)

The Short Circus: Hard, Hard, Hard (from ‘The Electric Company OST’, CTW, 1972)

Bob McGraph: Why Choose to be Afraid (from ‘Bob McGraph from Sesame Street’, Affinity Records, 1970)

Electric Company: JJ to Brenda to Mark (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Bob Dorough: Three is a Magic Number (from the LP ‘Multiplication Rock’)

Jim Henson: The Countryside (Signature Records 7″, 1960)

Electric Company: Punctuation Song (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Bob McGraph: Good, Good Morning Day (from ‘Bob McGraph from Sesame Street’)

Electric Company: Fight! (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Electric Company: My Name is Kathy (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Bob Dorough and Blossom Dearie: Figure Eight (from the LP ‘Multiplication Rock’)

Loretta Long: Someday Little Children (CTW 7″, 1970)

Electric Company: Signs Song (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Hap Palmer: Bossa Nova to Eight (from ‘Math Readiness’ LP, 1980)

The Short Circus: Jelly Belly (from ‘The Electric Company OST’)

Les Chanteurs et L’Orchestre De Michel Triventi: Ulysse ’31 (from ‘Hit Parade des Enfants’, label and date unknown)

Basil Kirchin: Primitive London Part 1 (from ‘Primitive London OST’, forthcoming on Trunk Records)

Bob & Gertrude Kimble(?): S-T-R-E-T-C-H like a Cat (taken from ‘Rhythmic Activity Songs’, Kimbo Instructional Records c.1962)

Jim Henson with Raymond Scott: Limbo- The Organised Mind (taken from ‘Manhattan Research’, Basta Recordings, exact date unknown)

The K-Tel Exercise Man: K-Tel Multi-Exerciser Instructional Record (1st extract) (K-Tel, date unknown)

The Green Goddess: Jump (Renault Trucks Workout) (Renault Trucks 7″, c.1980)

Laban Movement Study Aids: Listen and Move extract (Laban, 78rpm shellac disc, date unknown)

The K-Tel Exercise Man: K-Tel Multi-Exerciser Instructional Record (2nd extract)

Linguaphone: English Lesson 14: Saturday Traffic (Linguaphone 7″, c.1962)

Dick Mills/BBC Radiophonic Workshop: Adagio (taken from ‘The Radiophonic Workshop’, BBC Records, 1975)

BBC Special Effects: The Countryside (taken from ‘BBC Sound Effects vol. 23- Relaxing Sounds’, BBC Records, 1979)

BBC Special Effects:  Screams (taken from ‘BBC Sounds Effects vol. 13- Sounds of Death and Horror’. BBC Records, 1977)

Basil Kirchin: Primitive London Part 4 (forthcoming on Trunk Records)

Unknown: BBC: Acetate disc marked November 1954

Loretta Long: Happy Talk (from the LP ‘Susan Sings Songs from Sesame Street’)

With thanks/apologies to Jonny Trunk. To learn more about the great man and his work why not visit www.trunkrecords.com ? Go on, it’s super.

Yummy Mummy: Series 2, episode 4

Resonance FM’s high-octane, low-concept children’s light entertainment bonanza for forward-thinking little people and backward-thinking big people. This week, in a desperate bid to force the sartorially-challenged station staff to smarten up their collective act, Resonance Commander-in-Chief Thomas Weaver-Baxter has ordered a large antique ornamental mirror to be hung above the studio’s mantelpiece. Predictably, it turns out to be magic and sends Yummy Mummy off on another wild adventure. Features graphic reconstructions of fairies being eaten by lions.

Originally broadcast 25/10/2010

Yummy Mummy: Series 2, episode 3

Resonance FM’s high-octane, low-concept children’s light entertainment bonanza for forward-thinking little people and backward-thinking big people. This week, following yet another ball-bursting incident with the primary school next door, the YMSR team find themselves barricaded in the studio by an army of angry young tear-aways. Reasoning that they never had this kind of problem at the old studio in Denmark Street, evil Station-Commander Thomas Weaver-Baxter decides that the only sensible solution is to tunnel their way back there at once. Unfortunately they don’t realise they’ve taken a wrong turn until they hear the distant sound of yodelling. Slight confusing fun for children of all ages.

Originally broadcast 18/10/2010