BFM 89.9

HIGHLIGHTS 
Podcast  >  Night Shift  >  The Pulse  >  Live Music Streams

Live Music Streams

Othniel Ting | Marissa Wambeck

25-Mar-20 22:00

Live Music Streams

As we find ways to keep us occupied and safe at home, musicians have taken their "work" home (and online) by live streaming their performances on various platforms. We speak to Marissa Wambeck from Riuh to find out more about the Riuh From Your Homes live performance series.  

Produced by: Othniel Ting

Presented by: Othniel Ting


This and more than 60,000 other podcasts in your hand. Download the all new BFM mobile app.

Categories:  FilmPoliticsSocial IssuesMusic

Tags:  The PulseRiuhlive stream concertsCovid-19TwitchIGTV





Play / Pause

Listen now : BFM 89.9 -- The Business Station

Today’s Shows



11:00 AM

Best of Enterprise

(REPEAT) We explore the move from “prime time” to “scroll time” with Amin Ashaari, Co-Founder of SoyaCincau.

12:00 PM

Just For Kicks

(REPEAT) After the North London Derby, Arsenal will now have to face Liam Rosenior's Chelsea. Will they pass this test? Our pundits share their thoughts and look ahead to the weekend's games.

1:00 PM

A Bit of Culture

(REPEAT) Kam, Michael Gong and Sudais Ferhard get together to talk about Nostradamus, revenge of the nerds and Seedance videos that are wildly popular now.

2:00 PM

Ringgit & Sense

(REPEAT) Yuvarajan Periyan, licensed financial planner and co-founder of Uno Advisers talks about 'Pig Butchering' scams.

2:30 PM

The Property Show

(REPEAT) Datuk Ho Hon Sang, REDHA President discusses Malaysia’s resilient property market and 2026 outlook.

3:00 PM

Best of The Bigger Picture

(REPEAT) We often hear about neighbourhoods being evicted, houses being torn down and communities organising against the state government or private developers. In this episode, we discuss the politics of eviction in Malaysia.

4:00 PM

Best of Evening Edition

(REPEAT) A Skeptic’s Take on the Epstein Files

5:00 PM

BBC World Service

The Life Scientific speaks to neuropsychologist Professor Julia Simner, who runs the Multisense lab at the University of Sussex and has pioneered research into understanding how special brains process our sensory world in special ways.