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Interview - Morton Subotnick
Audio 7 Jul 2013James Gardner interviews Morton Subotnick, electronic music composer, known for his pioneering album 'Silver Apples of the Moon'.
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Interview - Morton Subotnick, Part 2
Audio 6 Jul 2013James Gardner interviews Morton Subotnick, electronic music composer, known for his pioneering album 'Silver Apples of the Moon'.
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Interview - Peter Zinovieff
Audio 3 Jul 2013James Gardner interviews Peter Zinovieff, who established EMS in 1969 and made a series of now-classic synthesizers.
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Jocelyn Bell Burnell: star dust
Audio 2 Feb 2013British astrophysicist who discovered pulsars. She visited Auckland to present a public lecture, We Are All Made of Star Dust, at AUT University and talk at the New Zealand and the Beginnings of Radio… Audio
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Tim Berners-Lee: the internet
Creator in 1989 of the World Wide Web, now a professor at MIT and the University of Southampton, director of the World Wide Web Consortium, and founder of the World Wide Web Foundation. He visited… Audio
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Rob Strathdee – Learning for the Labour Market
Audio 2 Sep 2012Rob Strathdee says more can be done to reduce the influence of social background on educational achievement. Professor Strathdee, Head of the School of Education Policy and Implementation at Victoria… Audio
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Zhu Feng – Balance of Power
Audio 2 Sep 2012Professor Zhu Feng, from Peking University in Beijing, is one of the world's leading authorities on China's foreign policy and North Asian security issues. He's now based at Victoria University where… Audio
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William Tobin: the Transit of Venus
Audio 2 Jun 2012The Transit of Venus Former physics and astronomy lecturer at the University of Canterbury and Director of the Mount John University Observatory, who has returned here for the Transit of Venus Lecture… Audio
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2011 Sir Douglas Robb Lecture 2 - Tariq Ali
Audio 8 May 2011Tariq Ali considers how USA power has played out across the world, arguing that although its imperial ambitions have been manifested for centuries, overstretch is beginning to set in. Audio
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Macmillan Brown lecture 2, 2010
Museums in the Colonies The great natural history and encyclopaedic museums of Europe arose as colonial empires were expanding round the globe. Efforts to organise, classify and display the material… Audio
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2009 Janet Frame Lecture by Wiliam Taylor - Part 2
The 2009 Janet Frame Memorial Lecture features the well-known author William Taylor, reflecting on a forty-year career of writing for children and young people. Audio
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Lecture 2 - The mystery of the first stars
Audio 22 Sep 2009Dr Grant Christie MNZM, Research Astronomer, Stardome Observatory
The first stars formed when the Universe was less than 2% of its current age. At this early epoch the conditions were very different… Audio
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Richard James Burgess - A Different Kind of Drummer (Part 2)
Former Quincy Conserve drummer Richard Burgess helped define the 'new romantic' sound, ran drum clinics, lectured in the US and UK and produced 24 charted singles and 14 hit albums and wrote the… Audio
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MacMillan Brown lecture 2, 2009
The 2009 Macmillan Brown lectures explore how Maori culture operates as a force for New Zealand's social and scientific advancement. In this second lecture, Professor Lisa Matisoo-Smith looks at how… Audio
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Lecture 2 - The Evolution of Biological Complexity
Audio 31 Aug 2008Professor Paul Rainey FRSNZ, Massey University. Professor Rainey paints a picture of life's evolution from the perspective of major evolutionary transitions, including that from solitary organisms to… Audio
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Macmillan Brown lecture 2, 2008
Cookery in the Colonial Era. Contact with the immigrants brought new types of kai and ways of cooking to Maori, explored by Prof Helen Leach of the University of Otago in the second of her 2008… Audio
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Macmillan Brown lecture 2, 2007
Audio 1 Jan 2007A Tale of Two Ways : ideas and transformation. The ways in which ideas are transforming the worldviews and lifestyles of the Pacific societies. Pacific societies were changed early, and fundamentally… Audio
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Macmillan Brown lecture 2, 2006
A tuakana-teina relationship: contemporary Maori and Pacific Art. Contemporary Pacific art has tended to be defined as art by New Zealand residents or New Zealanders of Pacific Islands, mainly… Audio
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Macmillan Brown lecture 2, 2005
'Afghans' and 'cheerios', 'kiwi' and 'iwi': the words we use. The beginnings of New Zealand English go back to the time when Captain Cook borrowed Maori words into English. In this lecture Elizabeth… Audio