BRISTOL PIRATE RADIO RECORDINGS

This blog is intended for me to post my pirate radio recordings. Most of the recordings are from Bristol, most will be pirate but there will be some legal stations and stations from other cities or national stations.

IF YOU OR YOUR FRIENDS HAVE ANY TAPE RECORDINGS OF PIRATE RADIO FROM BRISTOL, PLEASE SUBMIT THEM TO THIS BLOG BY RECORDING THEM TO MP3 (CLICK HERE FOR A HELP GUIDE) AND UPLOADING THEM TO http://www.sharebee.com, or a similar site such as Megaupload, Mediafire, ZShare, but not Rapidshare as it's getting a bit hard to use. SEND THE URL IT GIVES YOU TO ME VIA A COMMENT ON MY LATEST POST or BY EMAIL AT bristolpirates at gmail.com (you'll have to correct that with the proper @ symbol, I started getting spam on the address). WE COULD ALSO ARRANGE A PICK-UP OF YOUR TAPES IF YOU LIVE IN BRISTOL AND CAN'T CONVERT TAPES TO MP3. THANKS IN ADVANCE, YOU WILL BE CREDITED.

Showing posts with label 1992. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1992. Show all posts

Monday, 3 March 2014

Fem FM @ M-Shed, Saturday 8th March - 3 til 5pm



In 1992, over 200 women made history in Bristol by setting up the UK's first women's radio station - Fem FM. Bristol Record Office has digitised the original broadcast tapes, now available for research as part of the Fem FM archive of recordings, photographs and other material.
On International Women's Day, M Shed will mark the launch of the archive by hosting a panel discussion about women's achievements in radio over the past two decades. Is the climate better for women broadcasters in 2014?
The event is open to anyone interested in the media and how to get more women's voices on air. Guest panellists (all originally involved in Fem FM) will include:
  • Sue Clark, Sony award-winning radio producer
  • DJ Ritu, DJ and world music guru who has broadcast with BBC London and the World Service
  • Ali Grant, chair of Bristol community station BCFM
  • Jacqui Wilson, manager of the internet station Passion Radio Bristol
  • Erin Riley, Senior BBC Producer
Chair: Caroline Mitchell, Senior Lecturer in Radio at the University of Sunderland and one of the founders of Fem FM.
Free admission. Please reserve your place by emailing bro@bristol.gov.uk or phoning 0117 922 4224 (Tuesday to Friday, 9.30am to 4.30pm)

Listen online: audio documentary about Fem FM



Here is something that may not be in the archive, a recording of their test broadcasts..






And here's a 20 min clip from Lady G.






Sunday, 2 March 2014

Sub Love sets from Galaxy Radio 1992 / 1993

I've now uploaded all the Sub Love sets I have from early 90s Galaxy Radio, which was on 97.2 FM taken over from FTP and not yet 101 FM.

Here is the link for the whole playlist...

http://www.mixcloud.com/bristolpirates/playlists/galaxy-radio-sub-love-sets/

Unfortunately, Mixcloud don't do a player for playlists. Here is one of my favorite sets though...






Tuesday, 17 February 2009

Fem FM 101 - RSL March 1992

(LINK DEAD)


Fem FM was an all-female RSL station which was on air (properly) from 8th-15th March 1992. It started a week or two before with test transmissions. This recording is mostly of those tests, the music was pretty good (house, hip hop, soul, funk etc..), but there is also a 20 clip from one of the shows, by SPEC Radio's Lady G. The rest of that show included Sarah D and Crystal Tips.

A book called "Women and Media" provides a case study on Fem FM...

Fem FM was the first women's station to broadcast in the UK. It lasted 8 days in March 1992, but it's development work with over 200 women went on for a year and its impact lasted far longer, providing a role model for subsequent stations across the UK.

Fem FM was based in Bristol, a multicultural city in the south-west of England with a vibrant arts and cultural scene as well as an active community and voluntary sector. Women who had a background in community, youth and women's radio set up the station. They organised a steering group of about a dozen women, "head hunted" for their skills, experience and expertise in radio, music, technical matters, fundraising, training, community development, working with volunteers, publicity and marketing. This group set about recruiting and training volunteers to carry out both the background work to setting up a station from scratch (including choosing a name, devising a jingle package, fundraising and finding broadcasting and training premises) and devising and producing programming for the eight days on the air. The station was run completely on voluntary labor and the women raised over £20,000 from sources including the Gulbenkian Foundation. The station as a whole was sponsered by an airline, which was keen to promote the fact it had an all-female flight crew!

The aims of Fem FM were:

- to create a radio station with a distinct and different sound from a woman's point of view, representing the rich diversity of women's culture;

- to include coverage of events and celebrations for international Women's Day and Festival Fortnight in Bristol;

- to encourage women from different generations and backgrounds to debate issues of importance to them;

- to provide a service produced and presented by a mix of experienced and first-time broadcasters and to offer guest slots to prominent female broadcasters to promote the station;

- to provide a variety of training opportunities to first-time broadcasters to develop their radio and communication skills and to have access to airtime.

The broadcasts contained a mix of live and pre-recorded programs with a 60:40 music:speech content mix. Producers wanted the station to sound professional - it was important to them that as a representation of women's achievement in radio Fem FM did not sound amateurish or boring, a criticism often leveled at community stations. This had to be balanced with giving first-time broadcasters an opportunity to get real, live experience and to make a few mistakes in a supportive atmosphere. Women at Fem FM were keen to scotch the myth that they didn't want to apply for presentation work in radio.

The programme schedule included a variety of speech and special interest programs, including a program in three Asian languages, a daily youth programme presented by young women, and a daily Men's Hour, and broadcasts were very well received. On Fem FM there were no specialist programmes for lesbians, although gay women were presenters and producers of programmes across the schedule. The feedback from listeners was extremely positive, with women appreciating the way that the station addressed it's listeners, female and male:

"Thanks for getting it together redressing the balance on the airwaves... the presenters are human and relaxing not trying to be cool and slick. If this is a women's touch, I like it... To all the wonderful dedicated women at Fem FM, thanks for the brilliant, exciting, interesting, fresh, riveting, powerful, stimulating, happy, strong, electric eight days of women's radio. Bristol should be proud... Sounds fab, I haven't heard such good music for a long time.. It's destroyed my tolerance for Radio 4: men talking to men... Brilliant, it just makes me realise what's missing off the rest of the radio... It's so wonderful and so good that I just have to tell you I am looking forward to it ending so I can get out of the house!" (Listeners cited in Mitchell and Caverly)

Tuesday, 2 December 2008

Electro Magnetic Installation

One old pirate I used to listen to from mid 91 to 1992 was EMI (Electro Magnetic Installation)...

http://www.irational.org/heath/electro_magnetic_installation/

It wasn't until just a moment ago when hunting down material for this blog, that I stumbled upon it's web-page on the irational.org site, linked above and learned of it's true name. I've only ever heard it referred to it as 'Demystified Radio' before, as the nature of the station was to never announce itself properly, to confuse the listener (maybe) but also to invite the listener to make their own audio art, to tape discussions or simply send in their home-made mix tapes. The station may well have had strong links with SYT, surfacing as it did on the same day that SYT made a return to the airwaves in 1991, after SYT had been off the air since mid 1989.

I have only one recording of the station and currently it is in my loft gathering dust. I will make an effort to retrieve it though.