Friday, 26 March 2021

Final broadcasts

Despite the passing of what is now a significant period of time, several UK-based shortwave free radio stations that have figured in this 1990s retrospective can still to this day be found on or around the 48 metre band. 

It is not the albeit honourably mentioned Radio Pamela, Xenon Transmitting Company(XTC), and Radio Merlin, as well as dormant stations like Weekend Music Radio(WMR) and Radio Pandora who are both it seems on extended hiatus, that are the focus of this blog post. 

When recently (re)listening to a YouTube clip of Live Wire Radio from approximately 20 years ago, it dawned upon me that this might well have been the last broadcast I ever heard from station operator Bill Lewis. That is not to say Live Wire called it a day at that time, but as I drifted away from the hobby and without any hard copy records or memories to suggest otherwise, there is a fair chance that this was the final time or one of the last when I heard one of the 1990s most recognizable free radio voices. 

Indeed, I can only be sure that I heard this broadcast as my phone call to the studio was acknowledged early in the show!

Despite delving into the 1990s UK-based scene to the greatest extent that I could, I have since pondered just when stations such as Live Wire, Subterranean Sounds, Scotland's Radio Gloria, and WNKR to name just a few broadcast their final programmes. It has also been a point of minor fascination as to whether these and other stations knowingly broadcasted their last programmes in a final flourish, or that they simply never returned to the air. This and what motivated individual operators to call it a day can only be answered by the protagonists themselves, but changes in circumstances, disillusionment with the hobby, and simply outgrowing what might not have had the same allure as the early salad days will surely rank highly in what has caused the significant hole left in UK free radio on shortwave by stations to this day who are conspicuous by their absence. 

It is far easier, or less difficult, to know how stations came into being and when they did so, but what characterized their final days and the reasons behind them by and large remain a mystery. This is though perhaps a metaphor for hobby pirates whose very existence must on the whole remain enigmatic and discreet. 

The door perhaps remains ajar for some stations who I otherwise assume to be consigned to history, and as such there may be operators who never actually 'officially' quit. If though broadcasters disappeared due to the deteriorating quality of free radio on shortwave, there is little on that basis to encourage them to return today.

By definition there are no rules, expectations, or standards demanded by free radio, and as such station operators can leave on a whim and return with alacrity without the need for explanation to listeners or to justify their actions to 'the man'. It is that unpredictability that has always lent a certain distinction to the scene, if albeit some operators let their so-called celebrity go to their heads - the only places it actually existed. 

It would be of interest to me if anyone out there has on record when the stations who have seemingly 'gone for good' actually called time on their presence on shortwave. Any recordings of final broadcasts would also be appreciated, even if only with hindsight has it since become apparent that these were the last times that they were heard, at least to date. 

2 comments:

  1. Before he was on WNKR, Andy Walker ran WFRL.

    WFRL certainly did a final broadcast, with Andy continuing with WNKR

    ReplyDelete

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