BBC Radio 2 frequency changes - Nov 1978

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • It's Wednesday November 22nd 1978, the eve of a major shake-up of frequencies for the BBC's national radio networks.
    Radio 1 will lose its appalling 247m (1215 kHz) medium wave frequency (to Radio 3) and gain two much stronger places on the dial; 275 & 285 metres, 1053 & 1089 kHz AM.
    Radio 2 is about to say goodbye to it's long wave (1500 metres / 200kHz) coverage of western Europe (to be taken over by Radio 4) and is moving to 433 & 330 metres medium wave, 693 & 909 kHz AM.
    The FM (VHF) frequencies are left unchanged. Radio 1 still doesn't have its own dedicated FM network at this stage - there isn't space on the dial as half the band is taken up by emergency service transmissions like police and ambulance!
    It's easy to forget that not everyone has access to FM at this time (especially in the car) and so medium & long waves are still very important. Another point is that many UK radio dials still used "metres" as the measurement and so the station jingles typically reflected that. It would be some time before we adopted the US standard of talking about "AM" (with the frequency given in kilohertz) and "FM".
    Here's a selection of clips from Radio 2 on that final day of long wave transmission with plenty of jingles, presenter and celebrity announcements and a comical song. You'll also hear part of the trail for the new Radio 2 (433 & 330) car sticker competition - all part of the effort to ensure they don't lose their audience overnight!
    Presenters/announcers include; Jimmy Young, Tim Gudgin, Pete Murray, Colin Berry, David Hamilton & Paddy O'Byrne.
    Thanks for watching - and listening! :)

Комментарии • 62

  • @kargaroc386
    @kargaroc386 10 лет назад +14

    That is one of the most amazing jingles I've ever heard

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 3 года назад +2

      Good ol' JAMS...

  • @johnking5174
    @johnking5174 7 лет назад +5

    The Lyrics of the frequency changes song - "Things are changing, things are moving, and we hope that, they are improving. In this letter, think we better, get across the message that we will soon be moving. On a weekday, in November, and the 23rd is what you must remember. It's a Thursday, that's the first day, that our frequency and wave lengths change their numbers. Yeah. Radio 2 is moving, and so we hope will you and you'll be listening when we move to Medium Wave of 433 and 330. We need you and so assume you like us too, and you'll be there to meet us when we move to Medium Wave on 433 and 330. Don't be worried, don't feel nervous, the kilohertz are on your dial in hundreds. You can find us, take your time, just remember 693 and 909"

  • @christopherhulse8385
    @christopherhulse8385 3 месяца назад +3

    This was a fairly big deal in 1978 as FM/MW/LW was the only way to listen to radio.

  • @organisten
    @organisten 4 года назад +3

    I remember this well. Although I was a little weird as a kid in liking Radio 3. I hated the changes, but they probably (looking back on it) helped me abandon the medium for FM. By my final school year, I thought of medium wave as a second class service. Now I live in Norway - and FM itself has all but gone, replaced by DAB and DAB+. The only exceptions are a few local radio stations that have, for the time being, permission to continue on FM. However many of them have now invested in DAB.

  • @Knightyknight72
    @Knightyknight72 10 лет назад +7

    An excellent historical listen. Even though I was only a kid (I was born in 1966) I remember it well although more so from a Radio 1 perspective. Certainly our Radio 1 reception was improved on 275m. Keep this stuff coming :)
    Regards,
    Tas

  • @davidmyers5545
    @davidmyers5545 9 лет назад +6

    I've still got an old Roberts radio with the little stickers on it that you got to help with the frequency changes. I reckon the stickers came with the radio times

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  9 лет назад +1

      I remember those! Sounds like a real collector's item :)

    • @christopherhulse8385
      @christopherhulse8385 2 года назад +2

      I think they came through the post.

    • @user-John666
      @user-John666 Год назад +1

      Yeah pretty sure they came through the post as we had them and no way could we afford luxuries like buying the Radio Times! 😆

  • @ianhand5006
    @ianhand5006 9 лет назад +3

    I remember this well. I was 11 years old and I recall we received a card with some numbered stickers on it. I still have it, minus some of the stickers, somewhere.

    • @alanmorr3635
      @alanmorr3635 8 лет назад

      +Ian Hand Yes indeed, I was a postman at that time, I remember delivering all those coloured stickers with all the new frequencies on it.

    • @quantumellon
      @quantumellon 8 лет назад

      Damn...
      I had a Panasonic RQ512FLSD radiocassette for Christmas in 1976 when I was nearly 15 !
      Those stickers came later in the post and my sister rubbed them off later when I was away at Manchester Polytechnic studying my degree... :(

  • @Thomas828
    @Thomas828 10 лет назад +2

    Well, I remember seeing all the publicity about the changes to BBC radio frequencies on the TV in the morning before programmes started up. I was 7 years old and this was the television and radio event of my childhood I remember best.
    I notice that no mention is made of Radio 4 that was taking over the frequency 1500 metres long wave, or Radio 3 on 247 metres medium wave.

  • @theweathercat2002
    @theweathercat2002 4 года назад +4

    The late 1970's news theme was good

  • @stephenhall6595
    @stephenhall6595 5 лет назад +4

    Radio 1 was improved but Radio 2 was worst in some areas on Medium Wave compared to Long Wave. However Radio 2 always had FM.

    • @christopherhulse8385
      @christopherhulse8385 Год назад +1

      Radio 2 generally had comparable coverage on MW with Radio 1, people did tolerate crackles and interference on their radio's back then more than today.

  • @hairynews8348
    @hairynews8348 3 года назад +2

    These are classics! Thankyou for posting

  • @davidmyers5545
    @davidmyers5545 9 лет назад +3

    Crazy that Radio 1 didn't get their own FM frequency till 1988!

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  9 лет назад +5

      Bonkers!

    • @MPsNewswatch
      @MPsNewswatch 4 года назад +1

      Not helped by the fact that Radio 1 was shoehorned into service after the success of the UK offshore pop pirates. For many of the early years, it shared airtime with Radio 2 and had some shared shows due to cutbacks in the mid 70s.
      It really wasn't until the late 80s when UK commercial radio split frequencies and most went CHR and R1 finally went FM in most of the country that pop music was finally part of the mainstream and not as a tick box outfit as R1 was for years, but 78 was an important year for many to tune into R1 without the dire reception 247 had.

    • @chrispearson3333
      @chrispearson3333 Год назад +1

      Autumn 1989 in Norfolk

  • @peterdockrill9653
    @peterdockrill9653 Год назад +1

    I know 25 Nov 78 was the first time I heard Mary's boy child by boney M. Love these downloads , the quality is really good.

  • @chrispearson3333
    @chrispearson3333 Год назад +1

    Yes Norfolk Fire Service used 99FM; today Radio 1 is on 99.3FM from Tacnoleston Transmitter south east of Norwich.

  • @RandomRadioJottings
    @RandomRadioJottings 10 лет назад +2

    Ray Moore doing the V/O on the car sticker promo

  • @radiodarkhorse
    @radiodarkhorse 10 лет назад +4

    Haven't heard that John Dunn theme since I was a kid!

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  10 лет назад +4

      Ah, the memories! When I recently heard John Dunn's closing theme again (Syd Dale's Central Park Parade), I was straight back in the kitchen as a teenager with mum doing the cooking!

    • @radiodarkhorse
      @radiodarkhorse 10 лет назад +2

      RetroRadioUK
      For me, my dad used to drive lorries for Celcon and he had Radio 2 on the radio in the cab. I used to accompany him sometimes and was listening to all shows being around 7/8 years old. My dad still listenens to Radio 2 although it's changed a bit

  • @michaelturner4457
    @michaelturner4457 3 года назад +3

    That sounds very much like PAMS Dallas jingles.

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  3 года назад +1

      And indeed it is! Check out the full 1976 package: ruclips.net/video/BOxJreL-khs/видео.html

    • @Nightingale1000
      @Nightingale1000 Месяц назад

      ​@@RetroRadioUK I think that was the last one they got from PAMS before switching over to Jam, right?

  • @jayrogers8255
    @jayrogers8255 6 лет назад

    39 years ago today on the very same day of the week as well!

  • @djkeithcostello5200
    @djkeithcostello5200 4 года назад +1

    Best radio station

  • @JoannaGoodyear1978
    @JoannaGoodyear1978 8 месяцев назад +2

    6:07 what’s this song called please?❤

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  8 месяцев назад +2

      Well I had to do a bit of Googling but the date of the transmission got me there: Frankie Valli, Save Me Save Me: ruclips.net/video/1a31VljKpnk/видео.htmlsi=Gqp4EhgzJ7a8Y-uP

    • @JoannaGoodyear1978
      @JoannaGoodyear1978 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@RetroRadioUK Well thank you for the information & I understand. I like this video. Thanks for posting😊

  • @peterdockrill9653
    @peterdockrill9653 Год назад +2

    Would've liked to actually hear the whole of the news bulletins

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  Год назад +2

      Me too... but I could never have known that my interests would change and I'd be sharing this stuff more than 40 years later :-)

  • @markgaughran4374
    @markgaughran4374 6 лет назад

    39 years ago today

  • @cabbage1673
    @cabbage1673 9 лет назад +1

    just heard the late ray moore is there any clips from his show's please

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  9 лет назад +3

      Hi Kevin - sorry I've no more Ray Moore clips. I was always out on my paper-round when he was on!

    • @cabbage1673
      @cabbage1673 9 лет назад +1

      thanks matey his theme tune was here there and everywhere by mike leander

  • @jayrogers8255
    @jayrogers8255 10 лет назад +2

    Was this recorded on longwave or FM? I'm guessing FM. Very interesting as I've never heard longwave radio (we don't have it here in ITU Region 2).

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  10 лет назад +3

      Hi Jay - yes, this was all taped off Radio 2's FM (VHF) frequency. Long wave lives on for UK listeners with BBC Radio 4 on 198kHz/1500 metres.

    • @jayrogers8255
      @jayrogers8255 10 лет назад +2

      RetroRadioUK We don't have that over here. I'm glad to hear that RTE Radio 1 is getting a 3-month reprieve. Do you happen to have the 1st day of the change in frequencies (Thursday the 23rd)?

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  10 лет назад +3

      Jay Rogers
      Hi Jay - I'm afraid not. I think I must have been skiving off school to get all the clips from November 22nd and would have been back in the classroom by Thursday! I do remember a school-mate coming in that first morning of the new frequencies and playing some of the new Radio 1 "275 and 285" jingles on his radio-cassette: ruclips.net/video/YBSKn_VjxQ4/видео.html

    • @jayrogers8255
      @jayrogers8255 9 лет назад +1

      RetroRadioUK Very nice! I can tell that's a Jam package!

    • @arthurvasey
      @arthurvasey 9 лет назад +1

      It's in stereo, so it's recorded from FM - even today, you still can't get stereo sound on long wave or medium wave!

  • @jessicamarshall5936
    @jessicamarshall5936 8 лет назад +2

    what are the lyrics to the song at 4:00?

    • @johnking5174
      @johnking5174 8 лет назад +2

      "Things are changing, things are moving, and we hope that, they are improving. In this letter, think we better, get across the message that we will soon be moving. On a weekday, in November, and the 23rd is what you must remember. It's a Thursday, that's the first day, that our frequency and wave lengths change their numbers. Yeah. Radio 2 is moving, and so we hope will you and you'll be listening when we move to Medium Wave of 433 and 330. We need you and so assume you like us too, and you'll be there to meet us when we move to Medium Wave on 433 and 330. Don't be worried, don't feel nervous, the kilohertz are on your dial in hundreds. You can find us, take your time, just remember 693 and 909". - I hope you appreciate it was hard for me to listen bit by bit to get the lyrics, I think I am 99.9% right. Hope this helps you.

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 3 года назад +2

      Things are changing,things are moving.
      And we hope that they're improving.
      In this letter, think we'd better
      get across the message that we're moving.
      On a weekday in November,
      And the 23rd is what you must remember.
      It's a Thursday, that's the first day
      That our frequency and wavelengths change their numbers.
      Radio 2 is moving house,
      And so we hope will you and yours be
      Listening when we move to medium wave
      On 433 and 330.
      We need you and sort of hope
      You like us too. And you'll be there to
      Meet us when we move to medium wave
      On 433 and 330.
      Don't we worried, don't feel nervous.
      The kilohertz are on your dial in hundreds.
      You can find us. Take your time.
      Just remember: 693 and 909.

  • @davejenkins744
    @davejenkins744 2 года назад +1

    why was these changes made?? and what was wrong with LW... genuine question

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  2 года назад +1

      Dave - there's probably a much longer answer for you via Wikipedia, but I think it was down to two issues: a need to improve AM reception across the UK - especially for Radio 1 which didn't have its own dedicated FM network at that time, unlike Radio's 2, 3 & 4 - and also to meet the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 which tweaked the allocation of European frequencies very slightly to cram more stations on the dial at increments of 9kHz (as opposed to 10kHz in North America).
      BTW - nothing wrong with Long Wave - the BBC's single Long Wave frequency (200kHz which was tweaked to 198kHz) was handed from Radio 2 to Radio 4 and the shipping forecast bulletins switched stations with that change - probably better suited to Radio 4's all-speech format.

    • @davejenkins744
      @davejenkins744 2 года назад +1

      @@RetroRadioUK thanks for that... this might sound boring yeah.. but about 1982 is started too listen too sport on 2 as akid for the football commentries mid week nights ... buts as the night would go on the reception used to like fade in and out.. id tune too the other MW station but it would still be bad... the day time its was fine... i live in west wales so would that be a reason it was bad at night... thanks again retroradio

    • @RetroRadioUK
      @RetroRadioUK  2 года назад +2

      Great memories Dave!
      There's some science here - AM signals travel further at night so your day-time favourites get squeezed out by stations that are based further away: ruclips.net/video/_VDUGiJhK78/видео.html
      That's partly why Radio Luxembourg aimed it's programmes at the UK after dark :-)
      Your memories also explain the evolution of broadcasting in the UK with the launch of Radio 5 in 1994, finally allowing Radio 2 to ditch its sports output, the expansion of the FM dial (removing emergency service transmissions from the upper end) to give Radio 1 its own dedicated network along with Classic FM and - in more recent times - the growth of DAB, allowing many more channels at far higher quality than AM - although many purists would say that too many of the commercial DAB stations are not as high quality as a conventional FM signal.

    • @davejenkins744
      @davejenkins744 2 года назад +1

      @@RetroRadioUK thankyou,,..... hope u find some sport on 2 soon.. evening shows

  • @eugeneoneal3034
    @eugeneoneal3034 9 лет назад

    Lots more retro Radio 1, 2 and ILR can be found here, www.normanb.net/index.htm