Afleveringen

  • Luis Claudio Troccoli de Meirellis was interviewed here by Toni Duder. Luis talks about moving to New Zealand and coming to terms with his sexuality, the work he has been doing for the queer community, and his perspective on the differences between New Zealand and Brazil for a member of the rainbow community.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/42p6ptu and submit a request using the Comments box on this page.

    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • This excerpt features Ellie Lim interviewed by Toni Duder. Ellie shares knowing her identity from a young age, her relationship with her queer relatives in Singapore, and coming out to her ex-partner. Ellie recollects coming out to her parents, the challenges at school, Catholicism, and her relationship with God.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/4brEDjW and submit a request using the Comments box on this page

    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?

    Klik hier om de feed te vernieuwen.

  • This excerpt features Toni Duder’s story recorded by Smita Biswas. Toni recollects the relationships with friends and family, discrimination at the boarding school, and the challenges faced while coming out.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/4946Ls6 and submit a request using the Comments box on this page

    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • This excerpt features Calvin Hona interviewed by Luis Meirellis. Calvin recollects the experience at Waikato University, the uncertainty faced when leaving home and coming out, and the story of meeting his partner.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/497lsuw and submit a request using the Comments box on this page
    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • This excerpt features the coming-out story of Shaun Hawthorne. The interview was conducted by Luis Meirelles and Toni Duder. Shaun talks about life in the ’80s, discovering more about himself in secondary school, coming out to his family and friends, being involved in the peace movements, moving into activism for gay rights and gender, and much more.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/4bsmgeL and submit a request using the Comments box on this page

    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • Duncan Matthews was interviewed by Toni Duder. Duncan speaks about the challenges faced when coming out, how the decision to tell the family occurred, and relationships with the extended family.

    To listen to the complete interview, click on this link https://bit.ly/49gE5w9 and submit a request using the Comments box on this page.

    Image: Rainbow Youth Services Poster. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Ephemera Collection

  • Happy Pride!Alison is joined in the studio by two special guests, Rhi and Sebastian, who talk about some of their favourite queer reads.Celebrate Pride year-round and embrace your rainbow joy by exploring the huge and diverse range of books and resources at Auckland Libraries.Books mentioned on the show can be requested from the Auckland Libraries catalogue using the links below. Most titles are available in multiple formats.Dykette by Jenny Fran Davis (2023) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=4c671c27-7174-5766-b987-21d5b3817d9b&entityType=FormatGroupWayward Children series by Seanan McGuire (2016-2023) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search?query=%22Wayward%20children%20;%22&searchType=series&pageSize=10Our Wives Under the Sea by Julia Armfield (2022) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=26511bf4-ff7f-5440-ab2c-cf43f3d33038&entityType=FormatGroupThings Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke (Eric LaRocca) (2021) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=277e7b95-1d41-5da5-979a-75cf68abe6fe&entityType=FormatGroupThe Stars & the Blackness Between Them by Junauda Petrus (2019) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=8fb498da-0d18-5d27-b31b-aaf85ba77ec1&entityType=FormatGroupThe Dos and Donuts of Love by Adiba Jaigirdar (2023) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=f762893d-70d3-510c-9d08-a1ddf2455555&entityType=FormatGroupThe Seep by Chana Porter (2020) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=49ba1a4d-779d-5f35-92f4-3cdc68bf7dad&entityType=FormatGroupGideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (2019) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=4c5beba2-a7b8-56af-a47a-425691d9ba30&entityType=FormatGroupThe Luminous Dead by Caitlin Starling (2019) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=ba919808-bcd9-5dc0-83c9-fa4bba405ef5&entityType=FormatGroupGreta & Valdin by Rebecca K. Reilly (2021) https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=3acc0d05-1eaa-541b-9e08-c676b4e8acf8&entityType=FormatGroup

  • In this episode, we’re tuning in to the music making of early colonial New Zealand.

    We meet music librarian and curator Marilyn Portman to look at a collection of early music albums which were brought amongst personal possessions to Aotearoa, to become the soundtrack of life in the colony.

    To bring the soundtrack to life, we meet up with musician Polly Sussex who demonstrates music making on a square piano by playing from the Auckland Libraries musical manuscript collection.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Musical Manuscripts

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES

    MANUSCRIPTS:
    Arthur Guyon Purchas. Williams Family albums of music. Book 1. 1852. MusMS-058-1.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/13983#.YZQg-QJ0H64.link

    Williams family. Williams Family albums of music. Book 4. 1850s. MusMS-058-4.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/14189#.YZQhBzXo3cU.link

    Arthur Guyon Purchas. Williams Family albums of music. Book 2. 1871. MusMS-058-2.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/14054#.YZQhBH3bZDE.link

    Williams family. Williams Family albums of music. Book 3. 1850s. MusMS-058-3.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/14079#.YZQi0u2J-fw.link

    PRINTED MUSIC:
    Henry R Bishop. I love thee Duetto, sung by Mrs. Bishop and Mr Braham, at the late Theatre Royal Drury Lane, in the opera of the Circassian bride. London: Goulding, D’Almaine, Potter & Co., 1810.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=44105b58-4f27-4915-905b-584f27c91597&entityType=FormatGroup

    BOOKS:
    Kirstine Moffat. Piano forte: stories and soundscapes from colonial New Zealand. Dunedin: Otago University Press, 2011.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=a2071fc3-60ff-5d93-81f5-502a7a46752c&entityType=FormatGroup

    Tessa Dudder. Sarah Mathew: explorer, journalist, and Auckland’s ‘First Lady.’ Auckland: David Ling Publishing Limited, 2015.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=5c7a3794-eab3-5941-803f-cf1800ecb72e&entityType=FormatGroup

    RECORDING
    Polly Sussex. My devoted piano. 7 Nov 2019.
    https://soundcloud.com/auckland-libraries/my-devoted-piano-november-7-2019?si=067ea631a6b94afc812032ca9dbe3a1d&utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

    BLOG:
    Polly Sussex. Recreational music in 1840s Auckland. 17 Nov 2021.
    https://heritageetal.blogspot.com/2021/11/recreational-music-in-1840s-auckland.html

    Image credit: Williams Family albums of music. Book 1. 1852. MusMS-058-1. Pg 68
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/manuscripts/id/13970

  • In this episode, we make a connection with poetry, poets, and the Auckland Central City Library.

    Research Librarian Elspeth Orwin takes us on a journey beyond the poetry book collection by sharing the voices of poets who interestingly also have a strong association with Libraries.

    We also meet and talk with poet and artist Ta Ilui who is both a regular Auckland Libraries user and who has contributed his own original work in the recent publication Rough Lives Speak.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections - Podcast Auckland Poets and Libraries

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES

    Hone Tuwhare. No ordinary son: poems. Auckland: Random House, 1998.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=f6d0cf52-037b-543a-b008-14d61065597a&entityType=FormatGroup

    Street Poets & Artists Collective Enterprise. Rough lives speak. Auckland: Auckland Council Libraries, 2022.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=007e36f7-1c23-5acf-a42a-3a37405b3a07&entityType=FormatGroup

    RECORDINGS:
    Te Ara- The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Hone Tuwhare Reading Poems. 2010.
    https://teara.govt.nz/en/speech/29786/reading-poems

    The Globe tapes of 42 New Zealand poets read their work. Auckland: Hard Echo Press, 1985.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=b488d187-7fca-5a83-8524-6882d03a0f75&entityType=FormatGroup

    Ngā Pātaka Kōrero- Auckland Libraries. No New Thing- R.A.K Mason. 2022.
    https://soundcloud.com/auckland-libraries/no-new-thing-r-k-mason?in=auckland-libraries/sets/real-gold-treasures-of-the

    Ta Iuli, oral history, 2012, Dominion Road Stories Collection, WOH-1095-002
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/oralhistory/id/1448/rec/1

    MUSIC LP:
    Arthur Rex Dugard Fairburn. A.R.D. Fairburn recording six of his poems. Wellington: The Mermaid Press, 1958.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=0f0eea7f-0995-4f23-8eea-7f09953f2359&entityType=FormatGroup

    New Zealand poets read their work. Auckland: Waiata Recordings, 1974.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=18861bb2-d9e5-46ee-861b-b2d9e5e6ee83&entityType=FormatGroup

    BLOG:
    Jane Wild. R.A.K Mason: a uniquely distinguished son of the city. 8 May 2017.
    https://heritageetal.blogspot.com/2017/05/r-k-mason-uniquely-distinguished-son-of.html

    Image credit: Ta Iuli at Auckland Central City Library, 2022, Benjamin Brooking for Ngako: The Collection Podcast.

  • In this episode, we view a unique poster printed in Rarotonga in 1849.

    Liam Koka'ua talks us through how this poster, Pepa 9, helped to introduce the people of Rarotonga to the Sámi people, who are indigenous to the far north of Scandinavia.

    Rare Book specialist Jane Wild adds to the story with an additional exploration into the research, the origins and the context of the poster printed in Rarotonga in 1849.

    This episode adds to the story The Pepa Trail - Printing in Rarotonga from our video series Ngako: The Collections Talk.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Learning about Lapland in Rarotonga

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    Pepa. Rarotonga, 1840-1849. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/search/searchterm/pepa

    Pepa 9. E puke tangata Lapland teia, Rarotonga, 1840-1849. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13709/rec/5

    The Pepa Trail – Printing in Rarotonga, Auckland Libraries 2022
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYYnNKbzTts

    Heritage et AL Blog:
    Jane Wild. The printing press poster and other lessons: printing in Rarotonga in 1849 and the mission press. 4 Aug 2022.
    https://heritageetal.blogspot.com/2022/08/the-printing-press-poster-and-other.html

    Image credit: Pepa 9. E puke tangata Lapland teia, Rarotonga, 1840-1849. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13709/rec/5

  • In this episode, we read Beauty and the Beast through four centuries of storytelling.

    Rare Book specialist Jane Wild describes the look and feel of the different stories in their time, how the style of writing and illustrative formats changed, and unfolds some exquisite paper engineering.

    Children’s librarian Clare Cudmore-Neame adds to the story by sharing her insights and experience of the role of fairytales for children today.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    Music credit: Piano performance by Marilyn Portman played from the score in the book Julia Corner. Beauty and the beast: an entertainment for young people. London: Dean and Son, 1854.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Beauty and the Beast

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    Beauty and the beast, or the magic rose. With eight coloured engravings. London, 1825. Record ID b1940431.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/12649
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=288cf24d-14ea-5bf5-ba75-00e4cf0d49cc&entityType=FormatGroup

    Le cabinet des fées, ou, Collection choisie des contes des fées, et autres contes merveilleux, ornés de figures. Amsterdam: Rue et hôtel Serpente, 1785-1789.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=b34713c6-b8ae-5472-9ea9-2b0595d0b6c0&entityType=FormatGroup

    Julia Corner. Beauty and the beast: an entertainment for young people. London: Dean and Son, 1854.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=4aa745a8-63f0-54d8-8849-8a813a73a10e&entityType=FormatGroup

    Charles Lamb. Beauty and the beast. London: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall Press, 1887.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=5e2d2750-923b-5d88-8656-39f22fd9437c&entityType=FormatGroup

    Constance Wilde. A long time ago: favourite stories. London: Ernest Nister, 1891.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=cadffb99-dd62-5c90-a9d3-4ef9d9d3f155&entityType=FormatGroup

    Charles Perrault. Old- time stories. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1921.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=6441163f-1476-5ec6-959d-0a6376608b73&entityType=FormatGroup

    Beauty and the beast. From: Peepshow books. London: Chatto & Windus, 1950.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=860123fe-2f77-52b4-a3ad-33e924711bf5&entityType=FormatGroup

    Philippa Pearce. Beauty and the beast. London: Longman Young books, 1972.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=7aab6a2b-ca79-5b20-b090-569fdd9b2533&entityType=FormatGroup

    Robert Sabuda. Beauty and the beast: a pop-up book of the classic fairytale. New York: Little Simon, 2010s.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=92d90121-205a-5d59-b75b-507de6d968fc&entityType=FormatGroup

    Gabrielle- Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve. The beauty and the beast. New York: Harper Design, 2017.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=ee3aa6fc-2e19-5f73-8eb0-402e24e5feb9&entityType=FormatGroup

    Image: Jane Wild unfolds Robert Sabuda's, Beauty and the Beast, 2022, Benjamin Brooking for Ngako: The Collection Podcast.

  • In this episode, we take a trip back in time to the Victorian craze for fern collecting and how Fernmania was documented.

    Rare Book curator Renée Orr describes the work of Herbert Dobbie and Eric Craig who collected and documented ferns of Aotearoa in the last part of the nineteenth century.

    We are also joined by a contemporary print artist and book maker Makyla Curtis who shares her inspiration and print work using ferns.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Fernmania

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    Herbert Dobbie, ‘New Zealand Ferns’, Whitcombe & Tombs, Auckland, 1921.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13930/rec/1

    Herbert Dobbie, ‘145 varieties of New Zealand ferns.’ Part 1.’ 1880.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13821/rec/2

    Eric Craig, ‘New Zealand ferns: 172 varieties.’ 1892. Fern Mounter Princes St, Auckland [Second Edition]
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13845/rec/1

    Sarah Whittingham, ‘Fern fever: the story of Pteridomania,’ Frances Lincoln, London, 2012.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=8957489a-a0e8-5e7e-a0f5-b9412cf0a349&entityType=FormatGroup

    Margaret Thomson, ‘The fern and flower album, for preserving dried specimens of ferns, flowers, seaweeds, &c.’ 1878.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=d8efed72-50e3-5154-8762-9061ecd73c4e&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis. ‘Artist file.’ Available at Takapuna Angela Morton Collection.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=4aea07c6-6b00-541c-8276-bba59c35170e&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis - Wordpress Blog
    https://makylacurtis.wordpress.com/2019/07/15/fern-printing/

    Makyla Curtis, ‘Apertures.’ 2021.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=245b2567-90e7-54fa-bd6f-5b043e52641d&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis, ‘Advance/ Recede.’ 2019.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=03a8d70f-9cec-583b-8899-d4023d750ca7&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis, ‘Abstract compositions project ’12.’ 2011.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=e450bb97-c267-5860-af7e-f2ac1132041e&entityType=FormatGroup

    ZINES:
    See a variety of multimedia publications here:
    https://makyla.wordpress.com/
    Makyla Curtis, ‘Ngā makenu.’ 2016.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=43fc789f-475f-560d-8806-25126802affa&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis, ‘I titohia ē nei kōrero paki e ngā ngeru.’ 2016.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=d323e1d3-bc23-547b-b9dc-b1ff7de1ecd5&entityType=FormatGroup

    Makyla Curtis, ‘On rocks.’ 2018.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=6820a4ea-ff41-5e0c-83c5-a08c0790dafb&entityType=FormatGroup

    Image Credit:
    New Zealand ferns: 172 varieties Illustrated by Eric Craig, 1892, Fern Mounter Princes St, Auckland [Second Edition], pg: 27
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/rarebooks/id/13845/rec/1

  • In this episode, we look at old sporting magazines from 'the stack' with Heritage Collections curator Andrew Henry and gain insights into how New Zealand sport was written about by journalists in the mid-20th century.

    We talk also with history student Katia Kennedy who shares her findings on the sports being played at that time, how these were viewed, and the culture around men's and women's sports participation.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Sports Writing in the mid-20th Century.

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    The New Zealand sportsman. Wellington, 1946-1958.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=cb6638b1-cb27-59f0-b4bd-79e6aed788e0&entityType=FormatGroup

    N.Z. sportswoman. Wellington: N.Z. sporting journals, 1949.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=9450e103-41f3-5761-9a50-e513b1383e7e&entityType=FormatGroup

    Women in sport: the magazine for every sportswoman. Devenport: D.E. Simons, 1948-1949.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=f6e01bc7-8999-5d9f-a5ce-9dfbf1b8abed&entityType=FormatGroup

    Rachel Hewitt. In her nature: how women break boundaries in the great outdoors. London: Chatto & Windus, 2023.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=aebe04df-f833-5b90-9b43-41c446561d7a&entityType=FormatGroup

    HERITAGE TALKS:
    Women’s sport in Auckland with Katia Kennedy. 23 March 2023.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euRVAqtgvVE

    Image credit: The New Zealand Sportsman magazines, 2022, Benjamin Brooking

  • In this episode, we explore the world of Ava through a printed text of Samoan solo and the experience of library specialists Nia Vavao and Pamata Toleafoa.

    We visit Anau and Todd at the Four Shells Kava Lounge and learn how Kava is integral to life across Te Moana-nui-ā-Kiwa and valued and enjoyed here in Tāmaki Makaurau.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast series is made with Auckland Libraries Content Creation funding and is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Ava, Kava, Kawa

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    George Pratt. Some folk songs and myths from Samoa: six solos about the kava (plant and drink). Sydney, 1890.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=5da08344-49d4-593d-8321-e6b1f0ed06ce&entityType=FormatGroup

    Augustin Kramer. The Samoa Islands: an outline of a monograph with particular consideration of German Samoa. Volume 1 & 2. Auckland: Polynesian Press, 1994/1995.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=def09ab7-6fb0-5235-a7ae-79b355f3a22d&entityType=FormatGroup

    Bernard Gadd. Kava ceremony, Hillary College, Ōtara. 1973. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, Footprints 00037.
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/43386/rec/1

    Four Shells Kava Lounge https://fourshellskava.co.nz/

    Image credit: Nia Vavao and Pamata Toleafoa, 2022, Benjamin Brooking for Ngako: The Collection Podcast.

  • In this episode, we find meaning and history in the Auckland Tramping Club’s newsletter Wanderlust.

    Archivist Sharon Smith shares her insights gleaned from reading the Wanderlust magazine in the period of publication during the Second World War.

    We are joined by current Auckland Tramping Club members, Ian, Anna and Dennis, on the Club’s programme of tramps and their preparation for the upcoming Club centenary celebrations.

    See a list of references for this episode below or get in touch with us by emailing [email protected] and we’ll make sure you can find the collection items of your interest.

    This podcast is part of a wider series of short films Ngako: The Collections Talk, available to view via aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/Ngako

    This episode was written and produced by Sue Berman, was recorded and produced by Benjamin Brooking and edited and engineered by Juliana Machado.

    This has been Ngako: The Collections Podcast - Wanderlust in the War years.

    Subscribe to check out the next episode!

    REFERENCES
    Archive [5 x minute books]: NZMS 1230. Auckland Tramping Club. Records.
    Lantern Slides: Photograph Accession 282
    Wanderlust: Research Central Basement Serial 796.92 W24
    Wanderlust Junior: Special Collections Basement Serial 796.92 W24

    Auckland Tramping Club. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/search/searchterm/auckland%20tramping%20club
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/search/searchterm/auckland%20tramping%20club

    MAGAZINE:
    Wanderlust. Auckland: ATC, 1936-2020.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=536310d2-8b91-5ea4-8a70-fc9f7f0fe483&entityType=FormatGroup

    Wanderlust Junior. Auckland: Junior Section, ATC, 1946-1948.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=2d638400-6e41-5453-a49f-1e539ebf4910&entityType=FormatGroup

    Catalogue Search: Auckland Tramping Club
    https://tinyurl.com/ypt8yvjb

    Auckland tramping club. Rules and regulations. Auckland: ATC, 2000.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=ce16b05d-7d25-5a78-809a-8b2cd36ed60b&entityType=FormatGroup

    Auckland Tramping Club. Constitution and rules. Auckland: The Club, 1976.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=58646575-9c91-5999-8588-6bda68c6ddbe&entityType=FormatGroup

    Auckland Tramping Club. Nineteen Twenty-Five to 1975: 50 years tramping. The Club, 1975.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=231b716c-5b61-5e84-a8d3-c6be3bbec30c&entityType=FormatGroup

    Twenty-one years with boots and pack: issued in celebration of the twenty- first birthday of the Auckland Tramping Club (INC.), 1925-1946. Auckland: ATC (Inc.), 1946.
    https://discover.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/search/card?id=95da9a4f-5951-584d-b361-b06630a6d2e6&entityType=FormatGroup

    WEBSITES:
    Katrina Laan. The story of an Auckland Tramping club map. 25 June 2018.
    https://heritageetal.blogspot.com/2018/06/the-story-of-auckland-tramping-club-map.html

    Auckland tramping club. https://aucktramping.org.nz/

    Soundscape: Bird Recording - Department of Conservation
    https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/native-animals/birds/bird-songs-and-calls/

    Image reference: Three trampers on the road from Happy Valley, 1942, Photographer Isabel Woods. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections JTD-04J-03104
    https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/51490/rec/1

  • A plaque in Devonport marks where in October 1847, Lieutenant Snow and his family were murdered in their beds. One of the perpetrators was subsequently hung on the same site. Who would commit such a crime? Māori Rebels hoping to incite a war, or was it the result of a botched robbery or an argument? Join author and journalist Sarah Ell as she shares her research on this murder and how it sheds light on the issues facing an emerging colony.

  • Doctors With Instruments from the acclaimed ensemble Pohadka launch the Spring series with a stunning programme contrasting icy and mystical Scandinavian music with warm and upbeat Jewish tunes. The Trio will explore lesser known pieces by Nordic composers Emil Hartmann and Peter Heise. These will be contrasted with the exuberant Klezmer style championed by the Trio with the tunes from Hungarian composer Béla Kovács and Canadian composer Srul Irving Glick. The combination of clarinet, cello and piano, coupled with an innovative repertoire will appeal to both experienced and casual classical music listeners . (Due to copyrights, the recording of Klezmer tunes could not be published in this podcast).

  • The Kaha Trio brings us the Winter Wanderer -  a journey through two piano trios from Felix Mendelssohn and Joseph Haydn.  Haydn’s Trio in G major, is also nicknamed the ‘Gypsy’ trio . As a lover of folk music, Haydn incorporated the tunes from the Verbunko dances performed by Austrian soldiers which can be especially heard in the rondo movement of this work. 
    Felix Mendelssohn wrote his second Piano Trio in 1845, in the final years of his life, by which time he had developed a rich harmonic language.  Throughout , one can hear reflections of his Songs Without Words and also his Midsummers Nights Dream while the finale introduces a Lutheran Chorale tune. The piece races to the finish line in a fortissimo final cadence worthy of a concerto.

  • In collaboration with the University of Auckland, Catherine and Jesse bring us an exciting programme which comprises four-hand piano works and solo performances, ranging from the mid-eighteenth century to the twentieth century. 
    As a duet, they present Mozart’s Sonata in D major K.381. Composed in the Galant style, it features elegant melodies, simplicity, and clarity. They will also play Mendelssohn’s Andante and Allegro Brillante, salon music graced with polished elegance and craftsmanship. This duet is almost never played in the piano four-hands repertoire - a hidden gem for sure! The concert will also explore solo performances, including Ravel’s Ondine, Prokofiev’s Piano Sonata No. 7... and more!
    Catherine and Jesse are both students from the University of Auckland. Jesse is currently under the tutelage of Sarah Watkins and Bryan Sayer, and Catherine is studying under Richard Liu.

    At the University, Jesse is a recipient of the Kathleen Mary Reardon Memorial Music Scholarship and the Carl and Alberta Rosenfeldt Prize in Chamber Music. Other awards include Llewelyn Jones Prize in Music for Piano (1st Prize)  and First at the Sixth Virtuoso International Competition in Korea. Additionally, he is a member of the APO’s Aspiring Musicians Program. Aside from piano playing, Jesse is also a passionate violinist and violist.

    Catherine was awarded Runner-up and Peoples' Choice at the National Young Performer of the Year Award and also 'Best Performance of a NZ work' at the National Piano Competition in 2022. Catherine gave her debut solo recital last year as part of the Lewis Eady Charitable Trust Emerging Artists' Series, and is a current APO Haydn Staples Piano Scholar.

  • Kotuku Quintet
    Simon Ansell (violin), John Seager (violin), Judith Gust (viola), Sally-Anne Brown (cello), Louise Webster (piano).
    The Kotuku Quintet returns with the Piano quintet in F minor, op. 34 by Johannes Brahms. Described as his greatest piece of chamber music it is probably the most frequently performed of his chamber works. Brahms was a demanding self-critic, and the quintet went through several iterations, beginning life as a string quintet, then transcribed into a sonata for two pianos before ending as a work for piano and string quartet. Here, the dual sides of his musical nature – dark, turbulent romanticism and rigorous classicism – were in their most fruitful conflict and balance, the music covering a wide spectrum of moods: majesty, serenity, tension, foreboding, anger and joy.

    Piano Quintet in F minor, Op. 34 Johannes Brahms
    1. Allegro non troppo
    2. Andante, un poco adagio
    3. Scherzo: Allegro
    4. Finale: Poco sostenuto – Allegro non troppo – Presto, non troppo