Who listens to shortwave these days?

A big thanks again to DJ Frederick and all the Imaginary Stations Crew for broadcasting the Downbeat on Shortwave 3 show over the weekend via those radio transmitters at Shortwaveradio.de

The show featured a “hands across the ionsphere” collaboration between Jesse Yuen from Perth, Australia and One Deck Pete from south London, UK who played two 15 minute mixes each in a back to back style featuring some downtempo business.

We’ve posted up two recordings of the show. The first is the super stereo studio recording, clean as a whistle.

Then the off-air recording via the shortwaves recorded in glorious mono. There’s added texture to the show thanks to signals bouncing off the ionosphere/groundwave propagation. Enjoy both recordings!

Tracklistings:
One Deck Pete Mix 1
Alpha Seven – Rain chime (beatless remaster)
Múm – There Is A Number Of Small Things (2019 Remaster)
Submersible – Teak Forest

Jesse Yuen Mix 1
Siva – Respect (version)
Mohinder Kaur Bhamra – Mainu Apne Pyar Wich (Mystic Jungle Remix)
Coyote – Living In Heaven

One Deck Pete Mix 2
Rauschwerk – Oxidation (timeless space mix)
Kris Kemist – Casio Hip Hop
Junior Y Su Equipo – La Borrachita
Terror-Cactus – Descalzo

Jesse Yuen Mix 2
Michael Shultz – Weather report excerpt
Elijah Minnelli – Venn Diagram (Dub)
The Modern Pop Ensemble – Brakhage (Stereolab cover)
OK EG – Open Sky

It may be raining here…

It’s a terrible day today here in London. It’s tipping it down, feels about zero degrees and last night we even put some protection around the mimosa plant we have in a large pot near the house, just in case.

It’s a lot better over the other side of the world in Perth, Australia where our Downbeat on Shortwave collaborator Jesse Yuen is, and he’s sent a couple of pictures of the gardening work he did yesterday in the searing heat of 36 °C but today is a nicer 26 °C. Above is a view of the front garden which is coming along nicely (in October he sent us a post about starting work on his garden here) and yesterday he put some steel edging in. Looks great!

Also he planted a hakea pin cushion plant, that we had never heard of before. He said, “They have amazing flowers when mature” and he’s right there (below).

Cheers for the update Jesse and we look forward to seeing more pictures of the garden as they are inspiring.

Slow mo shortwave

Imaginary Stations will be bringing another Downbeat on Shortwave (show number 3) this weekend (cheers Fred!) on Saturday 14th February 2026 at 1200 UTC and on Sunday 15th February 2026 at 1000/1400 hrs/2100 UTC on 6160 kHz.

Our good dub gardening friend Jesse Yuen from North of The River Swan, Perth, Australia and One Deck Pete from SE23, will be bringing you two 15 minute mixes each in a back to back downtempo style.

Tune in your shortwave radio or if you haven’t got one, via an online Software Defined Radio here (tuned into 6160 kHz) at the right time this weekend in AM mode and listen in and chill out to their slow-mo selection.

A view from Perth, yesterday

It’s a mildish 6°C on Boxing Day in London today, but thanks to our Downbeat on Shortwave collaborator Jesse Yuen, here’s some pictures of summer in Australia at the moment.

These photos of his parents’ garden in Perth are full of some great plants and landscaping ideas and we’re particularly loving that shaded retreat in the bottom picture. Their garden is looking great Jesse and thanks for the update!

Gardening connects us all (Perth edition)

If you remember, our friend and Downbeat on Shortwave collaborator Jesse Yuen (of RTMFM’s North of The River Swan) moved into a new house in Perth last year and is doing some major work on his front garden. His last post was here and we’ve got an update and it’s a great one!

“Okay, so this is the next chapter in what I’m calling “re-wilding” our front yard…”, over to you Jesse:

The house was built in 1963 and right up to that point, our property was just undeveloped bushland. In the ’50s and ’60s the urban sprawl in Perth started to spread through our suburb and giant bush blocks owned by rich people were divided up into smaller lots and sold off as private properties. At the same time the government built road infrastructure through the area and our house was one of the first built on the street. We bought the house from the family who built it, who had raised a couple of generations of kids in it so when we moved in, it still felt very much like theirs.

We purposely let the front yard die, didn’t water the lawn for a year, ripped up the non-local vegetation and essentially completely neglected it. People walking past must have thought we were crackheads, because it was looking very rough by the end. The goal was to remove the effort of clearing it by hand, let it die naturally and create a sustainable garden that probably was similar to what would’ve been growing there 100 years ago.

We adopted a technique we’ve heard about called “smothering”, essentially covering the entire area in cardboard, watering it in so it moulded to the present topography and then laying a heavy amount of mulch on top. The weeds and the things we didn’t want would be starved of sunlight and oxygen so not being able to photosynthesise and die without needing any pesticides or laborious weeding.

We progressively laid cardboard over the entire garden and weighed it down with bricks then watered it all in, making it mushy and soft and moulding itself into the ground. I’ve been saving up cardboard for the last year, luckily moving house means you have a lot of the stuff on hand. It was great to use all our own cardboard rather than buy it and we also had some concrete around the house from renovations and stuff too. I salvaged a bunch of slabs from the back yard and made a cute little path through the front of the garden.

I was incredibly disheartened to find that within weeks, local weeds had figured out how to grow through the cardboard through the mulch (below). The primary villain in this war of weeds Is this one: Oxalis pes-caprae, commonly known as African wood-sorrel, Bermuda buttercup, Bermuda sorrel, buttercup oxalis, Cape sorrel, English weed, goat’s-foot, sourgrass, soursob or soursop.

Kids growing up in the ’80s and ’90s in Perth called it sour grass and we would eat the stems and the flowers for snacks, even though it is incredibly sour as the name suggests. Without a doubt if you were seen picking it, a kid would tell you that a dog probably had peed on that patch of sour grass but you’d probably ate it anyway. This weed comes from a bulb buried deep underground and I must’ve left tons of it buried in the soil because it’s everywhere now.

You can see how long its stem is (above), it’s probably extended itself maybe 20 cm to burst through the cardboard and the mulch to find the sunlight. Really impressive, life will find a way right? They have come up everywhere in the garden and I’m experimenting with pouring boiling water over it all because I refuse to use any chemical chemicals to kill the weeds.

By the way, these last couple of days was heavily soundtrack by this tender, contemporary jungle album by Coco Bryce.

 

Cheers Jesse for sharing your story and pictures, we really appreciate it and look forward to the next part which he says is a cracker. “There are some nice plants coming along in the yard and some of them are getting a lot of commentary from the neighbours as they walked past which is great too.”

Limited copies come with an extra “via the ionosphere” mix

A big thanks to DJ Frederick and Imaginary Stations for broadcasting Downbeat on Shortwave last weekend via the transmitters of  Shortwave Gold. The show featured two 15 minute mixes in a downtempo style back to back from Jesse Yuen (Australia) and One Deck Pete (London, SE23).

We’ve posted up two recordings of the show. The first is the stereo studio recording and below that, the off-air recording via the shortwaves recorded in glorious mono. Fading and extra noises thanks to the ionosphere/groundwave.

Big shout to Jesse Yuen for getting involved and into the spirit of this shortwave radio project of ours.

Something very special from far far away

A big shout to Jesse Yuen (of RTMFM’s North of The River Swan) for letting us know that he’s moved into a new house in Perth and that in the garden they have a wonderful looking Foxtail Agave (above) that’s actually flowering! As Jesse said “Flowers are rare for the plant and each one only flowers once in their life, after 10-15 years.” and he also said “It’s like ours is welcoming us to the new house.” We agree with you there! What a great housewarming present.

Jesse also said “All over Perth you can see them flowering, and the members of local gardening Facebook groups are speculating that because we had a really dry, long summer, they are in shock which has bought on a mass flowering season.”

He was saying the bees are going bonkers for the flowers and told us “Apparently once it finishes flowering the big head dies off and these smaller “pups” take over” (above and below).

Absolutely wonderful stuff Jesse and best of luck to you and the family for the new house and hope everything goes well with the move and getting settled in! More on the wonderful plant here.

The relationship between apples and dub

The sun’s out today and we’ve been listening to a great show called Golden Apples in Dub with a selection by Jesse Yuen (of RTMFM’s North of The River Swan that returned to the radio yesterday by the way). The show was broadcast by RTR FM 92.1 Perth, Australia and a fine dubbed out show it is. Listen and enjoy some very nice tunes here and some great “Baby I love you so” versions which you can never get enough of! It’s a great show Jesse!

Around the world, around the world – Part 2

A big shout to Jesse Yuen from the excellent North of the River Swan radio show (which is on a sabbatical for the time being) from RTM FM  presently living in Bassendean, Perth, Western Australia. He sent us some pics of a job he did yesterday taking Frangipani cuttings that he’s been drying out over the last few weeks.

We don’t really know much about the plant (aka Plumeria) apart from it grows in the subtropics, has distinctive smelling flowers and the plant can only be grown here as a houseplant. Best of luck with the cuttings Jesse, they look like trees compared to the tiny cuttings we usually take over here, blimmim’ eck!

Also a big thanks to our good friend Wlad (US7IGN) in Kyiv for sending us some more excellent pictures from a Ukrainian countryside garden (below). Cheers Wlad, some great stuff and appreciated as always!

There is a land far far away (musical update)

Here’s a quick update to the last but one post featuring Jesse Yuen‘s parents garden in  Perth, Western Australia. Cheers to Jesse for sending us an update of what he’s listening to on the Hi-Fi at the moment.

This mix from Aussie producer Cousin is a great eclectic mix up:

Also Paul St. Hilaire’s – Tikiman Vol​.​1 is on heavy rotation

And this local reissue of 90s dub/downtempo tunes is also getting frequent spins. This is some nice stuff by the way!

Cheers Jesse for sending us some nice recommendations that we’re going to explore further.