Up next: 9:30 am Whatever's Cool With Me
I'm gonna make it weird. Just be cool about it.
12:05 pm today Midday Magic
When you're loved like you are, people think of you and smile :]
5:00 pm today The Guest List
We talk two great Ottawa blues artists, Sue Foley and JW-Jones about their latest recordings and their upcoming concerts at Ottawa Bluesfest on July 12th and July 19th respectively. Check out: https://ottawabluesfest.ca/
6:00 pm tonight Third World Players Present
A conversation with Lorain Smith about his historical novel Port Royal (from 2007)
♀ WINGS ♀
6:30 pm tonight ♀ WINGS ♀
Sevgil Musayeva is Editor-in-Chief of Ukrainska Pravda, Ukraine's major online news source. In June 2025, she talked to Ursula Ruedenberg of the radio program Ukraine 242, about the life and death of a daring and committed freelance reporter,...
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Midnight tonight Rainbow Country
The Vinyl Diaries
9:30 am Friday Studio J Jukebox
Music for sitting in a camping chair all alone in a park...
1:00 pm Friday The Dylan Hunter Show
Probably the 47th best program I have ever put together. Maybe the 46th.
3:00 pm Friday Chance Meeting
Chance meeting on a white house of a charade and devastation
8:00 pm Friday Peaceful Journey
DJ Shortcut makes his Peaceful Journey debut, with a sick old school set for the 1st Friday of the month!
8:00 pm Saturday Heavy Friends
From synth-soaked dreams to Bengali disco and pre-revolution Persian pop, Heavy Lina's 72nd episode will celebrate boundary-defying sound. Stay heavy, stay curious every Saturday night from 8-10pm, right here on CKCU!
8:00 pm Sunday Roots and Rhythms
Nick Lowe
9:00 pm Sunday Black And Blues
"Blues and R&B at the rest of the FEST"- July 16th -20th at the OTTAWA BLUESFEST - DK Harrell, Harry Manx, Christone "Kingfish" Ingram, JW Jones, The Texas Horns and more. That is in the first hour. The "new and reissued blues and R&B tracks on...
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12:30 pm Monday Nothing To See Hear
Favourite voices.
3:00 pm Monday Unclassifiable
New music from Florist, and Mark Pritchard & Thom Yorke, plus tracks by Gold Dime, Wye Oak, Corridor, and Flying Lotus.
YOW Jazz
11:00 am Tuesday YOW Jazz
Highlights of the Ottawa Jazz Festival plus new releases
What's This?
12:00 pm Tuesday What's This?
Rawk Songs.
1:00 pm Tuesday JustINwords
She talks about the troubles with living and trying to take care of someone with Alzheimer's and her books.
3:00 pm Tuesday Minding The Brain
Dr. Jim Davies and Dr. Kim Hellemans interview two experts on the topic of concussions, Andree-Anne Ledoux, a Research Associate at Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario and Dr. Matt Holahan, a neuroscience professor at Carleton University. We...
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3:30 pm Tuesday Stranger Songs
The theme on the July 8 edition of Stranger Songs with Mike Regenstreif is Peggy Seeger at 90. Peggy turned 90 on June 17.
9:00 pm Wednesday In A Mellow Tone
Jm Reil and Ron Steeds guest host this week on In A Mellow Tone. Jim offers up some classic small combo jazz from the 1930's and some live quartet jazz from 1994/1995 led by Joe Lovano at the Village Vanguard. Two hours of great jazz for a...
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11:00 pm Wednesday Rabble Without A Cause
Quebec’s Jazz Libre plus an interview with author Eric Fillion about his newly translated book about the avant garde in Quebec
12:00 am Thu. Jul. 10 Night Trax
The golden-era counterpart to my PASTEL WAVES series. We visit the origins of what the kids today are calling Marina-Pop, in it's OG form.
Up next: 9:30 am Whatever's Cool With Me
I'm gonna make it weird. Just be cool about it.
12:05 pm today Midday Magic
When you're loved like you are, people think of you and smile :]
Mehdi Fallahi was full of passion when he decided to premiere Namaashoum — Ottawa’s first ever fully Farsi show — some 20 odd years ago. As an activist, he said the support was overwhelming despite his first few productions being “dry and awkward.”
Since then, he’s grown and has expanded the program into a collective with 30 diverse members (some even Carleton professors) who air educational programs and intriguing interviews.
In 2024, Namaashoum cracked into the top five most donated to funding drive shows at CKCU — an achievement Fallahi said was due in part to his steadfast activism.
“People know me as someone who is serving the community,” Fallahi said, adding that Namaashoum is often the medium for his activism.
The philosophy behind the program, Fallahi said, is to help spur change. He said he wants people to think critically about the contents of the show and further their knowledge for the better.
“I believe that my show should bring people from point A to point B at the end, even if point A and B are very close to each other,” he said.
During the funding drive, Fallahi said he takes his activism a step further and physically connects with people. In this way, Fallahi said he builds a stronger sense of community — something he’s already deeply committed to.
“So when I go to them asking for help, they respond to me, especially when I explain the nature of CKCU and how it works.”
With about 12 active co-hosts of Namaashoum, Fallahi said they all involve themselves and help with the funding drive. But, he said he’s still the main “driver” of the program.
“If for whatever reason I cannot continue and produce the show tomorrow, there is not one single person who can grab the torch and continue,” he said.
Fallahi said he puts on average 20 to 30 hours a week into Namaashoum and treats it like a second full-time job.
He does this because he said he believes that radio is still the most powerful broadcasting tool. For most Canadians, it’s accessible anywhere and everywhere and provides news, entertainment, sports, and much more.
For this reason, Fallahi tries to pack as much high quality Farsi content like interviews and educational segments rather than just airing music — his unique and personal preference.
Namaashoum airs weekly on Monday’s from 7 to 9 p.m. and consists mainly of Mehdi Fallahi.
As CKCU 93.1 FM enters its 50th year of broadcasting, we are reaching out to our incredible community for help. This milestone is a celebration of the station’s legacy, but it also marks a critical time in ensuring its continued growth and success.
We are seeking new board members, particularly someone with financial expertise to step into the role of Treasurer.
As a volunteer-driven community radio station, CKCU relies on passionate, dedicated individuals like YOU to keep the wheels turning. This is your chance to make a meaningful impact on the future of an organization that has been the voice of our community for decades. Whether you have experience in finance, governance, or just a passion for keeping community radio alive, we need strong, committed, and diverse people to join our Board.
PART TWO: THE HUNTER/ARGIROPULOS-HUNTER AND WALKER FAMILIES
As the 50th anniversary of CKCU FM is around the corner, we want to celebrate familial ties at the station, highlighting the bond between families and community. Over the past while, I had the pleasure and privilege of speaking with four families contributing to CKCU. In part one of this article, we featured Boba and Mihajlo from Monday’s Encounter, the Asian Sounds quartet. Now, in part two of the article, we will dive into getting to know the Hunter/Argiropulos-Hunter and Walker families. Each of the families offer a unique approach in their broadcasting to CKCU’s audiences, be it through cultural and communal awareness, or by shining light on artists and creative minds that make up Ottawa’s music melting pot and other less mainstream scenes.
Dylan Hunter has been a longstanding member of CKCU FM, with just shy of 30 years of experience under his belt running his show —aptly named after its eponymous host —The Dylan Hunter Show. His daughter, Zoë Argiropulos-Hunter, began her journey at CKCU as a co-host with her friend Owen Maxwell, sowing the seeds for what would become her current show First Crush.
Young Zoë and young dad, Dylan.
Having both parties involved at the station has strengthened an already special relationship between the father and daughter duo. “It’s great to be able to connect with and share something”, said Dylan. Her father’s mammoth collection of music and records, alongside her experience with CKCU’s Radio Camp for kids (as an attendee and later in life a staff), were a big part of how Zoë became interested and involved at the station.
Zoë stressed the importance of being ready and open to hearing new music and uses First Crush to play selections that are overshadowed by mainstream radio. “Songs have a strong power to teach and to inform” she added. In contrast to more mainstream channels, community radio plays a central part in community building, which allows listeners to meet with and discover other musicians in the scene. Zoë uses her show to metaphorically ‘pass the mic’ to those who wish to make their voices heard. Dylan leans into playing a large mix of music that reaches far beyond the mainstream into smaller and more obscure record labels and artists.
While both father and daughter use their respective platforms to share the music they love with other people, the main goal for both hosts is to entertain their audiences. The dedication that Dylan and Zoë put into hosting their distinct programs at CKCU has provided them with a sense of purpose focused on community building and uplifting voices within community radio and lesser-known artists.
Trevor Walker, like Dylan, has been with CKCU since the 90s, and is currently the host of Friday Drive. Trevor encouraged his father to jump on the airwaves with him and speak about issues concerning social justice circa 2010, all the while his father, Gordon Walker continued to stand behind Trevor’s work at the station and passion for delivering soul, jazz, funk, and afrobeat music.
Three generations of Walkers have contributed to the station, including Trevor’s 19- and 23-year-old daughters who have occasionally co-hosted alongside him. Importantly, Trevor wants the family connections to both Gordon and his shows to be natural and uncoerced, rather than roping them into something that they might not be too keen on pursuing. While his daughters’ interest in radio might not be the strongest now, there is always the possibility that it will blossom later down the road.
Father and son, Gordon and Trevor Walker.
Gordon’s collection of music from classical, to folk, to music he discovered on the radio while posted in Ghana with the Canadian International Development Agency, was a large influence on his son’s personal music taste. All the music Trevor was exposed to influences what he plays on Friday Drive.
Trevor and Gordon Walkers’ hard work and dedication to presenting quality radio programming has sown the seeds for the family to voice the 93.1 FM airwaves. And while the three generations of Walkers find themselves interested in different aspects of culture and music at times, the family maintains a grounded and ethical basis within community radio, committed to providing a space that will foster the creative minds of the next generation.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote “Music is the universal language of mankind”. This certainly holds true more than 100 years after Longfellow’s passing. Music is a pillar for human connection. At CKCU FM, we take great joy in seeing music and cultures strengthen connection. It is a beautiful thing to be able to share in something that has forever been seen as the unifier of cultures, groups, and families alike.
On Friday, November 1, at 8:00 PM, the Westboro Masonic Hall came alive to celebrate CKCU’s own Anne-Marie Brugger, the 2024 recipient of the Spirit of Tony Turner Award. This annual event, featuring an impressive lineup of local talent, paid tribute to Anne-Marie’s significant contributions to the Ottawa music scene.
Anne-Marie Brugger at CKCU FM
As a radio broadcaster, arts reporter, and dedicated community volunteer, Anne-Marie has tirelessly worked to promote local musicians and connect them with audiences. Her journey began nearly 25 years ago at CHUO, where she focused on promoting Canadian new releases and highlighting local artists. Over the years, she has hosted various programs, including the long-running Canadian Spaces on CKCU FM, where she showcases a diverse array of Canadian talent. Notably, she also produced and hosted Hop The Fence, a music interview show that provided emerging artists with a platform to discuss their work and connect with listeners. This program played a crucial role in helping many musicians gain confidence and experience in media.
Anne-Marie has also organized impactful events like the FemmeVox concert series, which celebrates female singer-songwriters and promotes gender equity in the arts.
The Spirit of Tony Turner Award, affectionately known as the SofTTie, recognizes individuals who work behind the scenes to support musicians and improve the broader community. Anne-Marie’s commitment to this mission makes her a truly deserving honoree.
As we near the golden 50th anniversary of CKCU FM next year, we want to celebrate familial ties at the station, highlighting the bond between families and community. Over the past month, I had the pleasure and privilege of speaking with four families contributing to CKCU. Boba and Mihajlo from Monday’s Encounter, the Asian Sounds quartet, as well as the Hunter and Walker families. Each of the families offer a unique approach in their broadcasting to CKCU’s audiences, be it through cultural and communal awareness, or by shining light on artists and creative minds that make up Ottawa’s music melting pot and other less mainstream scenes.
With a lot of ground to cover, this article will be presented in two parts, the first focusing on the shows that are centered around distinct cultural communities. Monday’s Encounter and Asian Sounds dive into the Serbian and the Indian subcontinent communities. The second part of the article, that will follow shortly, will cover the music-driven shows of the Hunter and Walker families.
Baljit Nagpal started with radio back in the 80s, where he assisted the host of CKCU’s Indian Morning. After receiving feedback from listeners who requested to play more modern Bollywood songs, he transitioned to his own show. Baljit said that during the 60s-70s when many Indian immigrants arrived to Canada, Bollywood films and its soundtracks were still in their minds. This is how Aap Ki Farmaish was born, which Baljit says means “your choice.” The show has been on CKCU’s airwaves for nearly 42 years.
However, the weekly Tuesday show is also known to connect multiple cultures throughout Ottawa through its selection of world music and guests that Baljit and his team of hosts bring in. The show’s main
In an era where independent media is increasingly threatened, CKCU is a beacon of authentic, unfiltered community voices. The challenges facing independent media today are extensive and complex. As large media empires continue to grow, smaller stations and networks struggle to survive.
The effect? The voices that have long delivered diverse perspectives, alternative viewpoints, and local stories are gradually disappearing from the airwaves, leaving a gaping hole in the stories of everyday people.
Despite these challenges, radio remains a vital content provider in Canada, with around 70% of Canadians tuning in to one of the over 900 radio stations every week. Radio is especially popular and convenient when travelling, providing a reliable source of talk, music, news, and sports content.