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Music of Your Life is an American syndicated music radio format featuring adult standards music. First created by recording executive Al Ham in 1978, the format achieved popularity in the 1980s among AM radio stations in the United States and Canada, which were then facing declines in listenership in a transition period of most popular music to the FM band.
All the Stations was a project organised by Marshall and Vicki Pipe to visit all 2,563 UK railway stations in the summer of 2017. [14] [15] The pair filmed much of the journey, with daily updates posted on YouTube and other social media. [16] A feature-length documentary about the journey was produced in 2018.
BBC Radio 3 is a classical music station, broadcasting concerts and operas. At night, it transmits a wide range of jazz, world music and radio dramas (FM 90.2 - 92.6 MHz) BBC Radio 4 is a current affairs and speech station, with news, debate, documentaries, comedy shows and radio dramas.
Softly, Softly is a British television police procedural series produced by the BBC and screened on BBC1 from January 1966. It was created as a spin-off from the series Z-Cars, which ended its fifth series run in December 1965.
Later more local stations were introduced. There is also one national commercial radio station, Classic FM. Commercial radio stations simulcasted on both FM and medium waves from the beginning until the IBA asked radio stations to end the practice and from 1988 stations began to offer separate stations on each waveband. Typically another ...
Liberty Radio is a UK radio broadcaster and company based in London, England that, as of 2013, is transmitted free to air from the Astra 2F [1] satellite at 28.2° East to most of Europe, and on the Internet, but not on analog or DAB terrestrial radio. [2] The station is also available to subscribers to BSkyB on the Sky EPG at LCN 186. The ...
National Prison Radio is a linear service broadcasting 24 hours a day, seven days a week, into prison cells. The station broadcasts a mixture of speech and music content, all designed to support prisoners through their sentences, helping them to make appropriate use of the rehabilitation services available to them while they are in prison and preparing them to live crime-free lives after release.
The MV Mi Amigo, once home of Radio Caroline, mid 1970s. Pirate radio in the UK first became widespread in the early 1960s when pop music stations such as Radio Caroline and Radio London started to broadcast on medium wave to the UK from offshore ships or disused sea forts.