Grigg hosted the
BPM and
Extended Play radio programmes on
95bFM and
George FM between 1985 and 2005. The BPM show was New Zealand's first dedicated dancefloor-aimed radio show and ran for 17 years. In 2004 Grigg's new label, Joy, released "
Its On" by
3 The Hard Way, which reached number one in New Zealand. Propeller Records has also released a series of archival albums, which have documented parts of New Zealand's musical history, including the reissue of the iconic punk collection,
AK79, much expanded (a joint release with
Flying Nun Records); the New Zealand post punk collection,
Bigger Than Both of Us, and the soundtrack to the
TVNZ documentary series,
Give It A Whirl. The label purchased the catalogue of Bryan Staff's Ripper Records in 2014, thus bringing much of the New Zealand punk catalogue under one roof. AK79 was reissued in December 2019 (CD) and January 2020 (vinyl) with the latter being the first official vinyl issue since 1982 and the first vinyl issue of the extended 1994 tracklisting. Grigg remains active in the New Zealand recording industry on a consultancy level and as a commentator. In 2012 Grigg was appointed Creative Director of
AudioCulture, the
NZ on Air funded online history of the music and musical cultures of New Zealand, which launched on 31 May 2013. Conceived by Grigg, the site's design concept, content direction and curation were his, although it exists under the administrative umbrella of the
NZ On Screen trust. AudioCulture was first conceived in the late 2000s and Grigg actively sought funding, supported by the wider New Zealand music industry and in particular Recorded Music New Zealand. After several knockbacks, finally in mid-2012 New Zealand On Air agreed to fund the site. It launched in May 2013. Grigg resigned as Creative Director in September 2016, although he retains a role as Founding Director. Simon Grigg's first book
How Bizarre: Pauly Fuemana and the song that stormed the world was published in August 2015. In April 2016 Grigg purchased New Zealand music publication
Rip It Up including its archives. In May 2019, the first eight years of this magazine were made available online free at the Papers Past site of the National Library of New Zealand. In October 2015 he was presented a prestigious Scroll of Honour from the
Variety Artists Club of New Zealand. ==References==