कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

A CAPITAL IDEA

Best of British

|

October 2023

Derek Lamb listens back to 50 years of domestic commercial radio

- Derek Lamb

A CAPITAL IDEA

By the time commercial radio began in 1973, the UK had been listening to continental and offshore commercial stations for more than 40 years. The most popular and enduring source was Radio Luxembourg, which began an English service in 1933. Only during the war years were listeners denied a commercial alternative to the BBC.

Postwar, Luxembourg continued to secure large audiences, albeit in the evening only and using a famously unreliable signal on 208 metres medium wave. As teenage pop music gained in popularity from the later 1950s, Luxembourg concentrated on this material. The BBC's output of pop music was meagre, partly due to its limited allocation of "needle time", the amount of commercially recorded music that it could play.

Several entrepreneurs rightly anticipated a demand for pop music broadcast throughout the day. Ships moored in international waters could ignore the constraints on the BBC. Radio Caroline began in 1964 and, within weeks, its audience was bigger than that of all three BBC networks combined. At one point, there were 11 "pirate" radio stations broadcasting from offshore locations. Despite their enormous popularity, complaints of interference from legitimate European broadcasters on "stolen" wavelengths prompted their closure in 1967. Despite their bravado, both Caroline ships were seized by creditors and went off air in March 1968.

While Harold Wilson's Labour government was not interested in the demand for legitimate "free" radio, the Conservative opposition had a more favourable attitude. It had been a Conservative government that ended the BBC's television monopoly by allowing a commercial alternative in 1955.

Best of British से और कहानियाँ

Best of British

Best of British

RAILWAY 200

Chris Cole celebrates the development of the railways and some of its successes

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

'Wow, isn't it small?

Early television memories from The Francis Frith Collection

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

Round the AUCTION HOUSES

Every week at auction houses up and down the country, a varied host of collectables are put up for sale at general and specialist events, offering everything from top-end treasures to more modest items. David Brown picks a selection of recent gems that have found new homes, and looks ahead to forthcoming sales.

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

'The Female John Noakes'

With the help of presenter Jenny Hanley, David Barnes explores the history of the popular children's TV programme Magpie

time to read

6 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

Byzantium Bites

Simon Stabler disputes the claim that lunch is for wimps

time to read

4 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

BACK IN TIME WITH COLIN BAKER

BoB's very own Time Lord recalls growing up with Granada, literally flooding the engine of his Mini, and getting ready for a return Holmes

time to read

2 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

RYDER CUP HERO

Colin Allan remembers golfer Dai Rees who led the first British team to beat the US in 24 years

time to read

5 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

TREASURES In the ATTIC

Brian Howes unearths some nostalgic collectables that might be discarded as worthless junk but actually have a value to today's collectors. Can you estimate what each object might be worth and pick out which one is the big-money item? The values are printed on page 80.

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

BRITAIN NOW

TOPICAL SNIPPETS FROM AROUND OUR NATION

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Best of British

Best of British

Take Your Pick!

Derek Lamb recalls an enduring game show and early ratings winner for ITV

time to read

4 mins

September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size