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Showing episodes and shows of
Ivor Wells
Shows
Podcasto Catflappo
The I to Q of Filthy Rich & Catflap
Part 2 of the 'A to Z of Filthy Rich & Catflap' covers the letters I to Q. Listen in to discover why L is for Lavatory, and P is for Priz! Here's the full list: I is for Ivor Whopper J is for the Judge ... John Wells K is for Ketchup L is for Lavatory M is for Milkmen N is for the Noles! O is for Ooer Sounds a Bit Rude P is for Priz Q is for Queer
2025-03-30
1h 08
The Magic Word Podcast
882: Fifth Dimension - Safety First and Always
Jeff Burns and Ivor Smith together are known as the Fifth Dimension who specialize in giving “magically enhanced presentations” to corporations around the world. In particular, they use magic for safety training sessions. There are many people who are in the business of motivational speaking and training, but few who focus on one area of training by using magic to help employees to remember key safety precepts. They travel the world to train employees with their unique style and method, always networking and making new contacts for the next opportunity. If you are more of a visual pers...
2025-02-06
1h 12
LitHouse podcast
A Brief History of African Dreaming. Lecture by Wole Talabi
For decades, African speculative fiction has weaved together past and future, combining myths and legends with space exploration and social criticism and broadening the scope of both African and speculative literatures.In this original lecture, invited by The House of Literature and recorded digitally, Nigerian author Wole Talabi presents a timeline of African speculative fiction from its early beginnings and until the present day. Here, he reflects on the influence and importance of the genre, citing its central works and defining its distinguishing features.Wole Talabi is a Nigerian engineer and author of...
2025-02-05
44 min
Litteraturhusets podkast
En kort historie om afrikanske drømmer. Foredrag ved Wole Talabi
Fantastisk litteratur (også kalt undringslitteratur) fra Afrika har i mange tiår vevd sammen fortid og nåtid. Forfattere har kombinert afrikanske myter og legender med samfunnskritikk og reiser i verdensrommet, i en type fiksjon som utvider rammene for både fantastisk litteratur og litteratur fra det afrikanske kontinentet.I dette nyskrevne foredraget, bestilt av Litteraturhuset og fremført digitalt, presenterer den nigerianske forfatteren Wole Talabi en tidslinje for afrikansk fantastisk litteratur, fra spede begynnelser og frem til vår samtid. Her reflekterer han over sjangerens innflytelse og betydning og forteller om rekken sentrale verk som har de...
2025-02-05
44 min
Sync Music Matters Podcast
14 – Hannah Peel (Ivor Novello Winner) – Challenging yourself creatively and drawing on personal experiences
In this week’s episode of Sync Music Matters I’m talking to multi award winning composer, artist and producer Hannah Peel Last year Hannah Peel won the Ivor Novello Best TV Soundtrack award for her score to Sky’s Midwich Cuckoos starring Keely Hawes. Having previously won awards with the Royal Television Society and Music Producers Guild She was Nominated for an Emmy for work on the documentary Games of Thrones – The Last Watch and is a regular collaborator with Paul Weller She is currently collaborating with Anne Nikitin.
2024-03-05
1h 15
Women In The Music Industry
Ep. 3 "Pam Sheyne" (Multi-Platinum Songwriter, Vocal Producer, Singer, Mentor)
Welcome to the episode 3 of "Women In The Music Industry", a podcast that shines a spotlight on the remarkable women who are breaking barriers and making their mark in an industry that has long been dominated by men. Today we feature the lovely and talented Pam Sheyne - Multi-Platinum Selling Songwriter, Vocal Producer, Singer and Mentor. She will tell us all about coming up with her first melody as a child, writing "Genie In A Bottle" for Christina Aguilera, and learning how to do the world's best whistle solo. Based in Los Angeles...
2023-07-16
47 min
Hamilton Today with Scott Thompson
Dear David Johnston… Nobody is Questioning Your Resume!
The Hamilton Today Podcast with Scott Thompson:Canada's special rapporteur on foreign interference David Johnston calls the allegations swirling around his objectivity "quite simply false," and says he plans to push ahead with his work, launching public hearings next month. Do you remember the time in June of 1975 when 52,000 people communed in Hamilton to catch Pink Floyd play at Ivor Wynn Stadium? Tom Blackwell was a reporter for the Canadian Press when he covered the trial of Paul Bernardo. It was an unsettling experience. He joins us to discuss the emotional resonance of the case, as well...
2023-06-07
1h 08
Scott Radley Show
Revisiting the history of Pink Floyd's infamous Ivor Wynne concert, Controversial changes may be coming to Hamilton minor hockey & What's our relationship with religion?
The Pink Floyd concert that was held here in Hamilton is held in infamy with crazy stories from all around the stadium. It would appear that inside the stadium, things were super packed but not as crazy. What's the actual story here?Guest: Jon Wells, Reporter & Feature Writer, The Hamilton Spectator-A quick way to make a stir here in Canada is to talk about hockey, more specifically youth hockey. Some proposed changes to house league hockey here in Hamilton have certainly done just that.Guest: Peter Martin, Acting Chair...
2023-04-07
56 min
Bizarre with Mick Molloy and Titus O’Reily
Stalin, Hitchcock and table tennis – Sports Bizarre
The sport of table tennis or ping pong, or as it was once known, Whiff Waff, has arguably had a more significant impact on world history than any other sport. In this episode, we look at the life of Ivor Montagu, the man who built table tennis into an international sport while also making films with Alfred Hitchcock, hanging out with Charlie Chaplin and spying for the Soviets during the War. Mick Molloy and Titus O'Reily examine a sport that connects Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin, Chairman Mao, King Charles, HG Wells, George Bernard Shaw and G...
2023-03-13
46 min
Un día como hoy en la música
Efemérides del 15 de enero
El nacimiento de: - El compositor y actor, Ivor Novello - Gene Krupa, batería de jazz y big band, es uno de los grandes nombres de la música en los 40 y 50 - Edward Bivens, vocalista del grupo The Manhattans - Pete Waterman, productor y compositor y uno de los componentes del trío de productores Stock, Aitken & Waterman - Ronnie Van Zant, miembro fundador del grupo Lynyrd Skynyrd - Melvyn Gale, será el chelista de la Electric Light Orchestra - Douglas Elwin Erikson, comp...
2023-01-16
25 min
Carlos Chávez - Podcast
111. Soleá by Carlos Chávez @ Balearica Music (040)
Soleá in Balearica Music. You can listen every sunday at 18h in www.balearicamusic.com I hope you like it and if you enjoy it... Remember the music is here to share it. My Social networks 🌖 www.instagram.com/djcarloschavez_/ www.facebook.com/carlosxavez1/ TRACKLIST: 1. Grace In Space - Sleeping Phoenix / Canopy Sounds 2. Lucho (AR) - Boarding Pass (Dio S Remix) / Nordic Voyage Recordings 3. Osunlade - Need U Now / Yoruba Records 4. Seven Wells - Heaven Holds You (Aske Izan Remix) / 3rd Avenue 5. Sunday Noise, David INK - Adicto (Original Mix) / Under No Illusion 6. The Sunchasers - Natural Kindness (Original Mix) / Into...
2022-10-31
1h 01
History and Philosophy of the Language Sciences
Podcast episode 18: Interview with H. Walter Schmitz on Victoria Lady Welby
In this interview, we talk to H. Walter Schmitz about pioneer of semiotics Victoria Lady Welby. Download | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts References for Episode 18 Primary Sources Hayakawa, Samuel Ichiyé (1939), Language in Thought and Action, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co. Ogden, Charles Kay and Ivor Armstrong Richards (1923), The Meaning of Meaning, London: Kegan Paul. (Reprinting of tenth edition with finger: archive.org) Russell, Bertrand (1905), ‘On denoting’, Mind 14, 479-493. Schiller, Ferdinand Canning Scott, Bertrand Russell & Harold Henry Joachim (1920), ‘The meaning of “meaning”: a symposium’, Mind, 29:116, 385-414. St...
2021-09-30
22 min
Standing Places
On Island Tides: A journey through the music of Blanco White
In this episode we meet the voice and the inspiration behind Blanco White, the stage name of Josh Edwards, a guitarist and singer-songwriter from London. Josh studied flamenco guitar in Cádiz in Spain, and later the Andean instrument the charango in Sucre in Bolivia. In 2016 he released his first EP, ‘The Wind Rose’ which was followed by ‘Colder Heavens’ and ‘Nocturne’. His first full album, ‘On The Other Side’ was released in 2020. His growing fan base is now global and he’s performed to sell out concerts across Europe and the United States. The music of Blanco Whi...
2021-04-02
48 min
Rock's Backpages
E87: Jez Butterworth on the Band + Dolly Parton + Perry Farrell
In this episode we welcome acclaimed playwright Jez (Jerusalem) Butterworth into RBP's virtual cupboard to talk mainly about The Band – but also about Dolly Parton and other musical tastes shared with hosts Mark, Barney & Jasper. Barney gets the ball rolling by asking Jez how an early '90s conversation with Malcolm McLaren led to his first play Mojo – and how music has long played a part in his work. A Butterworth screenplay based on John Niven's peerless novella Music from Big Pink prompts discussion of The Band, taking in clips from Barney's 1991 audio interview with Al Aronowitz, the N...
2020-11-09
1h 16
Standing Places
The Cult of the Shining City
What is happening to the soul of America? It’s a question the whole world is asking as Americans start voting in the most bizarre general election in their history. Yet regardless of who wins the 2020 Presidential race, it’s clear that something is going horribly wrong in the world’s oldest democracy. Tempting as it may be to blame America’s malaise exclusively on Donald Trump, to do so would be naive. Trumpism is a symptom of a disease that’s ravaged America’s body politic for generations. In this episode we meet the Ame...
2020-10-18
1h 04
Standing Places
Poetry to journey by
So we’re all grounded for the foreseeable future. None of us will be travelling the way we used to any time soon. And so we wait, and remember, and imagine the open roads and open skies we crave and miss. In this episode I share a few poems about the excitement of setting off again, and our insatiable itch for new horizons. But the best journeys are the ones that teach us new things; not just about the places we visit, but also the places we call home. An...
2020-05-14
24 min
Variable Frequencies Podcast
Variable Frequencies (Mixes by Seven Wells and Oliver & Tom) - VF75
Welcome to VF75 mixes by Seven Wells and Oliver & Tom as aired on InsomniaFM... Track Listing: Seven Wells: 1. Hidden Eyes (Original Mix) - Miguel Payda, Marino Canal 2. Cortex (Nico Szabo Remix) - Mauro Rodriguez 3. City Above the Clouds (Agustin Giri Remix) - Goda Brother 4. Solo (Robert R. Hardy Remix) - K.Oshkin 5. Kailas (Original Mix) - Volen Sentir 6. Nattuggla (Original Mix) - Jeremy Olander 7. Labyrinth of Doubts (Greenage Remix) - Lucas Rossi 8. Skyscrapers (Alex O'Rion Deep Dub Mix) - Carl Jurgens, Niso 9. It Was a Dream (Original Mix) - Buba SC - https://soundcloud.com/sevenwellsmusic Oliver & Tom: 1. Emi Galvan...
2020-04-27
2h 00
Standing Places
Politics of a Pandemic: A conversation with Dr. Paul G. Buchanan
Most of the world is now in some form of pandemic lockdown, and everything around us is changing – politics, economics, international relations. How do we navigate this new terrain? What are the implications for liberal democracy? What might a ‘new normal’ look like for the world order? Paul Buchanan is Director of 36th Parallel Assessments, a geopolitical risk and strategic assessment consultancy based in New Zealand. He’s a former intelligence and defence consultant for the US government, and an expert in authoritarianism, unconventional warfare, international security and comparative politics. Paul grew up i...
2020-04-20
51 min
Standing Places
Coronavirus: Time will come good
As the coronavirus lockdown is further extended here in the UK, it’s hard to know when or indeed how our lives will return to any sense of normality. In the meantime we wait, and we hope, and we tune in for news of better times. In this episode I reflect on the importance of journalists – the good ones – who inform us, widen our worlds, and in times of crisis can so often find just the right words to lift our spirits. One of the good ones is Fergal Keane, whose ‘Letter to Daniel’...
2020-04-16
10 min
Standing Places
Coronavirus: Fighting 'The Rona'
Since recording my last episode it seems that I contracted the coronavirus. So here are some reflections on fighting ‘The Rona’, the silence of London’s traffic-less skies, and the poetry of one of New Zealand’s best writers, Brian Turner. If you’re feeling unwell or afraid right now, I hope this episode is an encouragement. You’re not alone. If you’d like to explore more of Brian Turner’s writing, a good place to start is “Boundaries: People and Places of Central Otago”, available from Penguin. Music on this episode is by Ch
2020-04-02
08 min
Standing Places
Coronavirus: We're all in this together
We're only just starting to accept the seriousness of the coronavirus pandemic here in the UK. We've never lived through anything like this in our lifetimes, and everything is about to change dramatically. So how do we stay connected and hopeful, and how do we manage our fear? In this episode we also hear from a leading expert at the frontline of the crisis response in America; Professor Donald J. Triumph, Director of the National Institute of Super Genius's in Washington DC.
2020-03-15
12 min
Standing Places
Home is where we have 51 per cent of the vote
What does it mean to be a global citizen when walls and borders are back in vogue? How do you create a permanent home that’s a sanctuary? And what does permanence and sanctuary even mean when borders are being re-drawn and the ground is shifting beneath your feet? In this episode we meet Amy Hochadel and Monica Cunningham who met on the political campaign trail in Ohio - one of America’s most hotly contested battleground states. A couple who also made a permanent and life-changing investment in London at a time when the winds of chan...
2019-11-07
59 min
Standing Places
Finding home again in the aftermath of grief
How do you find home again when you’ve lost the person who was your home? And what does the idea of home even mean in the aftermath of grief? Home is more than a physical place. It's something very human shaped. Because so many of us find our sense of home in the people we love. Four years ago Caroline Twigg's world was tipped upside down. Since then she slowly found a way to start again, and through it all, one of the hardest, yet most important things she’s done, has been finding home a...
2019-07-30
1h 09
Standing Places
The citizenship tests of a lapsed Canadian
What does home mean when you've always had a complicated relationship with the country you were born in? Piali DasGupta's personal story stretches from Kolkata, India to the prairies of Canada, to the town halls of England's cities and the banks of the river Thames in London. In this episode Piali and I talk about what it means to be a modern Canadian, growing up in a Bengali home and how to prepare for the British citizenship test. We also talk about the changing nature of local place in the UK, and what t...
2019-06-19
58 min
The Just Checking In Podcast
JCIP #5 - Ivor Wells
In the fifth episode of the Just Checking In Podcast we checked in with International Development Specialist and Founder of the 'Standing Places' Podcast, Ivor Wells. We chatted about how mental health is tackled in his home country of New Zealand, rugby, the Maori approach to mental health, toxic masculinity as well as literature and poetry from his favourite Kiwi authors, Ivor's childhood and of course, a chat about our mental health too! As always, #itsokaytovent Music: @patawawa - Strange: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d70wfeJSEvk Just Checking In Live #2 - Tickets available here: https://helmtickets.com/events/3163...
2019-06-02
1h 20
Standing Places
Football, grime music and being English in East 18
Londoners aren't always good at getting to know their neighbours. Sometimes it feels like even the city's suburbs are trying to avoid eye contact. In this episode we go out East to meet Freddie, James and Dan; three Londoners in their mid-20s who grew up in the postcode of East 18. We met in South Woodford to talk about everything from football tribalism to Grime music, from mushy peas to the future of English identity. WARNING: There's a mouth-watering fish and chip shop in this episode... +++++ One of our guests on...
2019-05-24
1h 22
Standing Places
Introducing Standing Places
Welcome to the first episode of Standing Places! In this episode we're just getting introduced. I explain what Standing Places is all about and the inspiration behind this podcast. And it all starts with a word that you'll only find at the uttermost edge of the world... Don't forget to subscribe to the show and please rate and review us! You can also follow @StandingPlaces on Facebook and Twitter. For more information about Standing Places or to get in touch please visit www.standingplaces.com
2019-05-23
15 min
Midweek
Claire Belhassine, Paul Conroy, Douglas Villiers, Errollyn Wallen
Libby Purves meets film-maker Claire Belhassine, photojournalist Paul Conroy, entrepreneur Douglas Villiers and composer Errollyn Wallen.Claire Belhassine is a British/Tunisian filmmaker whose documentary film, Papa Hedi tells the story of her grandfather Hedi Jouini, whom she discovered was the Frank Sinatra of the Arab world. When he died in 1990 he was considered to be one of the significant Arabic composers of the 20th century. Papa Hedi is being shown as part of the 2013 London Shubbak Festival.Paul Conroy is a former soldier turned photojournalist who was with war correspondent Marie Colvin when she...
2013-06-19
42 min
Download the New Releases Audiobooks in Fiction, Short Stories & Anthologies
The Man Who Could Work Miracles Audiobook by H. G. Wells
Listen to this audiobook free with a 30-day trial. Go tohttp://hotaudiobook.com/freeTitle: The Man Who Could Work Miracles Author: H. G. Wells Narrator: Ivor Hugh Format: Unabridged Length: 43 mins Language: English Release date: 03-27-07 Publisher: Jimcin Recordings Ratings: 3.5 of 5 out of 9 votes Genres: Fiction, Short Stories & Anthologies Publisher's Summary: This humorous story was "a flight of fancy" for H. G. Wells. A man is given the power to perform miracles but with very unexpected results. © and (P)1977 Jimcin Recordings Editorial Reviews: Ivor Hugh delivers a jolly rendition of the H. G. Wells comic short story The Man W...
2007-03-27
43 min