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Thin Air

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TV has only rarely used a radio station as a setting for comedy or drama; perhaps it’s not a glamorous enough setting.  Off the top of my head I came up US offerings of WKRP in Cincinnati, Midnight Caller (overdue for a repeat surely), News Radio (recently on Sony TV) and, of course Frasier.  In the UK there’s been Shoestring (‘The Private Ear’), Agonyand Ken Stott in Takin’ Over the Aslyum. No doubt you can think of a few more.

One ‘forgotten’ series is Thin Air set in the fictitious Urban Air radio station in which intrepid news reporter Rachel Hamilton (played by Kate Hardie, left) uncovers local corruption.

In 2008 the Guardian’s Gareth McLean wondered about the TV shows that time forgot and of Thin Air wrote: “I remember bits of it vividly - mostly the sometime Communards collaborator Sarah Jane Morris lying dead in a radio studio. I also recall having a crush on Hardie but that's less relevant here."

McLean's post continues: "Obviously now, thanks to IMDb, I know there was much acting talent involved in the drama including Robert Pugh, Kevin McNally and Clive Merrison (who, his turn as Sherlock Holmes aside, always seems to play a baddie). And it was directed by Antonia Bird, who went on to direct Priest, Care and The Hamburg Cell. But it's so obscure that it doesn't even have a Wikipedia entry and there's not a whiff of it on YouTube. Thin Air was one of those dramas that vanished into, well, the ether”.



Urban Air boss Richard Hellier (Nicky Henson), Rachel hamilton (Kate Hardie)
 and activist Mark Gentian (Kevin McNally)
The five part thriller aired on BBC1 in the Spring of 1988 and was written by Sarah Dunant and Peter Busby. A Radio Times feature described it as follows:


Thin Air could hardly be more rooted in the present. Set in a commercial radio station in an enterprise zone called ‘Riverside’, it involved property development on a massive scale, the disruption and forced exodus of a local community, the stripping away of local authority powers, left-wing activism, designer drugs, media hacks.


James Aubrey as disc jockey Zac Diamond

Sam Kelly as harassed news editor Henry Campbell

Brian Bovell as night-time DJ Joe Jeffries
I was convinced I had at least a clip of the programme tucked away on videotape but if I did I can’t find it. However I have located this location report from Pat Rowe from Woman’s Hour on 4 April 1988. As well as Hardie, Henson and Dunant you’ll hear producer Caroline Oulton

Thin Air

The Viking Invasion – Part 4 – Country Wars

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It was High Noon in Hull. Viking versus Humberside. The battle was over country music presenter Tex Milne.


Tex had long been on the BBC station and, as the Hull Daily Mail of 16 January 1986 reported, he had “dropped a bombshell on Radio Humberside by announcing on air that he is leaving to join commercial rivals Viking.” Apparently he’d been feeling “uncertain” about his future and had heard that he was due to be dropped by boss Geoff Sargieson.  For Viking’s manager Roger Brooks it was the second coup that month as they’d also secured the services of Paul Burnett.

Country music shows were not uncommon on the early ILR stations with their public service remit.  From day one Viking Country was hosted by Pete Ryan but it seems he was dropped a couple of years later. I’ve no idea why or indeed what happened to him after that.
Pete Ryan

Meanwhile Tex Milne (was a country music presenter better named, though I’m guessing it wasn’t his actual name) was already well known for presenting Country Music Time and had been with Humberside since 1972. He was a storeman with a Hull based company but his interest in country and western dated back to 1959. For a while he worked in a record shop and in 1968 was compering at the original Hull Country Music Club. 
Tex Milne

It wouldn’t be too many years before Viking, along with many other commercial stations dropped their specialist music shows. Meanwhile over on Radio Humberside regular Sunday country music shows continued with Tammy Cline and later Bob Preedy.

Fun at One - Adrian Juste

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It’s what Saturday lunchtimes were made for. For many years filling the 1 to 2 p.m. slot on Radio 1 was an hour of music and comedy pulled together by Adrian Juste.  Think hit records from Kim Wilde and The Eurythmics interspersed with clips of Hancock and Bob Newhart and the occasional specially written sketch.

That mix of pop and comedy had been inspired by Jack Jackson’s ‘record roundabout’ shows on the Light Programme and Radio 1. Jack’s final show, a Bank Holiday special on Radio 2, had aired in 1977. Adrian’s shows became a fixture on most Saturdays between 1978 and the start of 1994, though for a while in the mid-80s he was moved to Sunday mornings and later Sunday afternoons. The Saturday shows benefitted from going out in stereo on VHF, at the time a scare resource for Radio 1, whilst over on Radio 2 we had comedy such as The News Huddlines and then the first half-hour of Sport on 2.    

Juste was the voice of Radio 1 for nearly 17 years. Programme trailers, campaign promos and those Roadshow intros (“today live from the boating lake, Cleethorpes…” etc.), he did them all. In addition he often provided the technical support, playing in the records or on standby at Broadcasting House during an OB should the line go down. Not forgetting a fair few New Year’s Eve Party shows too. No wonder Adrian was bitter was he was given the boot as part of Matthew Bannister’s DJ cull in 1993.

Here’s the second half of Adrian’s last show that went out on 1st January 1994. There’s some fun to be had, not to mention a touch of bitterness, towards the end with Adrian looking for new employment, “Slung out after 17 years” and going into panto, “Where’s your career? Behind you!”

And this is Adrian in the early days with a Saturday lunchtime show from 14th November1981.

Juste has appeared on the radio intermittently since leaving Radio 1, most recently on BBC Radio Devon with a 2012 Christmas special offering much the same mix as before. 

Fun at One – Lenny Henry

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It’s time for Lenny Henry’s biennial Comic Relief appearance in a loud suit this coming Friday. But years before his Red Nose antics Lenny was a Radio 1 DJ.

A guest performance on a 1981 Roadshow and a My Top Twelve appearance convinced network controller Johnny Beerling that Lenny was suitable for radio work. The following year he was given an Easter tryout and then summer cover work for Noel Edmond’s Sunday morning show – theSunday Hoot was born.
Mixing music and comedy, written by Lenny’s TV scriptwriters such as Kim Fuller and Bob Sinfield, the shows would introduce his audience to characters such as Joshua Yarlog (“Katanga”) and Delbert Wilkins (“Y’know what I mean?”) that would feature in later TV shows.

Much of Lenny’s Radio 1 work was broadcast live and he learnt how to drive the desk. For a short spell in the early 80s (1982-85) he was seen as part of the regular DJ line-up complete with his own JAM-produced ident. Here he is having fun with those jingles in a trailer for his Sunday show.
Lenny Henry

This is a complete one hour (recorded) Christmas specialbroadcast on 24 December 1983.

Read more about Lenny’s Radio 1 career in Fun at One by Tim Worthington.

The Viking Invasion – Part 5 – Splits and Mergers

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Our story now moves to 1987, a year of change behind the scenes and on-air at Viking Radio. The ILR stations were gradually loosening their IBA shackles and the rules on ownership now allowed the merger of Radio Hallam and Pennine Radio and then Viking Radio to form the Yorkshire Radio Network.

The first evidence of YRN on-air was on the evening of 19 May 1987 when Tim Finlay presented the launch show airing on all three stations. Along with Steve 'Bongo' Tong and Les Smith the joint shows filled the hours between 8 p.m. to 6 a.m.
Tim Finlay 190587

The other change in radio, both commercial and BBC, was the Government’s decision to take “a decisive step away from simulcasting” on FM and AM.  Viking had already dipped its toe into the water with its Sunday afternoon music (FM) and rugby league (AM) split. Here’s Viking’s schedule in 1987, by now we’d also got Saturday split programming with Sportacular(terrible title) versus Afternoon Delight with Diana Luke.

When it came to full-time permanent changes in simulcasting first out of the blocks was County Sound, on 1 June 1988 splitting to form Premier Radio on FM and County Sound Gold on AM. In August Piccadilly was renamed Key 103 whilst its AM service morphed into Piccadilly Gold. On 4 October GEM-AM launched out of the Radio Trent and Leicester Sound grouping. And then on 1 November we had the Capital FM/Capital Gold split and Viking Gold launched on 1161 AM.



On air that first day were Peter Fairhead, Alan Ross, Tim Jibson, Al Dupres and John Uphoff all making good use of those PAMS jingles re-sings. (Sorry, I've no recordings of Alan or Al).
Peter Fairhead
Tim Jibson
John Uphoff

The Viking Gold launch team was as follows:

Peter Fairhead had joined the team from Pennine Radio and would go on to present on Classic Gold and Great Yorkshire Gold (more of which in future posts). You can hear Peter each week on WHCR in Hull and on UK Country Radio.

Tim Jibson was already part of the Viking team and would also work on the later local Gold stations. Tim launched KCFM and now runs Adventures in Radio Ltd.

Alan Ross was Viking Gold’s Programme Controller and came from the Pennine side of the operation. He’d started at DevonAir before moving to CBC and Red Dragon Radio. Alan would also work on the subsequent Classic Gold service before a move back to Pennine (later The Pulse). From 1994 at Touch Radio and then Magic 1170 in Stockton  where he stayed for over 14 years retiring from the Breakfast Show just last month as part of the increasing networking of Magic programming.

John Uphoff was also from Pennine. By 1991 he’d moved to Jersey working on commercial radio and then for the BBC. Sadly John died in 2008 aged 46.

Keith Skues has, it seems, been DJ-ing for ever. When Viking Gold launched he was the Group Programme Consultant for YRN. Read more about Keith in my Hallam post.

Al Dupres has long been involved in radio in the Hull area working on the later Gold incarnations, Magic, KCFM and WHCR. As well as doing voiceover work Al can currently be heard on Radio Caroline.

Meanwhile over on FM Viking Radio's 1988 team was Dave Fewster, Steve King,
Chris Bell, Martin Lee, Tim Finlay and Freddie Allen
Viking Gold’s life was short, by May the following year it became Classic Gold. More of that in a future post.

Radio Lives – Peter Jones

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Peter Jones was an all-rounder, one of the rare breed of broadcasters that used to grace the BBC’s airwaves and could turn their hands to most events with aplomb.

He was born and educated in Swansea and then went to Cambridge University before pursuing a teaching career. It was whilst at Bradfield College as French teacher and sports master that he encountered BBC football commentator Maurice Edelston, himself a former player for Fulham and Reading and now also coaching at the college. Through Edelston he was hired by Angus Mackay, the creator and editor of Sports Report, as a sports assistant, joining the BBC in October 1965.

The following year Jones was working on his first major sporting tournament. Writing in 1987 he takes up the story:  


The first World Cup I covered, as a very new sports assistant, was back in 1966. Our senior commentators then were Brian Moore and Maurice Edelston. I was sent to the qualifying group in the north-east of England and my first seats in the house for the BBC were at St James’s Park, Roker Park and Ayresome Park. The group consisted of Italy, Chile, the Soviet Union and North Korea. Italy were the hottest of hot favourites and looked magnificent in training, but my biggest headache was collecting facts and figures about the totally unknown North Korean squad. Information was sparse and when the names did come up they were a nightmare. Not only did the players all look alike, but their names – tongue-twisters indeed – all sounded alike. Not that it would make much difference, for North Korea would surely be on the first plane home after the qualifying matches. They were up against the strongest opposition and the fruits of all m y industry in collecting a North Korean dossier were going to be short-lived. The rest is football history. North Korea played some dazzling, if at time naive, football and were through to the quarter-finals, and it was Italy who were on the first plane home. Suddenly I was one of the most popular men in the sports room.

That preparation paid off as Peter Jones would now join the main football commentary team. He would go on to cover every World Cup between 1970 and 1986, the FA Cup from 1968 as well as countless European and club games. Many listeners during the 1970s will recall the Saturday afternoon live second-half commentaries shared between Jones and the BBC’s football correspondent Bryon Butler. (He’d first started regular Saturday commentaries in 1967 alongside Alan Clarke).

Bryon Butler and
Peter Jones
He was soon entrusted with linking together the Saturday afternoon radio sports coverage on the Sports Service, carried on the Third Programme’s frequencies, initially in late 1967 and then as the main host from late 1969. Jones presented the final Sports Service in March 1970 and the first ever Sport on 2 the following month following a shake-up of radio sporting coverage. He would remain a regular presenter throughout the next two decades alongside the likes of Des Lynam, Jim Rosenthal and Alan Parry.  You can hear Peter Jones on Sport on 2 in this post.   

As well as his football work Jones would cover swimming, often alongside former Olympic swimmer Anita Lonsbrough, and tennis commentary were he would host the Wimbledon coverage on Radio 2.

His first summer Olympics were the Munich Games in 1972 were “the black shadow of terrorism clouded the face of sport”. His first Commonwealth Games, the Edinburgh ones in 1970. In addition, like other versatile OB commentators before him – Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, Brian Johnston and Robert Hudson to name three - he would cover special events such as the Royal Maundy service, the Festival of Remembrance, the Lord Mayor’s Banquet, the Opening of Parliament.  There were also question master duties on Sporting Chance and Brain of Sport.   
FA Cup Final 1979
Wimbledon 1979
World Cup 1986
Part of the Radio Times billing
for the first Sport on 2 (April 1970)
For the wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 he was improbably paired up with Lorraine Chase in a commentary position on a balcony of a pub on Fleet Street. Jones recalled her exclamation of “Cor look at them geezers in red coats. Don’t they look smashing!” 

Inevitably live commentary would lead to the odd Colemanballs moment, this from the FA Cup Final in 1985: “At this moment the Band of the Grenadier Guards stand erect in the centre circle, their instruments flashing in the sunshine.”

Two of Peter’s best known commentaries are suffused with tragedy. He was present at both the Heysel and Hillsborough disasters.
Heysel commentary
Sport on 2 covers the Boat Race in 1981
Peter Jones’s death was also tragic and very sudden. In 1990 he would take over University Boat Race commentating duties from Brian Johnston and was onboard the BBC’s launch Arethusa (it was retired the following year in place of the Mercier). In charge that day was producer Joanne Watson. Paul Donovan of The Sunday Times wrote about the event nearly a year later:

He died with the microphone in his hand and the words forming in his throat. He was standing on the Arethusa as the flotilla of launches and craft followed the Oxford and Cambridge eights under Hammersmith Bridge. Curiously, he did not collapse but simply went rigid. He did not respond to comments made to him over the headphones. A woman producer sitting behind him, one of two who have stepped down this year, tapped him on the back. Again he did not respond. Within a few minutes, one of the other commentators aboard – Robert Treharne-Jones, a qualified doctor – was giving him the kiss of life. The commentating for the last few minutes was handed over to Dan Topolski on the launch and Tony Adamson on land.

When they finally got the 60-year-old commentator to the shore they had to wait “an age” recalls Watson, for an ambulance – it was also the day of the poll tax riots. But it was too late. The voice of radio sport for 25 years was silent.

Following admission to hospital Peter died some 36 hours later. Reporting on Monday’s Sports Desk on Radio 2 was Jon Champion.
Sports Desk

Jon had been presenting Sport on 2 on the Saturday – his debut in that role. Later he recalled that on the previous afternoon that Peter “typically dapper in blazer and flannels and carrying the obligatory pile of books under his arm, had wished a nervous novice well in the sports room. ‘Just enjoy it – you’ll be fine,’ was the gist of his advice. Easy to say, hard to follow, I thought, but nice of him to say anything at all.”

There’s no doubt that Peter’s contribution to broadcasting will not be forgotten. Apparently extracts are played on a loop at the exhibits and memorabilia on display at the National Football Museum.  

Peter Jones 1930-1990

Radio Times

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Is it a collection or am I hoarder? In fact I like to think of my Radio Times archive as a valuable research resource.


When packing up to move our worldly possessions from Yorkshire down to France I sold or threw away a whole stack of magazines. But the Radio Times boxes, they remained untouched, save for some extra parcel tape. They were coming with us.

My Radio Times collection dates back from 1976 starting when, aged 14, I kept the family copy rather than let it go into the bin. At the time the magazines were, much to my mum’s annoyance, stored in the bottom of my wardrobe.

The run is patchy during 1976 and only complete from Easter 1977, save for those missing editions due to the 1980s print disputes. That’s about 1,800 copies. Recent eBay purchases have supplemented my archive with older editions. But with the BBC’s Genome project perhaps going public later this year will I be ditching the lot? 

The Genome project scanned all the various editions of the Radio Times back to 1923 to create a fully searchable programme information database, ideal for radio and social historians or just the idly curious alike.  At first the project won’t be making the photos, articles, letters, adverts and that classic artwork available online, although the whole of the magazine will have been scanned. Using optical character recognition the software will build up the programme data to populate a screen similar to the existing schedules pages you see on the BBC radio and tv websites. I think I’ll be hanging onto the actual magazines for the moment.

Here in France fortunately enough two of the main supermarkets in the nearby town of Parthenay – both Leclerc and Hyper U –stock the Radio Times, appearing on the shelves by the Thursday. So I’m still able to get my weekly fix. The online version just doesn’t do it for me. And if, for some reason, the RT doesn’t get delivered then it’s a quick call to a chum back in the UK. Cheers Phil!


There are plenty of other Radio Timescollectors out there. The late Wallace Grevatt probably had the largest private collection and some of his copies were used by the BBC for the Genome Project. Tony Currie talked about his personal obsession on Radio 4 back in 1990 and went on to write a book about the magazine’s history.

There's still a few Radio Times issues that are on my wish list. I did eventually manage to acquire the famous 1967 launch of Radio 1 ‘dolly bird’ issue as well as the preceding week for the close of the old Home, Light and Third but I’m on the lookout for:

w/c 29 July 1945 launch of the Light Programme
w/c 29 September 1946 launch of the Third Programme
w/c 26 September 1964 extension of broadcasting hours
w/c 23 October 1965 start of Breakfast Special
The Christmas double issues for 1973 and 1974.


Remember those Radio Times jingles? “It’s out today….the new Radio Times.” Here’s a sample of the jingles produced by JAM Creative Productions for both Radio 1 and Radio 2.
Radio Times Jingles

From 1985 this is Mark Page with a Radio 1 promotion as the magazine hits the newsstands.
1985 Promo

No jingles in this Radio 2 example from 1980, just a bit of over-acting from announcer Paddy O’Byrne.
1980 Promo


And to show that you can perhaps have just too many issues of this esteemed publication this chap in Channel 4’s Get Your Home In Order had 5,000+ with many multiple copies. Whilst the Churchill funeral issue may not be worth much I did spot an old Dad’s Army one (Clive Dunn on the cover) and at the end of the clip the 1970 Codename issue (featuring Anthony Valentine) is significant as it’s the first week of major radio changes following the Broadcasting in the Seventies review. Let’s hope he just didn’t junk those.

More on the Radio Times this November when it celebrates 90 years of publication.

With thanks to Ian Arnold.
 

Radio Lives - Humphrey Lyttelton

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“A well-known Old Etonian ex-Guards Officer jazz-trumpeter-broadcaster-cartoonist-bandleader-bird-watcher-gastrnome-humourist-panellist-TV-personality.” Who is this? Why Humphrey Lyttelton of course with the words taken from his self-penned comic obituary.

To many Humph is associated with a certain radio panel game and many a round of Mornington Crescent is played in his memory. But in this post I’m looking in more detail at Humph’s other radio career: as a jazz broadcaster over five decades. 

A well-known online encyclopaedia has this to say on Humphrey’s jazz broadcasting career: “From 1967 until April 2007, Lyttelton presented The Best of Jazz on BBC Radio 2, a programme which featured his idiosyncratic mix of top-quality recordings of all ages, including current material”. And that’s it. Shame the dates are wrong too.

His first broadcast was an impromptu and entirely accidental affair. On VE Day, 8 May 1945, Humphrey went up to London and joined friends outside Buckingham Palace. Happening to have his trumpet with him he played Run Rabbit Run and We’re Gonna Hang Out the Washing on the Siegfried Line to the delight of the crowd. He ended up leading a procession up the Mall and into Piccadilly. “In later years I wondered if I had dreamt all this”, he recalled. “Then to my delight a friend unearthed a BBC tape of a commentary by Howard Marshall in which I got a mention. Admittedly not by name, but he does say, ‘And as we return to the studio, somebody down there is playing a trumpet…’” 
VE Day

Humph had discovered jazz when aged 15 he started collecting records by Nat Gonella. But his moment of epiphany was on hearing Louis Armstrong’s Basin Street Blues. (He would go on to present a Radio 2 documentary series, Satchmo, in 1974/5). Soon after he gave up playing the mouth-organ formed his first jazz band and took up the trumpet.

His war service saw him serving with the Grenadier Guards and on demob it seemed that a career as a cartoonist rather than full-time jazzman might be on the cards. On the back of the post-war New Orleans jazz revival Humph joined George Webb’s Dixielanders for a few months but by late 1947 he’d left and together with his friend the clarinetist and fellow cartoonist Wally Fawkes he formed his own band in January 1948. They soon became regulars at the newly formed London Jazz Club with a “jazz-for-dancing policy”.

It was also in 1948 that Humphrey made his first studio broadcast for the BBC in the series Jazz Club - this had started the previous year and ran, with breaks, until 1975. Writing for the Radio Timessome 16 years later he recalled that Piccadilly studios broadcast: “It sticks in my mind because Mark White, Jazz Club’s originator and first producer, had cast me in the unlikely role of Louis Armstrong, and I had to play the scarifying introduction to Armstrong’s West End Blues. Throughout the tea break just before transmission I walked round and round Piccadilly Circus, wishing I was dead and fighting an urge to jump on the tube and flee to the furthest Stanmore or Collier’s Wood.”  (It seems even then he couldn’t resist a quick game of Mornington Crescent!)

As bandleader Humphrey would, of course, introduce the band and the songs, a task that he’d perform with wit and humour – something I was to witness many years later when I saw the band perform at the Beverley Picture Playhouse. By the late 1950s the BBC was also letting some bandleaders make their own announcements on air and Humph soon became an assured and natural broadcaster. This is an early Radio Times billing from 7 August 1958.
 


Alongside Jazz Club listeners could, in the late 50s also hear Just Jazz with Charles Melville and Steve Race, Jazz Session (1958-64) on the new Network 3 (later Third Network) as well as Ken Sykora’s Guitar Club. In the early 60s we got Jazz Today (Charles Melville again and Aleis Korner) and from 1962 Jazz Scene with Steve Race. By now the same names were coming up on these various programmes, broadcasters who would be associated with jazz on the BBC for many years and Humphrey was one such name, becoming an occasional and then regular host of Jazz Club from 1964, appearing on its short-lived successor show It’s Jazz and later alternating compering duties on TheJazz Scene with Benny Green.  In addition when, in December 1964, the Music Programme (the daytime service of the Third Programme) started to extend broadcasting hours and introduced the Saturday lunchtime Jazz Record Requests it was Humphrey who played the selection of ‘gramophone records’.



In the mid-60s there were also occasional forays into television with Jazz 625 and Jazz Goes to College, both produced by Terry Henebery who’d worked on Jazz Club for many years.



BBC Radio's jazz offerings in 1966 across all the networks.

On the launch of Radio 1 in September 1967 the old Light Programme show The Jazz Scene ended up scheduled on the new pop station. In the Radio Times Humphrey explained the changes, as well as providing something of a hard sell for British jazz radio:  

So Jazz Scene and Jazz Club henceforward go their own separate ways. As compere for both new programmes I’m aware of the apprehension in some quarters about our new Radio 1 environment. After a day of non-stop pop shall we feel like belated guests coming stone-cold sober into a roomful of whooping revellers? Jazz has admittedly grown away from pop to the extent that it is more concerned with enduring quality then fashions or trends. So Jazz Scene must present the vintage stuff as well as the newly pressed. And the great range of British jazz heard in Jazz Club will reflect the traditional as well as the trendy.

But jazz is happening now, it’s being talked about now, and it entertains and excites millions of people now. And we shall always keep this in sight. On Jazz Scene, for instance, as well as a half-hour review of new discs and the voices of leading musicians in Hear me Talkin’, we shall have Peter Clayton working as my ‘oppo’ chasing the jazz news right up to the last minute of rehearsal and ready to chip in with the latest happenings at any time during transmission.

As for Jazz Club, I can only repeat what I have said before. American artists, reared on a diet of canned, bottled and pickled radio back home, are staggered to find a place where radio broadcast means singing to real live people with a real live atmosphere, and not just talking to a man in a little box about your latest record. On Jazz Club, we don’t call on electronics to whip up an atmosphere. It’s built in – and you can’t get more trendy than that!

It was all change again in 1968 when The Jazz Scene morphed into The Best of Jazz, the programme for which Humphrey would become best known, panel games aside. Still on Radio 1 late on Sunday night it first aired on 13 October, moving over to Radio 2 in March 1970.

From late 1969 The Best of Jazz had an unusual unique existence on three BBC channels. Billed as a Radio 1 show on medium wave it also went out on Radio 2’s long wave and VHF. However, as Radio 2 still wasn’t in stereo you could hear most of it, aside from an extended news bulletin, over on Radio 3’s VHF stereo transmitters. This Sunday night arrangement continued for a couple of years. By the summer of 1973 The Best of Jazz was occupying what would be its most regular place in the schedules on a Monday evening.  

Here’s a couple of clips from The Best of Jazz from the 70s and 80s:
Best of Jazz

Meanwhile Humphrey was much in demand elsewhere, contributing to radio and TV arts programmes and starting the inevitable round of chat shows, quiz and panel show appearances that would include Sounds Familiar, Quote…Unquote and Jazz Score 
 


Programmes for the BBC World Service included
Jazz in My Life (1975)
In 1971 he got the call to pilot a new radio panel game. The idea for I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue came from Graeme Garden’s desire to have a programme that contained the essence of the fun of I’m Sorry I’ll Read That Again without the hassle of writing a script.  Garden and radio producer David Hatch needed a chairman for the new show. Hatch recalls: “The notion was we should actually go off-piste and not have the words written down, but invent it. And the equivalent to the composed piece of music was jazz.” They both thought of Humphrey. “It needed a father figure. I mean it was a bit like Ken Horne used to be on Twenty Questions, that sort of gravitas. A large figure who could hold these wild young things together.”


Writing in his diary some three years later Humph remembered that “everyone agreed that it was too self-indulgent and dreadful to get off the ground Months later a BBC ‘high-up’ heard the pilot, fell about and insisted it should go on.” Relying on the comic skills of the panel increasingly the real star of Clue was the chairman. He feigned boredom (or was it real?) and sounded if he’d rather be elsewhere. He delivered the scripted game intros with a bewildered air that belied his comedy timing. “He’s the only person I’ve ever known who could get a laugh just with silence”, claimed friend and ISIHAC panellist Barry Cryer.
ISIHAC

In October 1998 The Best of Jazz hit its 30th anniversary, here’s that show complete with a revived theme tune:


In April 2007 Humphrey decided to cut back on The Best of Jazz shows, presenting them for 12 weeks at a stretch, alternating with Jools Holland’s shows. On 17 March 2008 he bowed out with a typically under-stated show: no fanfare, no BBC send-off or mention in that week’s Radio Times. Here’s Humph’s swansong:


Just over a month later, on 25 April, Humphrey, passed away after post-operative complications.    

Humphrey Lyttelton 1921-2008

With thanks to Mrs Trellis of North Wales


Humph signed this CD cover for my late father-in-law. 
A few notes on Jazz Club

After Jazz Record Requests (still running on BBC Radio 3) and The Best of Jazz, the longest-running show was Jazz Club. It was first broadcast in the Light Programme on Saturday 15 March 1947 and billed as a “half-hour of music in the jazz idiom played by some of Britain’s leading jazz instrumentalists, coming to you from the heart of London’s West End”. The first presenter was Mark White who would later rise through the ranks of BBC management and is credited, amongst other things, as giving Terry Wogan his BBC break in 1966. Other presenters in the early years included Jack Jackson and Steve Race.  The programme’s theme, composed by Billy Munn, was Jazz Club Stomp.

The programme took a break in the early 1950s, replaced by the record show World of Jazz with presenters including Alun Morgan, Denis Preston, Rex Harris, Charles Melville and Kenneth Ashden and session performances in British Jazz with Dill Jones.

Jazz Club returned on 3 October 1957 and for this run the presenters included Dill Jones, Tony Hall, Hector Stewart, Alan Dell, George Melly, Diz Disley and Humphrey Lyttelton. It ended on 19 September 1964 only to be revived on Monday 22 March 1965 with Humphrey as the main host through until 26 December. From Sunday 2 January 1966 it becomes part of The Jazz Scene show, with the performance billed as In the Jazz Club.

With Humphrey presenting the show again becomes a stand-alone programme on Radio 1 from Wednesday 4 October 1967, later moving to Saturday nights in 1969. Major changes to all networks in April 1970 means Jazz Club is now on Radio 2, initially midweek but then swapping with The Best of Jazz to occupy a Sunday night slot post-midnight after Peter Clayton’s Jazznotes.

On 8 April 1973 Sounds of Jazz begins, this time on Radio 1, with Humph looking after the first hour as Jazz Club and Peter Clayton the second hour of jazz records. By October 1973 Humphrey no longer looks after proceedings and from 5 January 1975 when Sounds of Jazz moves to Radio 2, Jazz Club finally ends. Jazz Club sessions continued to feature as part of Sounds of Jazz which ran until 1990 and was succeeded by the nightly Jazz Parade.  Listeners to Radio Ulster can enjoy their version of Jazz Club every Sunday evening.

2Day - Journey Back to 1980

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This Friday on BBC Radio 2 sees the return of 2Day for its third year in a row. And, as is now tradition, I delve into the station’s past and feature a day’s broadcasting condensed to just a few minutes.

So its back to Saturday 8 March 1980, all in just nine minutes. That day’s schedule ran as follows:

0200 You and the Night and the Music with Geoff Bennett
0500 Tom Edwards with The Early Show
0800 David Jacobs with Star Sounds
1000 Pete Murray’s Saturday Show
1300 The News Huddlines(not included)
1330 Sport on 2 with Peter Brackley
1800 Europe 80 with Colin Berry
1900 Beat the Record with Don Davis
1930 Big Band Special with Sheila Tracy
2000 Saturday Night is Gala Night(not included)
2200 Sentimental Journey with Carl Sheppard
2300 Bob Kilbey with The Late Show

You’ll also hear the voices of Tim Gudgin, James Alexander Gordon and Vivien Stuart.

 
 
 

State Opening of Parliament

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Today’s State Opening of Parliament once again displays al the pomp and majesty in what is essentially a triumph of style over substance. The Queen’s Speech will, no doubt, have been well sign-posted in advance and is unlikely to contain any surprises.

Admittedly we can now be pretty blasé about the whole event but 55 years ago the State Opening was broadcast for the first time, on both radio and television.  The decision to cover the event was not taken lightly. During a Parliamentary debate in July of that year Prime Minister Harold MacMillan was adamant that it was not the start of regular coverage: “I should like to make it clear that the Government regard this ceremony as a State occasion, quite distinct from the day-to-day work of Parliament, and that they have no intention of proposing that facilities for the televising of those day-to-day proceedings should be allowed”.

The Government was also at pains to ensure that the public didn’t think that the Queen was sullying her hands with the dirty world of politics. The speech “is drafted by the cabinet and is a short, factual account of what the Government proposes to do during the coming session of Parliament”, wrote the BBC’s Parliamentary Correspondent Roland Fox. “The fear has often been expressed that this would not be realised by the viewing and listening millions if the speech were to be broadcast ‘live’. When the decision to allow the facilities for the first time was announced in the House of Commons, Mr Gaitskell said there was a possible danger that the sight of Her Majesty reading the speech might be misleading, and he emphasised how important it was that the Crown should not become involved in party politics”.  

That first broadcast of the Procession from Buckingham Palace and the State Opening was on Tuesday 28 October 1958. Explaining the proceedings to BBC viewers was, naturally enough for a Royal event, Richard Dimbleby. Meanwhile radio coverage on the Home Service was described by Audrey Russell from the Victoria Memorial, Wynford Vaughan-Thomas at Westminster Abbey, Raymond Baxter at the Entrance to the Palace of Westminster and David Lloyd James in the House of Lords.

That week’s Radio Times went into some detail not just about the ceremony itself but the engineering problems involved in bringing to the public, with the pictures also been fed to Independent Television.
 
As a broadcasting operation, the Opening of Parliament, for all its richness and splendour, does not compare with the Coronation in complexity and magnitude. It has its own problems, however. The engineers led by Alan Bray and his chief planner John Allport, have had to install and the test the equipment at odd moments when the Law lords were not sitting. Cameras have had to be conjured into positions where they don’t steal seating space for the distinguished gathering.
In the sound radio broadcast, the absence of music, except for fanfares, will thow a heavier load on the commentary.
Not to spoil the splendour and dignity of the Palace of Westminster, the three cameras covering the ceremony in the Upper House will be mounted inconspicuously on platforms built into doorways and galleries. Sound-proof cubicles have been set up for Richard Dimbleby and David Lloyd James, and for the Independent Television commentator.   (The ITA’s commentator was Robin Day).
Pictures are, of course, only half the story. The sound side, like television, will have its specially-built control panel in the Houses of Parliament. Charles Max-Muller, producing for sound, will have with him the veteran engineer R.H. Wood, for the past 22 years responsible for the Royal broadcasts from Sandringham on Christmas Day.
Microphones, though less eye-catching than television cameras, could still jar on the august Chamber. The engineers have tried their hands at camouflage. For instance, the tow microphones carrying the Queen’s Speech are hidden behind twin angels on either side of the Throne and gilded to match their wings.

The BBC TV coverage of the 1958 ceremony has cropped up on the BBC Parliament channel but here’s the Pathé Newsreel of the occasion.
 

Pop Over Europe

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It’s Eurovision. This year yet again the UK rolls out one of pop’s golden oldies, as the raspy-voiced power balladeer Bonnie Tyler attempts to impress voters with Believe In Me.

For many years the voice and face of Euro-pop on the BBC was Catherine Boyle – later billed as Katie Boyle of Camay ad fame and the TV Times agony aunt column Dear Katie. During the 60s and early 70s she hosted the Light Programme/Radio 2 show Pop Over Europe and was compère on four occasions at the Eurovision Song Contest.


Eurovision 1968

Here’s Katie in 1990, broadcasting just before Zagreb contest, recalling some of the past winners in 35 Years of Eurovision. This show went out on Radio 2 on 5 May 1990.   
 

Eddie Braben

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Scriptwriter Eddie Braben, who died earlier this week, is rightly lauded for his contribution to British comedy: the TV and radio scripts for Morecambe and Wise. What is often overlooked are the radio shows that Eddie both wrote and starred in during the 70s and 80s.

In 1975 there was The Worst Show on the Wirelessfollowed by The Show with Ten Legs in 1978. This in turn spawned The New Improved Show with Ten Legs in 1979 and three years later The Show with No Name (1982-84). All the shows were produced by James Casey up in Manchester for Radio 2.


This is an episode of The Show with Ten Legsthat I recorded on 28 August 1980. Starring alongside Eddie are the gormless Eli Woods, Alison Steadman (a radio regular at this time also appearing with Roy Castle and later on The News Huddlinesand Week Ending ), David Casey and David Mahlowe.


This particular broadcast was billed in the Radio Times as a repeat, though the rest of the run wasn’t. My own notes state that it was first broadcast on 15 July 1979 which actually makes it the first episode of The New Improved Show with Ten Legs, though this isn’t mentioned in the recording. If anyone can offer a definitive answer please let me know.

Eddie Braben (1930-2013)
 
You can hear Morecambe and Wise’s last ever programme for the BBC, repeated this week on Radio 4 Extra, online at this link:

Coronation Day Radio

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It was the first major television event in Britain and changed our viewing habits forever but what of the radio coverage of the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II back in the summer of 1953.


“The ceremonial pomp and pageantry of June 2 will furnish a theme for storytellers and balladmakers who are not yet born”, proclaimed the special edition of the Radio Times. “How lucky are we who will be able to tell our children’s children that we had a part in the events of the great day. Thanks to broadcasting, none of us need be denied the opportunity of sharing in them”.

The TV audience was almost double that for radio: of the adult population about 56%, or 20,400,000, peered at those small TV screens whilst 11,700,000 followed the events on the wireless.

In 1953 the BBC offered three radio services: the Home Service, the Light Programme and the Third Programme (though this only broadcast in the evenings). On Coronation Day the Home and Light joined forces from 5.30 a.m. to 5.20 p.m. Before the main event listeners were offered sequences of light music with Music While You Wait, the BBC Scottish Variety Orchestra, Victor Silvester, the Queen’s Hall Light Orchestra and Commonwealth Melodies from Peter Yorke and his Orchestra.

Covering the procession and the ceremony were a group of commentators, many of whom would continue to work for the BBC over the next couple of decades or so. At Buckingham Palace was Jean Metcalfe of Family Favourites fame. At the Victoria Memorial were Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, from Australia Talbot Duckmanton and from Trinidad William Richardson. Stationed at Trafalgar Square was Raymond (Tomorrow’s World) Baxter and at Victoria Embankment Rex Alston, best known as a cricket commentator. At Middlesex Guildhall were former wartime reporter and future BBC manager Frank Gillard alongside Tom Fleming who would go on to describe numerous state events for BBC television.  BBC commentator Henry Riddell was positioned at St James’s Palace and Alun Williams at Stanhope Gate.  Announcer David Lloyd James was at Marble Arch and cricket commentator John Arlott at Piccadilly Circus. In the Annexe to Westminster Abbey were Audrey Russell and Canadian Ted Briggs. The service itself was described by Howard Marshall and John Snagge, both of whom had also covered the Coronation of King George VI in 1937.

Following the Coronation the Home Service offered Children’s Hour with David Davis, Henry Hall’s Guest Night, the guest being ‘Our Gracie’, Gillie Potter (with tales of Hogsnorton) and The Kingdom Dances. Over on the Light more music from the Majestic Orchestra, Rhythm is Our Business and the hit comedy Take It From Here.


The Home and Light combined again at 8 p.m. for Long live the Queen narrated by actor Robert Donat with music by William Alwyn. Just before 9 p.m. Sir Winston Churchill spoke to the nation and on the hour the BBC television service joined, in sound only, for the Queen’s message.

Events on the Home Service continued at 9.15 p.m. with Coronation Day Across the World narrated by Leo Genn, John Snagge and David Lloyd James. This programme is being repeated this weekend on BBC Radio 4 Extra.  A performance of resoundingly patriotic music followed in Land of Hope and Glory, Raymond Baxter described the firework display (yes, on the radio!), Rikki Fulton introduced the Show Band Show, a programme, incidentally, produced by Johnnie (Mr Top of the Pops) Stewart. Finally, in an extended day’s broadcasting through until 1 a.m. there was Let the People Dance featuring music from the likes of Geraldo and Jimmy Shand interspersed with commentary “on the street scenes of Coronation night”.


A programme described as “a living, instantaneous sound picture of rejoicings and
celebrations with song and dance, with ceremonial drums and loyal messages,
on a scale as great as anything attempted in the history of broadcasting”.
On the Light Programme there was a performance of the Basil Hood/Edward German comic opera Merrie England  before they re-joined the Home Service.   

Meanwhile over on the Third Programme from 6 p.m. there was music from Kirsten Flagstad, Solomon Cutner, a talk by Sir Llewellyn Woodward, concerts featuring works by Handel produced by the Canadian and Australian broadcasting services and rounding off with Esme Percy and Paul Scofield in Thomas Love Peacock’s Gryll Grange.

The Coronation issue of the Radio Times, with a circulation expected to exceed 9 million copies, made mention of its own special cover with its Eric Fraser illustration. “The coloured cover we have produced has been printed in a novel way: the yellow background was printed by a gravure process on 50-incg reels each of which had to be re-wound twice and cut into four 12 ¼-inch reels before being fed into our presses; the black design was printed over the background in the course of the run”. 

Thumbing through the rest of the RT programme highlights include a new production of The Tempest with John Gielgud as Prospero; on The Forces Showalongside Ted Ray, Jimmy Jewel and Ben Warriss was Betty Driver (aka Corrie’s Betty Turpin)and a gala performance titled Light Up Again in which Brian Reece (PC 49) and Noel Johnson (Dick Barton) introduce the stars of Hi, Gang!, Waterlogged Spa, Riders of the Range, Ignorance is Bliss, Much-Binding-in-the Marshand Variety Bandbox.  And finally I wonder if As Millions Cheer ever made it to the archives? This hour-long programme was set in a newspaper office on Coronation eve and featured Eric Barker, Peter Ustinov, Alfred Marks, Roy Plomley, Pearl hackney, Maurice Denham, Stanley Unwin, Graham Startk and Herbert Mostyn (i.e. Frank Muir and Denis Norden).

This weekend there are a number of radio and TV programmes celebrating the 60thanniversary of the Coronation:

1953: Those Radio Times on Radio 4 Extra (Saturday 9 a.m. and 7 p.m.)

A Royal Gala Programme of Radio Varietyon Radio 4 Extra (Sunday 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.)

Coronation Day Across the World on Radio 4 Extra (Sunday 8 p.m.)

The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II a complete re-run of the TV coverage on BBC Parliament (Sunday from 10.10 a.m.)

Coronation Year in Colour on ITV1 (Sunday 5.30 p.m.)

Barton Returns

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They just can’t keep a good man down! Dick Barton returns for his latest ‘live’ adventure this weekend.

This information comes to me courtesy of Charles Norton:

There's a new production of Dick Barton - Special Agent being recorded in Leicester. Tim Bentinck (David Archer in The Archers) is going to be the new Dick Barton. Terry Molloy (Mike Tucker in The Archers and Davros in Doctor Who) is his right-hand man, Snowy White and other cast-members include Lisa Bowerman, Barnaby Edwards, David Benson and Nick Scovell.

On Sunday 16th June, they'll all be assembling at the Y Theatre in Leicester to recreate an 'as live' radio recording session, as it would have been back at BBC Maida Vale Studios in early 1951.

The new recording is being made for BBC Audiobooks/AudioGO and will be released later in the year. However, before that, we've got around 300 tickets to sell to the recording itself. The entire show is to be performed with a studio audience.

The audience will get to come to the theatre on the night of the recording and see the whole programme recorded live. We're using period ribbon microphones and recording equipment and copies of the scripts from an original 1951 Dick Barton serial. We'll be recreating it on the stage, all as close to how it would have been first time round, as is practically possible. Spot effects will also be created live and the music will be played in as we go. If anyone would like to pop along to a 1950s BBC radio drama recording, this is their chance.


More on Dick Barton here:
Still a Special Agent
Barton, Temple, PC49 and The Man in Black

The Viking Invasion – Part 6 – More Gold and the Big Easy

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Changes in ownership and changes in branding, something that is now the norm in the industry, started to happen in the late 80s: the transition from “independent” to “commercial” radio.  

On 1 November 1988 Viking Gold had launched but by 1 May 1989 it was now Classic Gold and networked to Hull, Bradford and Sheffield.  A year later it was snapped up by the expanding Metro Radio Group and was soon re-titled Great Yorkshire Radio (to complement their Great North Radio in Newcastle). A decline in audiences and the realisation that the Gold name and format was perhaps, erm, “radio gold”, it became Great Yorkshire Gold in 1994. (Does anyone know the exact date?). 
Classic Gold promo
GYG jingles

From a 1995 Gold publicity leaflet, at a time when Steven Parkinson was the Programme Controller, the DJ line-up at Great Yorkshire Gold was:
 


John Foster – these days broadcasting daily on BBC Tees
Mark Jones – formerly “Mark Joenz” of Radio City and still working in radio in the North-West
Steve Colman – latterly with Magic 1152 in the North-East
Chris Straw – ex-Radio Sheffield but other than that nothing known though I have found this clip from 1996:
Chris Straw
Gerry Kersey – still broadcasting every Sunday afternoon on BBC Radio Sheffield
Ann Hodgson – ??
Peter Hetherington – is or was serving time in prison
Peter Fairhead – mentioned in the last Viking post
John Harding – who went into radio management and currently works for Bauer Media


 
This undated schedule also shows an old favourite on the air, Tim Jibson with his Goldmine Gold Show, Steve Fountain (latterly Head of Radio at the KM Group) and the networked, ahem, Savile’s Travels.

Here’s two Great Yorkshire Gold airchecks. Firstly from 16 August 1996 Peter Fairhead sitting in for Al Dupres. You’ll notice those classic JAM jingles familiar to Radio 1 listeners in the 70s complete with  “Beep Beep Yeah Travel News”.
Peter Fairhead

By the time of this Al Dupres show on Monday 10 February 1997 the station’s days were numbered prior to the Magic makeover.
Al Dupres
The Metro group had been bought out by media group EMAP in August 1995 and they started to roll out their Magic branding. On 12 February 1997 Great Yorkshire Gold was replaced by Magic 1161 using what it called “The Big Easy” format. With a mix of oldies and contemporary hits with long sweeps of music that seemed to consist of Phil Collins and Celine Dion, or that may be just my memory of it!

The launch was live from Cave Castle in South Cave. In charge of proceedings was Nick Wright - still doing his thing daily on the Magic network. Nick’s first guest, on the phone from Geneva, was Phil Collins (talking for far too long before we get into the first record, Two Hearts so I’ve edited this bit but listen out for the mystery voice asking “you are there, aren’t you?”).
Nick Wright

In the next and final post what’s going on over on FM.

Around the Coast

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It’s forty years ago today that the first Radio 1 Roadshow trundled off round the coast of Britain, offering a chance to see your favourite DJs and bands you may just have heard of. And for radio anoraks like me an opportunity to poke around the back of the trucks and see how the show was put on-air.

Here’s part of a show from Skegness in the summer of 1990 with DJ Phillip Schofield recovering from the Noel Edmonds Gotcha escapades in Cleethorpes the previous day. As usual with these events one suspects the crowd in Skeggy got more enjoyment out of it than the radio audience.


This is the Gotcha footage.


Simon Bates and Kid Jensen with the new Roadshow truck in 1983.

The Viking Invasion – Part 7 – Viking FM

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To conclude this series of posts on Viking Radio here are a few random bits of publicity some audio memories from the late 90s and early 00s.

From the mid 90s some team publicity shots with the DJs posing in their Petroleum clothing.
 



The breakfast star from late 1993 was king of the wind-ups Simon Logan. Readers of a Viking FM publicity leaflet were told that Simon is “out of bed at 4.30 each morning to feed his cat Mostyn”. 




This is part of Simon’s last show at Viking FM (before his move to Radio Aire) on 19 December 1997. Simon currently broadcasts daily on BBC Radio Newcastle.


A selection of publicity cards (and some of the blurb from the back) from the late 90s:

Sam Heywood
Her birthday is 18 February. Sam’s favourite bands are Alanis Morissette and Sash and she thinks the sexiest person is Matthew Perry – Chandler from Friends. (After 13 years at Viking Sam is now on KCFM as Programme Manager).

David Johnson
Born 23 January. His favourite TV shows are TOTP, Friends and The Clothes Show and his favourite movie is The Italian Job. (At the time I think David was doing drivetime. He went on to work at Century FM and Key 103)

Scott Makin
Birthday on 13 May. His favourite experience at Viking was meeting Melinda Messenger and getting a kiss. (Scott was later at Century FM, Real Radio and now at Hallam FM)

Joel Ross
His birthday is 31 May. His favourite band is The Spice Girls and his favourite TV show is Prisoner Cell Block H. (Joel along with JK teamed up for the Viking breakfast show. Their subsequent career on radio and TV is well documented).

Jason King
Born on 6 January. Thinks the sexiest person is Claire Goose. Loves to eat curry, pizza and boiled egg and soldiers. His favourite experience at the station was doing the “full monty” in front of 2000 women.

When JK and Joel left Viking it was Simon Hirst that took over the breakfast slot. From Aircheckdownloads.com here’s Hirsty in June 2002.

From 2000 Viking’s new logo using EMAP’s ‘Big City’ branding.




Another clip from Aircheckdownloads.com, this time Steve Jordan who returned to Viking last year having originally been on air at the station between 1995 and 1999.

Radio Lives - Benny Green

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His epitaph could well have been devoted to the “blind saxophone player” when, on the late 50s TV sensation Oh Boy, he was in the line-up of Lord Rockingham’s Eleven playing slightly out of tune on the hit Hoots Mon.  Fortunately polymath Benny Green would become far better known as a broadcaster and writer with interests in music, theatre, cinema, literature and cricket. In fact those dark sunglasses had been an attempt to avoid being recognised in “this appalling travesty of a band” but it didn’t stop the fan mail pouring in at the time.

Despite being most people’s idea of a Cockney, Benny was born in his mother’s home town of Leeds in December 1927 to Dave (“a strolling player”) and Fanny. Though married in London they had met the year before when his saxophone-playing father had been touring Northern England.

Young Bernard developed an early interest in music and writing from his father, of whom he would later recall: “He taught me to play and presented me with two saxophones and a clarinet when I was thirteen”.  Dave also had unfulfilled ambitions to write short stories that he hoped to sell to one of the London evening papers.  “He impressed upon me almost without realising it the special, almost mystical nature of the act of picking up a pen and a sheet of paper.”

Following demob in 1947 Benny plied his trade as a touring professional sax player working the rounds at Jewish weddings, tea-dances, holiday camps and with a variety outfits led by Anton Burns, Sonny Landau, Roy Fox, Lew Stone, Bertie King, Kenny Baker, Tito Burns, Geoff Love and Ralph Sharon.

Life changed in two respects in 1952 when he joined Ronnie Scott’s band – he would become life-long friends with Scott – and he wrote the first of his regular columns for the New Musical Express. Eventually his interest in writing about jazz rather than playing it led to him becoming jazz correspondent of the Observer in 1958.

By the early 1960s Benny was now well-known as a broadcaster and writer. His first radio broadcast had been in 1955, though as musician rather than as host. However, the BBC were looking for musicians who could present a growing number of jazz programmes with authority and interest, Benny was one of them, alongside the likes of Humphrey Lyttelton, George Melly, Steve Race and Ken Sykora. As early as 1961 he was an occasional host on Network Three’s Jazz Session and in 1964 a regular on the Light Programme with The Jazz Scene and It’s Jazz. Later he was a contributor to Jazz on One in the early days of Radio 1 when its fare extended beyond pop.

1964 also saw the start of his regular TV work as either presenter or scriptwriter with Rediffusion’s thrice-weekly Three After Six, billed as “a personal comment on what’s going on”. A TV Times article in November 1964 told readers that “In theory it sounds easy - just assemble three intelligent people who take an interest in what’s going on in the world, sit them in front of the cameras and let them chat to each other for 20 minutes. No scripts to be written and learned, no elaborate rehearsals.

The trio have to like each other enough to enjoy discussion, yet have such different personalities that they are constantly disagreeing. It’s generally agreed that the current team of Dee Wells, Alan Brien and Benny Green disagree with rare pungency and wit”.

A couple of years he was the host of a late-night chat show, again for Rediffusion three nights a week, Late Show London.  Writing in The Spectator Stuart Hood described it as “probably the worst programme to go on the telly in living memory”. How fair this was I don’t know, to my knowledge recordings of the series, which went out live, don’t exist. But at least some viewers approved:“There could be no better choice of host than Benny Green who treats his guests in just the right way” wrote a Mrs Gleneen Proudman.


Alongside his jazz broadcasting on both TV (Jazz at the Maltings, Commonwealth Jazz Club) and radio he was also a literary critic for The Spectator and provided film review for Punch. In 1975 he scripted two programmes for Radio 2 that reflected his different interests. From the world of music came a 13-part tribute in The Fred Astaire Story with David Niven recording the narration. One of Green’s literary heroes was P.G. Wodehouse and in Wodehouse on Broadway, presented by Ian Carmichael, he wrote about his time as lyricist and librettist in musical theatre.

In 1976 Radio 2 broadcast two major series written by Green: first was the 26-part celebration of “outstanding producers of entertainment in the USA this century”, The American Showmennarrated by Michael Craig. Secondly, his love of the cinema, and especially the movie musicals led to him research and interview most of the main protagonists for the 28-part Hooray for Hollywood. Narrated by Douglas Fairbanks Junior it traced the development of the genre from the 1930s Busby Berkley extravaganzas until they went out of fashion in the late 60s. Here’s the final episode Full Circle, first transmitted on 19 December 1976 and here repeated on 6 January 1981.


Benny’s radio repertoire was still expanding. On Radio 4 he appeared on the Robert Robinson hosted talking shop Stop the Week and here on Start the Weekin July 1980 he got to interview one of his idols Ella Fitzgerald. 


In 1978 he had a six month stint on Radio 2’s Album Time (he’d go on to present a similar series on the BBC’s World Service). The following year there was a major series on the great American songwriters Green On…, each week focusing on the likes of Kern, Porter or Gershwin. Benny then took over a Sunday morning show for a few months (September 1979 to January 1980) for what was, in effect, a dry run for his most famous series. In 1980 he co-wrote a series on the career of Stanley Holloway, Wiv a Little Bit o’ Luck and on 30 March kicked off his Sunday afternoon shows that would become unofficially be known as The Art of the Songwriter.
 

Radio Times illustration for Green on ...
19 September 1979

Those Sunday afternoon shows initially replaced Sounds Easy but eventually both ran in tandem throughout the 1980s and until 1994 when David Jacobs took over from an ailing Alan Dell.  They became essential listening for anyone who enjoyed popular music presented by guys who knew their stuff and had often worked with or met the artists whose discs they played. In his biography of his father Dominic Green wrote:

“He was to carry on working for the Beeb right up to the end; in his bag when we took him to hospital for the last time was a script for the next Sunday’s Art of the Songwriter show. When in an act of Eighties philistinism, a new station controller attempted to displace him for his Radio 2 slot, his two million listeners were outraged, there were complaints in the press, and a protest march up Regent Street. Chastened, the controller renewed Benny’s contract, and the show continued. Taken collectively, his Sunday show is perhaps the largest single collection of history, anecdote and analysis of the popular song. For reasons so asinine that they are best left unexamined, the BBC did not have a policy of keeping archive copies of the shows. When we decided to collect them together and present copies to the National Sound Archive for the study and pleasure of future generations, we had to obtain cassettes from fans who had illegally taped the show every week”.

A number of the shows were unearthed as part of last year’s Listeners’ Archive project. Here’s my own contribution with an early example from 14 December 1980.


Green’s jazz roots were not forgotten, however, as he also chaired Jazz Score (1981-1997). Ostensibly a music quiz it effectively allowed a load of jazzers to reminisce and entertain the audience with their anecdotes.  I’ll post an edition of Jazz Score at some future date.  In 1990 Benny was part of the launch line-up for London’s Jazz FM with a Tuesday night series on songs and songwriters. 

Benny’s last Radio 2 Sunday show was in June 1998, they were usually recorded in pairs on Friday, and he died a little over a week later. Those programmes are remembered on Radio 2 tonight in Green on Greenwhen his son Leo recalls Benny’s career and favourite music. Next week Leo will re-create that last un-broadcast show based on that script that was in Benny’s bag.

Benny Green 1927-1998
That’s Entertainment!

The Collection Closes

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There are just three broadcasters whose careers started in the 1940s that are still on-air today. All three started off in forces broadcasting. All three did a bit of acting, worked on the Light Programme and Radio Luxembourg and appeared regularly on our TV screens in the 1960s. This broadcasting triumvirate can all be heard on BBC Radio 2. They are David Jacobs, Brian Matthew and Desmond Carrington.   Sadly David is hanging up his headphones (as the old DJ cliché goes) and presents his final show (the occasional special, health permitting, apart) this evening after nearly 70 years with the Corporation. For those, such as myself, who have been regular listeners it is a sad day.



With David’s retirement we lose yet another link with the past. When he plays a record by Frank Sinatra, he actually met him. Lena Horne, Alma Cogan, Bing Crosby, he’s worked with them too. That breadth of knowledge and the personal anecdotes are, quite simply, irreplaceable.

The final show in the David Jacobs Collection airs this evening at 11 p.m. But, if you can’t wait, here’s an edition I recorded on 8 May 2005.

I also urge you to listen to Desmond Carrington’s Friday night show as he played, in full, a show from May 1986 in which he and David reminisced about their broadcasting careers and their favourite music.

Cover Story

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For many years the Radio Times was rightly lauded for its cover art. I’m thinking in particular of the work of Victor Reinganum, Eric Fraser, Peter Brooks and Mick Brownfield. These, and many more, are celebrated at the Museum of London’s exhibition for Radio Times at 90 running until 3 November 2013.

These days its mainly photographic covers, commissioned artwork only make an appearance at Christmastime.  One of my own favourites, for the Easter issue, is this self-referential 1980 cover from Chuck Jones.
 
 
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