Tuesday, 20 May 2025

Eurovision x Subterranean Sounds Redux

At the risk of returning to old ground - or am I now veering off topic since discovering the wonderful world of piped supermarket music - the recent Eurovision Song Contest from Basel, as each ESC happens to do, brought back memories from my own halcyon days of shortwave listening. 

The mid-1990s was a tremendous time for listening to 76 metres (3 MHz) in the evening, or more particularly after midnight. Ironically, Steve Midnight of Radio Confusion then Subterranean Sounds would be one of the few predominantly but exclusively British stations that was regularly heard after sundown, but would more or less be on his own in broadcasting late evening - say 1030 pm onwards. There would usually be a broadcast, perhaps what might have been termed a Eurovision special, on the conclusion of that particular year's contest. These are small but nevertheless significant memories that represent just one leitmotif of a scene that brought about the creation of this blog. 

Of course, Radio Confusion then Subterranean Sounds did not just broadcast once a year to coincide with what remains a rather dubious pan-European music fest that has now been hijacked by ideologies, and where contestants run the risk of being heckled due to the actions of their leaders, but for your correspondent would usually be as much about Eurovision evening as the contest itself. I also recall in the early days of Confusion broadcasting on 6 and 7 MHz a diet of Indie music, whilst Subterranean Sounds being more memorable for monologues on UFOs (the contemporary parlance being UAPs - Unidentified Aerial / Anomalous Phenomena) and tracks from Birmingham-based band Broadcast, as well as Papua New Guinea by Future Sound of London being regularly aired. Good days.

The night-time 76 metres scene was a bona fide extension, perhaps even an improvement, on the tradition Sunday morning 6 MHz scene, with Live Wire, Radio Armadillo,  and Wizard's Magic Spell being amongst the UK-based stations who also grasped the nettle. Weekend Music Radio would often run 3 MHz in parallel with other frequencies, whilst Brian of SF03 would frequently pop up at the end of the night to call CQ to some of the aforementioned. 

Although this has always been a strictly UK-based blog, honourable mentions must also be made for Radio Grensjager (Borderhunter), Radio Korak, and Radio Pirana, three stations I would consider to be at the highly acceptable, listenable end of the shortwave free radio spectrum, and whom were also synonymous with 3 MHz in the evenings.

Despite much water having passed under the bridge since, events such as Eurovision and UK Bank Holidays never fail to trigger positive memories of my listening past. As a new wave of UK stations complements the old guard, has the baton passed to a new generation of broadcasters and listeners? Of that I am not so sure, as presumably many still involved are those returning to the hobby, or who never actually left. 

With the advent of on demand streaming, instantaneous messaging, and digital radio searchable by genre, it is now difficult to imagine that many, or any, younger people have discovered shortwave and particularly free radio as I did in the late 1980s and early 1990s. However, whilst change is inevitable, a glass half full attitude would say that it is good to hear that free radio on shortwave is still going strong, albeit in its current form. 

Monday, 19 May 2025

Lost in Music - Morrison's Style

This was never meant to become a recurring theme, but purely in the name of research I thought I'd compare last week's muzak in Asda with that being pumped out by Morrison's, one of its big, if albeit ailing rivals. 

The store in question is a few miles north of Blackpool, in a town, known by some as Costa Geriatrica, replete with squadrons of mobility scooters - is there a collective noun for these Welfare Wagons or Benidorm Buggies? - and home to at least fourteen charity shops. It was even once pointed out by your correspondent to a tourist that the disabled toilet wasn't working, hence the name...

Anyway, I digress. Describing, or attempting to define the essence of Cleveleys does in no way reflect the music played in the background to soothe the furrowed brows of shoppers wending their way around a bleak supermarket, one that has been poor for a while before going downhill from there. The predominant demographic is obviously not considered by Morrison's when putting together what I will admit is an intriguing smorgasbord of tracks, some of which had be whistling along to in approval. It seemed only apt that first one was:

Sister Sledge - Lost in Music


Alison Moyet - Love Resurrection


Rufus & Chaka Khan - Ain't Nobody



Earth, Wind & Fire - Land of Fantasy



Yes - Owner of a Lonely Heart



Ariana Grande - One Last Time



Chairmen of the Board - Give Me Just a Little More Time


Clout - Substitute



Robbie Williams - Supreme



Simply Red - Sunrise (Hall and Oates sample)



Dusty Springfield - Son of a Preacher Man



We are Down - Lights Off (Czech(ia) entry in the 2022 Eurovision)



I am sure you'll agree that this selection of music, either decided by an esoteric music aficionado or a frighteningly self-aware AI algorithm, is nothing if not unpredictable. I am not sure if a curated playlist can influence where one does 'the big shop' but it certainly makes the borderline intolerable into something less unpleasant. Heck, I may now even be spending longer in supermarkets that I used to, which might be their evil plan all along...

Whilst comparisons are odious, none of these tracks reached the heights of Bryan Ferry's effortless crooning during last week's trip to Asda, but I give Morrison's a solid eight out of ten for imagination. There is obviously a Marvin Gaye fan who puts together the music for Home Bargains, but I rarely spend more than ten minutes slaloming through the multitudes in the Liverpool-based value-for-money emporium. No, it has to be somewhere that necessitates a longer stay to gain a better appreciation of a store's musical output. And there was me complaining about continuous music on shortwave !!

Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Lost in Music - Asda style

For me to prolong this blog (perhaps I'm actually prolonging the agony) it will have to venture into new, if albeit tenuous areas. Although this post is categorically unrelated to UK-based free radio from the 1990s, to quote Sister Sledge - music is my salvation. 

Therefore, whilst it would be most agreeable (borrowed from John Major) if the Xenon Transmitting Company or even Radio Badger (other stations are though also available) took it upon themselves to air the following play list, they are of course expected to stay true to their own individual, and respective musical tastes.

Having long since becomes first disillusioned with then appalled by so-called legit FM radio, it is to curated or algorithm-based play lists I have turned to for satisfaction. There are, after all, some advantages to modern technology, although nowadays one's life never feels to be your own. Nevertheless, as I reluctantly trundled through Asda this morning, I could not fail but to be impressed by the catholic taste of those tasked with providing suitable background entertainment for reluctant shoppers in a well-known Lancashire resort. 

I will let you be the judge of the quality and variety, and whilst radio programming and musical tastes are always subjective - not everyone after all is averse to continuous music or Dutch stations whose names change with the wind - there was I thought a certain flair at play from I hope the human who chose Asda's aural entertainment:

Joyce Sims - Come Into My Life


John Newman - Come and Get It


Soul II Soul - Back to Life


Rag 'n' Bone Man - Put a Little Hurt on Me


Kygo & Whitney Houston - Higher Love


Yazmin Lacey - Not Today Mate


Family Stand - Ghetto Heaven


Jonas Brothers - Only Human


and finally. and what a track:

Roxy Music - Same Old Scene



Next time you are doing the weekly shop in one of the UK's major supermarket chains, turn your attention away from shoppers wearing dressing gowns, White Fox and Represent hoodies, Crocs, and the obese in leopard print leggings, and listen to what is being played. You might just be pleasantly surprised. 

UK Bank Holidays: Supermarket Shopping replaces Listening to Free Radio

For me at least there was once a time when a Bank Holiday was synonymous with the exciting possibilities afforded by UK-based free radio on ...