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Maximum Music Monday

Wake up and embrace the day with Zoe Ball and the team. Zoe keeps the tunes rolling on Maximum Music Monday.

Wake up and embrace the day with Zoe Ball! Between 8 am and 9 am Zoe keeps the tunes rolling on Maximum Music Monday. Plus we hear your weekend in words and one of the best Pick Your Own Playlist picks ever!

Along with Tina Daheley on news, Richie Anderson on travel and Mike Williams on sport, Zoe and the team have the best start to your morning. With celeb guests, quizzes, headlines, tunes chosen by listeners and more music that you can shake a glitterball at!

There's also a Pause For Thought from Rabbi Dr Harvey Belovski and listeners on the line as Zoe entertains the nation with fun for the family!

2 hours, 59 minutes

Last on

Mon 27 Jan 2020 06:30

Music Played

  • Madonna

    Material Girl

    • Finally Enough Love (Deluxe Edition).
    • Rhino.
    • 2.
  • Blossoms

    The Keeper

    • The Keeper.
    • Virgin EMI.
  • Level 42

    Running In The Family

    • The Complete Polydor Years: Volume 2 (1985-1989).
    • Cherry Red Records.
  • The Mavericks

    Dance the Night Away

    • Ultimate Country (Various Artists).
    • Telstar.
  • Paloma Faith

    Make Your Own Kind Of Music

    • (CD Single).
    • RCA.
  • Queen

    Crazy Little Thing Called Love

    • The Game.
    • Island.
    • 5.
  • The Script

    Run Through Walls

    • Sunsets & Full Moons.
    • Columbia.
  • Deniece Williams

    Let's Hear It For The Boy

    • History Of Dance Music Vol.2 (Variou.
    • Connoisseur Collection.
  • Westlife

    World of Our Own

    • (CD Single).
    • BMG/RCA.
  • Faith Hill

    This Kiss

    • New Hits 99 (Various Artists).
    • Global Television.
  • Bastille

    Pompeii

    • (CD Single).
    • Virgin Records.
  • James Ingram & Michael McDonald

    Yah Mo B There

    • Duets - 36 Of The World's Greatest Ev.
    • Telstar.
  • Electric Light Orchestra

    All My Love

    • From Out Of Nowhere.
    • Columbia.
  • Ariana Grande

    One Last Time

    • My Everything.
    • Republic Records.
  • Alicia Keys

    Underdog

    • ALICIA.
    • RCA.
  • Steve Winwood

    Higher Love

    • Music Of The Year: 1986 (Various Artists).
    • Universal-Island Records.
  • Eurythmics & Aretha Franklin

    Sisters Are Doin' It For Themselves

    • Duets - 36 Of The World's Greatest Ev.
    • Telstar.
  • David Guetta, MORTEN & RAYE

    Make It To Heaven

    • (CD Single).
    • Parlophone.
  • Talk Talk

    It's My Life

    • More Greatest Hits Of 80's (Various).
    • Disky.
  • Daft Punk

    Get Lucky (feat. Pharrell Williams)

    • (CD Single).
    • Columbia.
    • 1.
  • Marvin Gaye & Kim Weston

    It Takes Two

    • Duets - 36 Of The World's Greatest Ev.
    • Telstar.
  • Lizzo

    Juice

    • (CD Single).
    • Atlantic.
  • Justin Timberlake

    Can't Stop The Feeling!

    • (CD Single).
    • RCA.
  • Pet Shop Boys

    Monkey Business

  • Robert Palmer

    Addicted To Love

    • Sounds Of The 80s - Like A Record Baby (1984-1986) (Various Artists).
    • UMC.
  • CeeLo Green

    It's OK

    • The Lady Killer.
    • Warner Bros.
    • 1.
  • The O’Jays

    I Love Music

    • The Greatest Hits Of 1976 (Various).
    • Premier.
  • Mark Ronson

    Nothing Breaks Like A Heart (feat. Miley Cyrus)

    • (CD Single).
    • Columbia.
  • Lauryn Hill

    Doo Wop (That Thing)

    • Walk On - Hits From The Last 2 Decade.
    • Columbia.
  • Faithless

    Insomnia

    • Now 35 (Various Artists).
    • Now.
  • Rihanna

    We Found Love (feat. Calvin Harris)

    • Now That's What I Call Music! 80 (Various Artists).
    • Now.
  • Darude

    Sandstorm

    • (CD Single).
    • Neo.
    • 001.
  • Gabrielle Aplin & Nina Nesbitt

    Miss You 2

    • Dear Happy.
    • Never Fade Records.
  • The Police

    De Do Do Do, De Da Da Da

    • The Very Best Of Sting & The Police.
    • A&M.

Pause For Thought

Pause For Thought

Harvey Belovski, rabbi at Golders Green United Synagogue:

Today is Holocaust Memorial Day, an opportunity to remember the millions of victims of Nazi persecution and subsequent genocides. It’s to the great credit of the British people that a day is reserved each year to commemorate the most despicable atrocities; to learn about hatred and how it spreads. 

This year – 2020 – holds special significance, as it’s th e 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and other death camps in Nazi-occupied Europe and 25 years since the Bosnian genocide.  Later this year, I will be attending a major event at Bergen-Belsen to mark this anniversary.

In a fractured world in which anti-Semitism and other hatreds are rising, I believe we cannot overemphasise the importance of Holocaust education. I was deeply troubled by a recent poll which found that one in three people knew almost nothing about the Holocaust and one in 20 had never heard of it. Shockingly, the survey also revealed that 5% of British adults do not believe that the Holocaust actually happened.

I am proud that my children have the chance to learn about the Holocaust first-hand. My older children have all visited concentration camps in Poland, and my third daughter is now involved in leading similar trips.

I forget when I first heard about the Holocaust: probably in history lessons at school. But I know from my own trips to these abysmal places that the industrial-scale, mechanised murder of millions cannot really be described. I’ve visited the Belzec (Buwzhets) extermination camp in Poland twice. The statistics are mind-boggling: 600,000 Jews were murdered there in under 10 months and the average time from arrival to murder was less that one hour. It’s the most appalling place I’ve ever been to.

My mentor and teacher, former chief rabbi Lord Sacks often says, ‘The hate that begins with the Jews never ends with the Jews’. The descent into an intolerant, cruel, jungle society can be rapid, with visible minorities such as Jews and Muslims merely at the front of the queue to suffer discrimination and hatred. Others will always follow.

Holocaust Memorial Day is an invaluable opportunity to focus on the evils of the past. But it’s really about hope – hope that learning about what people can and have done to each other will strengthen our resolve to create a happier, more harmonious world for us all.

Broadcast

  • Mon 27 Jan 2020 06:30