Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
MFR (Moray Firth Radio [1]) is an Independent Local Radio station based in Inverness, owned and operated by Bauer Media Audio UK as part of the Hits Radio Network. It broadcasts to Moray, Scottish Highlands and North West Aberdeenshire. As of September 2024, the station has a weekly audience of 91,000 listeners according to RAJAR. [2]
Radio Forth - predecessor of Forth 1 - is 50 in January. Radio Tay, Northsound and Moray Firth date back to the early 80s. The practice of networking -sharing programmes - had become common in ...
Independent Local Radio is the collective name given to commercial radio stations in the United Kingdom. ... Moray Firth Radio: MFR: Bauer 1 March 1982 Bedford:
23 February – Moray Firth Radio begins broadcasting to Inverness and the surrounding area of north east Scotland. [6] 1983. No events. 1984. August – Radio Forth becomes the first Independent Local Radio station to broadcast a part-time split service. It is Festival City Radio, which provides coverage of the 1984 Edinburgh Festival. 1985
In 1982 Mounteagle was chosen as the site of the first commercial radio broadcasts in northern Scotland, with Moray Firth Radio taking to the air on 23 February of that year. In 1996 transmitters for Classic FM were added, and then later in 1997 Mounteagle began broadcasting television services again, when transmitters were installed for the ...
Speaking to Moray Firth Radio on Monday, Mr Yousaf also spoke about how the arrest had impacted him saying it was “personally quite painful”.
June – Emap acquires Scottish Radio Holdings, gaining control of a suite of AM/FM stations in Scotland including Clyde 2, Forth 2, Tay AM, Moray Firth Radio, West Sound and Northsound 2, plus regional stations including Vibe FM (rebranded to Kiss in 2006) in the East of England and the Severn Estuary, and Wave 105 on the South coast. [1] 2006
Gellatly began as a volunteer for Moray Firth Radio in Inverness in the late 80s, moving to Northsound Radio in Aberdeen in the early 90s. He joined the launch of Glasgow-based radio station Beat 106 in November 1999. Following a shift in the station's music policy, he left after just a few months to join Chrysalis-backed internet radio project ...