All
recordings below are Kenny
Everett shows on Capital
Radio |
November 1973
Kenny & Cash at 1140. Date?
November 1973
Kenny & Cash at 12. Date?
Monday, April 1, 1974
Kenny & Cash. Big L spoof. Mono.
Tuesday, October 8, 1974
KE Breakf. Show 0755-0825. Mono.
Friday, March 21, 1975
KE Breakf. Show 0745-0830. Mono.
Monday, May 1, 1975
KE Breakf. Show, 0715-0800. Mono.
Monday, May 5, 1975
KE Breakf. Show 0715-0800. Mono.
Capital Radio, June 28, 1975
KE Breakfast Show. 8 min. Stereo.
Sunday, Aug 24, 1975
KE Show, at 1415-1445. Mono.
Sunday, Oct 4, 1975
KE Show, at 1300-1330. Mono.
Sunday, Nov 23, 1975
KE Show, at 1400-1430. Mono.
Saturday, Jan 24, 1976
KE Show, at 1230-1330. Mono.
Saturday, March 19, 1977
The KE Show. Mono.
Saturday, Aug 13, 1977
KE Show 1300-1400. Special
Feature: ten years since the MOA
Saturday, Aug 13, 1977
Second part of the above,
Saturday, Nov 12, 1977
The KE Show. Mono.
Saturday, June 9, 1978
The KE Show. Stereo.
Unknown date 1978
Jonathan King chatting with KE.
Saturday, Aug 26, 1978
The KE Show. Stereo.
Saturday, Feb 17, 1979
The KE Show. Stereo.
Saturday, March 31, 1979
The KE Show. mono.
Saturday, June 16, 1979
The KE Show. Stereo
Saturday, Aug 11, 1979
The KE Show. Stereo
Saturday, June 14, 1980
The KE Show. Stereo
Saturday, June 21, 1980
The KE Show. Stereo
Saturday, Sept 27, 1980
The KE Show. Stereo.
Saturday, June 9, 1984
The KE Show. Stereo.
Saturday, March 26, 1988
The KE Show. Stereo.
Capital Gold, Dec. 25, 2004
Celebrating what could have been
Kenny Everett's 60th Birthday.
Captain Kremmen. episodes
from the radio version of this space comedy series
are 25 more episodes

Capital
Radio All Time
Top 100.
Kenny Everett & Roger Scott on New Years
Day 1976
at 0900-1000 countdwn 100-88
at 1000-1100 countdown 87-73
at 1100-1200 countdown 72-59
at 1200-1300 countdown 58-47
at 1300-1400 countdown 46-33
at 1400-1500 countdown 32-21
at 1500-1600 countdown 20-9
at 1600-1650 countdown 8-1

Kenny
Everett on other stations than Capital Radio
R London, Jun 17, 1965
2035-2050
R London, July 7, 1965
1741-1827
A recording divided in two parts:
R London, July 29, 1966
0702-0800
R London, July 29, 1966
0800-0828
BBC Radio 1, June 9, 1968
1000-1200
R Lxmbg, Apr 21, 1969
29 min.
BBC Radio 1, Sept 13, 1969
63 min.
R Lxmbg, Sept 18, 1970
26 min.
R Lxmbg, Oct 9, 1970
16 min.
R Lxmbg, Oct 18, 1970
18 min.
R Lxmbg, Dec 25, 1970
24 min.
R Victory, Jan (?), 1976
43 min.
R Victory, Aug 20, 1976
51 min.
R Victory, Nov 18, 1976
50 min.
Everett's R Victory jingles
BBC Radio 2 Oct 3 1981,
his 1st on R2.
BBC Radio 2, Oct 10, 1981
2nd on R2.
BBC Radio 2, Nov 7, 1981
BBC Radio 2, Nov 14, 1981
BBC Radio 2, June 19, 1982
BBC Radio 2, sept 4, 1982
BBC Radio 2, Oct 9, 1982
Kenny Everett at the
Beeb:
BBC Radio 4 - when? part
1:4
BBC Radio 4 - when? part
2:4
BBC Radio 4 - when? part
3:4
BBC Radio 4 - when? part
4:4
BBC Radio 4, Nov 22, 2008
"Here's
Kenny" - a tribute to Kenny Everett.
Music journalist Mark Paytress reassesses the
pioneering deejay and comedian Kenny Everett
and his place in broadcasting history.
BBC Radio 2, Xmas Day 2010
A "new"
Kenny Everett Show, 15 years after the death
of Kenny Everett. By Paul Gambaccini.
|
| |

Capital Radio, 1974
Eugene Fraser. A tribute to Cass Elliott.
Capital Radio, 1974
Roger Scott interviewing The Carpenters
Capital Radio, Feb 6, 1975
Tony Myatt, The Late Show, Capital Countdown thursday
2225-2255
Capital Radio, Feb 20, 1975
Roger Scott's Peoples Choice at 16.45
Capital Radio Oct 7, 1975
Graham Dene Breakfast Show at 7.20
Capital Radio Oct 10, 1975
Graham Dene Breakfast Show at 8.35
Capital Radio/IRN, Aug 16, 1977
The 11p.m. news "Elvis Presley is dead"
Capital Radio Nov 15, 1977
Graham Dene Breakfast Show at 8.07.
Capital Radio, Aug. 10, 1988
Richard Skinner.
Capital Gold, May 14, 2003
Tony Blackburn show at 8.30 PM.
Capital Radio jingle mania
Loads of Capital Radio (and a few other stations)
jingles in a mixture made by Thomas Bergstam and me.
For all us extreme jingle fans. |
| |
|
|
Recordings of Radio
Luxembourg's British
service on 208 meters |
Radio Lxmbg 1963
Radio Lxmbg 208 (year?)
about Del Shannon
Radio Lxmbg, June 11, 1966
The Decca Records Show. Jack Jackson.
Radio Lxmbg, Dec 24, 1966
Jimmy Saville X-mas Show
Radio Lxmbg, October 19, 1968
Fragments of shows: Paul Burnett; Roger Day; Noel
Edmunds; Tony Windsor
Radio Lxmbg 208 (year)
Tony Prince, Simon Dee and Mark Wesley sharing their
memories of Radio Caroline
Radio Lxmbg, Oct 31, 1974
At 21.30: This Is How It All Began. The story behind
the English service of Radio Luxembourg.
Radio Lxmbg, Oct 31, 1974
At 23.45: The Peter Powell Show.
Radio Lxmbg, April 18, 1976
At 19.15: The Chris Carey Show.
Radio Lxmbg, Aug 16, 1977
At 11 p.m. confirms that "Elvis Presley is
dead" and Tony Prince rapidly changes his program
for the rest of the night into a 5-hour memorial
program. This recording covers the first hour.
Radio Lxmbg, Oct 6, 1982
Barry Aldis at 11 PM. 3 hrs
Radio Lxmbg, Jan 8, 1989
At 22.00 Mike Hollis. 23 min.
Radio Lxmbg, Jan 8, 1989
At 02.00 David Lee Stone. 46 min.
Radio Lxmbg, Jan 8, 1989
At 03.45 David Lee Stone. 22 min.
A Radio Lxmbg, Ducumentary
Noel Edmunds "The Story of Radio Luxembourg"
|
| |
|
|
Radio Caroline recordings |
Caroline North (when?)
Mike Marriott, The Late Late Show
Caroline, Oct/Nov 1966
Carl Conway talks to Paul Anka followed by Dave
Lee Travis, who greets Mr Anka by playing the
oldie "Diana".
Caroline, Easter Sunday 1966
April 10, 1966, the 2:nd anniversary for Radio
Caroline. Graham Webb and his even more festivity
mooded mates celebrating on the 1966 Easter Sunday
morning. The MV Mi Amigo had gone aground in January
1966, so this transmission was made from the former
Swedish offshore radio ship Cheeta 2, owned by
Radio Syd. It was used by Radio Caroline as their
ship from February till May 1966. This was received
and recorded in the Stockholm area.

Graham Webb - Caroline South studio
Caroline North, May 22, 1966
Tony Prince at 01.10 until 199 closes down. 52
minutes.
<part 1 - -
<part 2
Radio Caroline
recorded at nighttime in Stockholm Sweden in the
summer of 1967. It's the best I've ever
heard of Radio Caroline. Also I find the deejay
Ian Mack fabulous. The recording
was made by a friend of mine who used a regular
table-top Philips radio and a Tandberg model 62
reel-to-reel tape recorder.
Radio Caroline, February 23, 1980
Stevie Gordon, recorded in Stockholm-Sweden at
00.55
Radio Caroline, March 15, 1980
Tom Hardy's, The Personal Top 30, Saturday at
20.00. "Tonight's number is 36 - also
as yesterday"

MV
Mi Amigo aground at Frinton- on-
Sea after the storm, January 20, 1966

|
| |
|

On-air studio at Radio Victory 1976 |
Radio Victory, June 22, 1976
Eugene Fraser and Dave Symonds. |
| |
Dit is Radio Mi Amigo
|
Radio London May 2, 1966
Mark Roman. |
Radio Jackie, Aug 14, 1977
Memories from the British offshore radio era. Phil
Hazleton. |
|
The
Story of Pop Radio
A six parts documentary series
produced in 1983 by Noel
Edmunds for the BBC Radio 1
|
|
| |
| |
|
| |
|
Downtown Radio 20 yrs Jubilee,
March 16, 1996 - the first independent local radio
station in N. Ireland (Belfast). |
Portugal
abandons DAB radio Read
more
|
50
years since Dan Ingram made WABC an AM radio icon
"I filled in for two days for Chuck Dun away,"
says Ingram. "I remember being not too sure
of myself, so I thought, 'The heck with it, I'll
just have some fun.'
Howard Hoffman says:
"In my ridiculously short time doing evenings
at WABC, I was constantly humbled by all that
surrounded and preceded me. Dan's the reason most
of us got into radio and Dan's the reason why
I stayed in radio. When he got moved to mornings
and I got moved to all-night, he had me stick
around every morning during his first hour so
he could shake off the drowsiness. When they finally
pulled the trigger on my tenure, Dan took me aside
for an hour and gave me the best pep talk I ever
got in my 40 years in this business. Most of all,
Dan made the world's biggest city laugh out loud
every afternoon for over 20 years. With all due
respect, no one who occupied the WABC afternoon
seat since Dan's reign - music or talk - has had
the ability to accomplish that. I love this man."
Read
more 
WABC, New York, springtime 1965
American Top 40 radio with PAMS jingles and the
unrivaled legend Dan Ingram. |
 |
STICK
IVÄG JACK
"Hit the road Jack" |
| The
thrilling story about Radio Nord, its founder Jack
Kotschack and a very different Sweden. |
Richly
illustrated with loads of never before published pictures.
The book comes with a unique DVD including a documentary
film about Radio Nord which was shown as an opening
film at the Swedish cinemas in autumn 1961. |
Out
now $55.00 Read more
|
Media
Network
was
a programme on Radio Nederland, broadcast
through the years 1981-2000. It was narrated and presented
by Jonathan Marks, and he often had interesting reports
about offshore radio, as for instance this from August
1985 :
Radio Caroline
|
Sweden
Calling DXers was a programme
on Radio Sweden International. During
the British offshore radio era, SCDXers used to give
detailed reports on the developments on this radio
scene. ’s
an outdraw of these reports through the years 1964-70. |
|
are slides from
Thomas Schulin's trip
to the "MV Mi Amigo"
in August 1979. |
|
KLIF, Dallas, January 4, 1961
The Ken Lock show. |
KLIF, Dallas, 1962
Russ "Weird Beard" Knight show. |
KLIF, Dallas, March 3, 1962
The Murphy & Harrigan Show. Tom Murphy and "Irving
Harrigan" (Ron Chapman). 8:00 - 9:00 a.m. |
KLIF, Dallas 1962 jingles |
WOR-FM, Barry Farber in 1963
An interview with Radio Nord's Jack Kotschack.
|
WMCA-New York in 1963
B. Mitchell Reed.
|
|
| Three
recordings with unknown dates:
WABC, New York Dan Ingram, 1967
WABC, New York Dan Ingram; 1967
WABC, New York Dan Ingram; 1967 |
WABC, New York 1968 studio quality
A linear recording (no dynamic compression) made
on an Ampex 300 studio tape recorder. DJ Chuck Leonard.
July 31, 1968.
|
scanning the dial in NYC, July 1, 1969
Starting on WABC, AM 770 kHz. |
WABC, New York, April 1, 1972
Dan Ingram. |
K100 (KIQQ) in 1974
Beaver Cleaver (Ken Levine). |
KFRC-AM610 Sept 28, 1978
Dr. Don Rose (Donald Rosenberg) - four times he made
KFRC voted as Billboard's "Station of the Year"
and he was personally named "Disc Jockey of the
Year". Further reading
|
KFRC-AM610 May 30, 1980
Another recording of the legend Dr. Don
Rose. |
KFRC-AM610 STEREO May 14, 1986
A recording of AM stereo using the
Motorola C-QUAM system. On the subject of AM stereo,
read more 
|
American Top 40, August 24, 1974
Casey Kasem's own
production of "American Top 40". Not complete
recording.
|
KROQ FM, March 1984 - "The
Swedish Egil" (Egil Aalvik ) |
American Top 40, Feb 28, 1987
Casey Kasem's American
Top 40 in a complete 4 hours 14 minutes recording.
In
1970, Casey Kasem introduced the radio show American
Top 40 (AT40). It was a syndicated broadcast
distributed to radio stations in the United States,
Canada, Australia, Philippines, China, India, Great
Britain, Malaysia and many other places around the
globe. As the name suggests the program had a countdown
playing the fourty most popular songs in the U.S.
according to the Billboard's Hot 100 Singles Chart.
The most important with Casey Kasem as a deejay
was his anecdotes about the artists and songs that
were played. Behind him he had an editorial with,
in its peak, a total of 8 employees.
From its inception in 1970 the duration of the show
was 3 hours. In the late 1970’s the program
was prolonged up to 4 hours to reflect the longer
playing time of the music of those days.
Billboard's Hot 100 was concidered the given industry
standard for specifying the most popular songs for
AT40 through the first years. In the second half
of the seventies the hit music was so changed, resulting
in an increasing specialization in formats on the
radio stations. Dissatisfaction grew between the
radio stations when AT40 continued to reflect the
many different styles and formats on the hot 100
list. Later, this lead to the result that the Hot
100 chart was replaced by the Billboard’s
Radio and Records list.
 |
It really represents light years of changes in the pop
music history if we compare Radio Nord's programming in
1961 with the sound of Radio Caroline. The hits of the
days of Radio Nord were for instance Take good care
of my baby (Bobby Vee) or Johnny Will (Pat
Boone) - compare that with the hits of Lennon / McCartney
or Jagger / Richards. The sounds that made the British
pirates a success would have been a disaster in 1961,
just like Pat Boone would have been, if he had tried to
make a hit of Satisfaction.
This year, 2011, we are celebrating the Fiftieth Anniversary
of Radio Nord - an adventure
that lasted for 16 months through the years 1961 and -62.
Radio Nord was a Swedish free radio station, broadcasting
from the ship MS Bon Jour anchored
on international waters off the Swedish coast.
The project was financed by Texan venture capital, and
the driving force behind, setting up the station, was
the American radio entrepreneur Gordon McLendon
(1921-1986). In America, he had created the Liberty
Broadcasting System, which eventually became
the second largest radio network in the U.S.A. It also
became famous for setting new standards for sports broadcasting
with daily broadcasts of Major League Baseball over 458
affiliated radio stations. In 1947, Gordon and his father
acquired a license to start operating radio station KLIF
1190 in Dallas, a station which was to become
the prime example of American Top 40 radio.
In Sweden in those days there was a rigid broadcasting
monopoly and that had been the order for thirty years.
In this respect Sweden would continue through further
more than 30 years to be the most obstinate of all European
countries. How did Gordon get the idea to create commercial
radio in Europe, and why, of all countries, did he choose
Sweden? There are several possible reasons, but the first
and foremost was the Swedish-Finnish businessman Jack
S. Kotschack (1915-1988).
Jack had moved to neighboring Sweden in 1944 after five
years as a front soldier in the Finnish Winter War of
1939-1940, and then in the "Continuation War"
(1941-1944), where he also was awarded several medals
for bravery. He had very active sporting interests and
in his younger years in Finland, he played for the national
team of bandy, and also distinguished himself as a skilled
tennis player. His university studies were completed in
Helsinki in 1932, and then followed three years at Herne
Bay College in England where he also initiated a short
but successful career in boxing, and he made it to the
college championship which he also won.
Jack's involvement in sports had often helped him in
making business contacts. During a business trip, Jack
visited Gordon in Dallas, and they both had the intention
of discussing a mutual film project. Gordon had a film
studio and Jack had been in the business for several years
with the company Svea Film in
Stockholm.
Jack
S Kotschack and Gordon McLendon |
|
After a while, their discussions began to move from film
to radio.
They both shared an equal interest in sports, and the
main event at the time was the upcoming World Heavyweight
Championship in New York, where the Swedish heavyweight
champion, Ingemar Johansson, was to meet Floyd Patterson.
Several months before the game, the Swedish Broadcasting
Company made it clear that they would not broadcast the
match. One argument was that they felt they were unable
to resist a public opinion, which saw boxing as grossly
dehumanizing. It was, admittedly, a minority, but the
arguments they put forward were perceived as more powerful
than the sport itself. Moreover, there was another important
factor: this was about pro sports! The latter was then
a controversial issue, and several of Sweden's top athletes
had therefore been excluded from competitions.
 |
|
The Ingo match was considered by
many as the game of the century. Another effect
was that the radio monopoly became a more disputed
issue than ever before - the refusal to broadcast
the match caused a furious public opinion.
One person who saw a chance to jump onto the opportunity
was the manager of the Swedish section of Philips
Electronics, Herbert Kastengren.
He bought airtime over Radio Luxembourg
and it was announced that Philips would report live
from the boxing match at Yankee Stadium in New York.
The newspapers began to provide expert advices
on antenna arrangements and how to tune the radio
to hear the broadcast. Then came that night, the
"Ingo Night", June 27, 1959, and millions
of Swedes stayed up from 11 p.m. when the broadcast
began. Prior to the match the broadcast offered
a great artist posse from a studio in Stockholm
interspersed with interviews and telephone reports
from Yankee Stadium in New York. Many still remembers
what they did that magical night, and the success
couldn't have been greater when Ingo at 3.37 a.m.
knocked out Floyd and became the first Swedish World
Heavyweight Boxing Champion. |
|
|
|
 |
|
Another source of inspiration to Jack and Gordon were
the events that had taken place in the narrow space of
international waters between the southern tip of Sweden
and Denmark. It was Radio Mercur,
which had become the world's very first commercial radio
station from a ship anchored on international waters.
Since August 2, 1958 they had been broadcasting from the
small ship Cheeta.
 |
|
United
States coast guard cutter "Courier",
a 338-foot, 5,500 ton vessel, moored off Rhodes,
Greece. A mobile transmitting facility for the
U.S. Information Agency to broadcast the "Voice
of America" programs behind the "Iron
Curtain" during "The Cold War"
years.
|
|
The founder of Radio Mercur was Peer Jansen (1930 - 1968)
who had gotten the idea after hearing the Voice of America
broadcasts from a ship on the Mediterranean Sea. They
were broadcasting western news and culture aimed at listeners
in the Eastern Bloc. Peer came to realize that they were
using frequencies which had not been authorized by the
International Telecommunications Union. This, however,
didn't seem to bother no-one at all - except presumably
those in charge in the Soviet Union.
Like most youngsters in the late fifties, Peer used to
listen to Radio Luxembourg. Through a misunderstanding,
he had been led to believe that they too, were broadcasting
from a ship, anchored in the English Channel. This he
saw as an additional argument for the idea: if Radio Luxembourg
can broadcast this way - then can we! As we all know,
Radio Luxembourg had fully legal transmitters on dry land
and on legal frequencies. However, the intentions were
obvious:
Through the use of broadcasting facilities installed in
another country, and by using transmitters with excessive
power, their aim was to circumvent the current British
broadcasting legislation. It was a business in a gray
area - not quite pirate radio, still a form of, and was
viewed badly by the authorities in the targeted country.
A cousin of Peer, Børge Agerskov, was
doing his university studies in law. He was caught by
Peers ideas and took the time to study the Danish legislation
on broadcasting. He found that it had completely overlooked
the possibility to broadcast from a ship out at sea to
a specific country, and thereby circumventing the monopoly
on broadcasts from within that country. This order was
equal in most countries, and Børges discoveries
would later serve as an inspiration to many other offshore
pirates. But it was Peer Jansen and Børge Agerskov
who first of all saw the whole context.
There's no doubt that Jack and Gordon felt that the recent
events surrounding Radio Mercur were inspirational and
offered them great encouragement. After a lot of intense
talks, Jack said, probably only as a joke or as a reckless
idea, Let's make a radio station! Gordon was
not lingering on the answer, he only said: OK, Go
ahead, Jack.
|
The
Neptunbolaget's ship "Herakles" |
|
The
original "Olga" before she was converted
|
|
A
graphic image showing the design of the
Bon Jour as a two-masted broadcast ship
|
|
Bon
Jour at Langeline, Copenhagen |
|
Engineer
Roland Englund behind the transmitter |
 |
The
Bon Jour, prepared for broadcasting |

So far, nothing's
heard on 495 m. |
 |
| |
 |
It seemed quite simple to "go ahead", but it
would prove to be an uphill struggle in which many storms
blew up, both in terms of weather conditions and in harassments
by government officials, or the telecommunications authority
and other powerful representatives of the establishment.
Such extreme actions as jammers and hijacking the
ship on the high seas were actually considered.
A much more unexpected hindrance appeared when the central
organization of the advertising agencies advised their
members to be cautious and to avoid radio advertising.
How much damage could it do to the public's trust in a
brand name if it became associated with a radio station
that was perceived as "bad", and what if the
venture should end in a fiasco? The newspapers and journalists
mainly drew up shady, negative scenarios of the new radio
station because they were worried that radio advertising
would mean harmful competition to the ability of newspapers
to attract advertisers.
When Jack, at the beginning of 1960, began the search
for an appropriate ship, he initially became interested
in a salvage ship, Heracles, owned by the Neptune Company.
Jack asked the magistrate inspector to conduct a thorough
inspection which resulted in a positive report. Jack felt
that the vessel issue thereby had been solved in a reliable
way. However, Gordon's confidant, Jim Foster had been
involved as “marine experts” and wanted to
exercise his greater authority in the matter. He considered
Heracles inappropriate - too small! Instead he advocated
(the only half as large) Olga, which he had found, moored
in Kiel Canal in Germany.
Bob Gordon, Jim and Jack flew down to Hamburg and then
onwards to Kiel, to inspect Jim's findings. Perhaps they
had gained too high expectations, in all cases it appears
to have been so for Jack. In his book, he described his
first sight of Olga like this: "I think she was
one of the ugliest boats I have ever seen. Small and worn
she lay on the dock, scattering an intense smell of rancid
herring, noticeable in a well 20 meters away".
It could have been that Jack felt a bitter touch of the
didactic he might have experienced from the "marine
expert" Jim. However, on the long run, Jim would
prove to be quite right - she really was a great ship!
Olga was a 2-masted steel schooner of 250 gross tons,
built in 1921. In its original outfit she was 30 meters
long and named SS Margarethe. She was one of three sister
ships - one came in use as a tug in South America and
another was sold to a company in the Far East. SS Margarethe
was used for cargo traffic on endless trades over the
Baltic and the North Sea. Through the years she underwent
several extensions of her hull. The last was conducted
in 1951, when she had her final length of 41 meters including
the bowsprit of three meters. From the beginning she had
been a steamer but her engine was being replaced twice,
the last was in 1936, when the Deutz 150bhp diesel engine
was installed and became her source of propulsion for
the rest of her years. After the change of ownership in
1927, she was renamed Olga after the new owner's wife.
In June 1941 she was requisitioned by the German Kriegsmarine
in Emden, but apparently she must have been very poorly
rated, so in November 1943 she was taken out of the Nazi
marine rolls and was returned to her civilian owner.
On May 31, 1960 she was towed to Norderwerft,
an alteration and repair shipyard in Hamburg, where she
underwent a major renovation. The cargo hold was converted
into crew cabins, storerooms, rooms for transmitters and
space for the two heavy 60 Hz Allis Chalmers-generators,
each of 93 kVA to power the transmitters and studio equipment.
Directly below the mast was installed the two Continental
Electronics 316b transmitters of either 10kW. Above what
had been her hold was built the characteristic superstructure
with the galley, mess and the studio techniques. She also
got her name Bon Jour carved in the bow, and the hull
painted in its new orange color.
On August 10, the shipyard received a message from Hamburg
Oberpostdirektion where they recalled an old Hitler Law
of 1937 which made it illegal to install, repair or perform
any work at a radio station without permission from the
government. Inspections were made by a posse of authority
representatives - some of them were Swedes. This made
it urgent to hastily move the MS Bon Jour to the Copenhagen
free port Langeline for the proceeding work. The 38 meter
high mast was erected on the foredeck with rigging and
guy lines. They had initially ordered two identical masts
and the idea had been that the antenna would be a "flat
top" design between the two masts. However, Gordon
had connections to an antenna expert, John Mullaney, from
the American Navy. His unique antenna principle, called
the folded unipole, an inverted ground plane antenna,
solved the problem with the mast which actually was very
far from any ideal length to function as a half wave aerial.
The unique feature was that John Mullaney's antenna design
took advantage of the forward and aft guy wires from the
mast's top to contribute as radiation elements in addition
to the mast of steel. To make this possible, it was necessary
that the wires from the top were connected through carefully
tweaked vacuum capacitors to ground (the hull). These
special capacitors, built in metal boxes, are visible
on the deck on some photos of the Bon Jour.
The most time-consuming work in Copenhagen was the installation
of the transmitters. They had been delivered as a kit
of 6000 parts and was put together, component by component,
by Glenn Callison, chief engineer from KLIF and his assistant
Archie Mesch.
On Tuesday, December 20, 1960, it seemed as if all preparations
on Bon Jour was completed and at 6 PM they were set to
leave Langelinie and begin the voyage up the Baltic Sea.
Still remaining on the quay was the second mast which
had proved to be unnecessary. At 8:30, they had to anchor
because of heavy fog. At 5 on the Wednesday morning, the
journey continued.
An article in Sweden's largest daily paper, Expressen,
on Thursday, December 22, confirmed that Bon Jour had
departed from Copenhagen two days earlier:
-The boat left Copenhagen on Tuesday for its 48-hour
trip to Stockholm, says consul Jack Kotschack. That
means, if nothing unforeseen happens, that the boat should
be on its anchorage already tonight. And then, it's just
to start the broadcast.
However, it would take much longer than the estimated
48 hours because of the weather at the time. It was stiff
breeze, 10 - 12 m/sec and very rough seas. Bon Jour had
in this harsh weather, with her round-bottomed design
combined with her high mast, a seaworthiness that got
her into a terrible swinging from stem to stern. It was
noticed that the stay lines on the mast were working loose.
They dropped anchor to repair and adjust the rigging.
Most of the men on board were unfamiliar with sea conditions
and must have been at worst discomfort. In the case of
a disaster there had been no ability to make distress
calls; there were no radio telephone on board yet. If
Bon Jour was wrecked their only chance was the lifeboat,
which was equipped only with oars, no engine.
When Bon Jour, after a arduous voyage, on Friday at 11
am at last arrived the Stockholm archipelago, and was
anchored, it was with rising concerns on board about the
lack of a radio telephone, if their problem could get
worse. Instead of the estimated spot, they choose to drop
anchor at a safer place: at Almagrundet, where a lightship
was nearby with constant monitoring. From the archives,
it has been verified that the guard on Almagrundet noted
Bon Jours arrival south of the lightship.
At last the people on board Bon Jour had reached the
long awaited moment when the transmitter for the first
time would be turned on and running. However, Glenn Callison's
promises of the transmitters full functionality became
completely contradicted when a hissing lightning striked
out between the mast and the rigging, and the transmitter
went dead and silent. Archie, Jan and Ove immediately
understood that they now had to deal with difficulties
trying to find out what had gone wrong. But shortly after
that, the mast rigging and its insulators began to rattle
against each other and fell down in pieces against the
ship's deck.
The fishing boat "Dunette" had been booked
in advance to search for Bon Jour on Friday - the day
before Christmas Eve. The idea was that she would deliver
fresh daily newspapers, newly recorded programs - and
Jim Foster, who we remember as Gordon's naval expert.
When Dunette arrived at her estimated spot - Ornö
/ Dalarö Skans - her captain reported (he had a radio
telephone) "The Bon Jour is not in sight here".
There was nothing to see except the open desolate sea
- and that's the way it use to be outside Ornö. When
Jack received his message, it came as a lightning strike
in the atmosphere that prevailed; in the absence of the
test broadcasts which s h o u l d have been started
already, somewhere at 495 meters medium wave.
In advance before Christmas Eve, Jack had ordered that
2000 telegrams would be distributed to Sweden's most important
business and public figures:
"Do you know that Radio Nord is now on the air?
Turn on your radio now and you'll hear the modern radio
station!"
Dunette continued searching for Bon Jour on Christmas
Eve. But the captain of Bon Jour had chosen the better
safe than sorry solution to abandon her in fear that the
mast was going to collapse. A salvage tug had picked them
up and took them to Sandhamn. They were really in bad
weather, and this was later to become even worse, up to
17 m / sec.
For this reason, the captain Elis Olsson got the sack,
and many have later chosen to describe him as a lousy
captain. As a further sign of this, it has been said that
he was the first to abandon Bon Jour - and even more,
it was near that one of the crew was left on board.
Or was this whole story untrue - was he blamed for the
many mistakes that others had caused? Swedens Dagens Nyheter
(Daily News) on December 29, said that the captain had
expressed concerns in Copenhagen about how the work had
been carried out in the yard and he had requested that
the shipyard would perform an inclining experiment, but
the yard said this was excessive.
The captain would soon prove to be completely right,
but then he already had been fired. There remained a lot
of work connected with the stability of the mast's rigging.
But there was further reasons to the debacle that had
arisen: the transmitter that did not work, the overly
optimistic expectations of a rapid premiere for Christmas.
But most of the drama was because no radio telephone had
been installed.
...sorry , a part of the story is missing here...
On photographs where you see Bon Jour straight from
one of the sides you can see that the balance of the ship
makes her mast tilt slightly backwards. This is caused
by the fact that she was originally equipped and planned
as a schooner; with two masts. Without the aft mast but
with a very heavy and large mast in the bow, she tended
to be a quite rocking front to back. On some pictures
you can also see that a large part of the rudder remained
above the water, meaning that the rudder wasn't so effective.
In rough wheather conditions, Bon Jour could be difficult
to control because the lines connected to the steering
wheel was directly linked to the rudder - she had no power
steering at all.
Below the bridge, which was quite far aft, were the berths
for the captain, mate and chief engineer. Farther aft,
lowest down, was the engine-room and the newly installed
diesel generators to power the transmitters and studio
equipment. These generators were electrically separated
from the vessel's conventional generator for lighting,
etc.
Up in the superstructure, or deck house, in its most
aft end, was the galley next door to the pantry. In the
next room - a small room, was a ladder down to the cabins
for the rest of the crew on board. Continuing forward
in the deckhouse was the washing and toilet facilities
and a shower. Further forward there was a combined dining
and recreational space on board. There were floor-fixed
tables, comfortable armchairs and also a TV with good
reception of Sweden's - then - only TV channel. At the
forward rooms was the studio and control room.
In the control room, the most dominant sight were the
four large tape recorders of the American brand Exacton.
Originally they had been planned to offer an ability to
make programmed automatic broadcasts at night where each
of the tape machines would hold prerecorded music, each
song combined with an announcement and separated with
green "leader" tape. A separate smaller tape
recorder was for the commercials and other prerecorded
material. An automatic random switching between these
four tape reels would completely avoid any repetitions
of identical song combinations. The automatic switching
between the tape machines was triggered by the silence
occuring when a song was finished and the following leader
tape, then immediately it would start the next tape machine.
The tape reels would be shifted before each night. It
was, for its time, a "modern" idea, but eventually
the whole idea was abandoned since it had failed too often.
In its most succesful events it still made too lengthy
silences between the programme ingredients. The prerecorded
tapes were used at times, but then only manually. Later
they changed this entire tape-rack-stand with two Ampex
recorders of the same reliable model, 350b, that was used
in the studio facilities in Stockholm.
The company had employed educated professional journalists
as early as October 1960. By a coincidence it happened
that the day when they introduced newscasts they also
had something particular to report: Jurij Gagarin became
the first man in space that day, April 12, 1961. The editors
main working tools were the two communication receivers,
one National NC-400 and one Hallicrafter SX-100 and also
through a Creed RTTY teleprinter machine to receive telegrams
from newsagencys such as Reuters AFP, AP, UP and UPA.
The news readers listened primarily to the BBC World Service
and Voice of America. They also had frequent radio telephone
calls to the Stockholm headquarters to receive home news.
Radio Nord was the first media in Sweden to report about
the "Bay of Pigs" invasion, where a CIA-trained
force of Cuban exiles made an unsuccessful attempt to
overthrow the Cuban government of Fidel Castro. Another
dramatic event when Radio Nord was first with the news
was on September 17, 1961, when the United Nations' secretary-general
Dag Hammarskiöld - a Swede - died after a plane crash
between Leopoldville and Northern Rhodesia. It was a tragedy
that paralyzed Sweden and the world, and it has never
been clarified whether it was a political sabotage or
an accident. The news was first received by the chief
engineer Ove Sjöström via short wave. The news
reader Lars Branje, who previously had many years of experience
as a pilot of the Swedish Air Force, made a knowledgeable
narrative of the dramatic event. The vast knowledge that
was offered in this particular news coverage must have
been difficult to other Swedish news media to beat.
Many have tried to portray Jack as politically naive.
They use to say that Radio Nord had never been launched
if a more sensible analysis of the political prospects
of the project had been made. I see it differently. Jack
had the ambition that Radio Nord would become a hit among
the radio listeners - and with this he managed with a
great margin. His idea was that such a large audience
would also create a strong public pressure that politicians
would not dare to oppose. I think that an analysis in
the planning stage had never been able to predict the
exorbitant priority that the government would give to
an intellectually so harmless radio station as Radio Nord
was. In his book "Radio Nord will return" (1963
in Swedish), Jack writes in his foreword: When they
wrote about me personally in the press, they often used
the word naive. I admit that I didn’t quite understand
what they meant - as a comparatively successful businessman,
I considered myself to be a realist. And a realist, I
am still to this day, but at one point, I give the papers
right in saying that I was incredibly naive - when it
comes to politics in general and politicians in particular:
I had the naive belief that MPs were elected to effectuate
the people's wishes - not oppose them.
Jack continued the preparations, and to the press he
stated a date when the new radio station would be launched.
Unfortunately it was passed, and there were several such
dates passed.
|
|
| Test Transmission
under the leadership of Archie Mesch, measuring and
listening. Also chief engineer Thure Andersson and
at the stern a German crewman, Knies. |
 |
Studio
engineers at the premises in Stockholm, Bengt Törnkrantz
and Lars Klettner |
Anyhow, to make a very long story a little less long,
it was at the beginning of March, 1961, when test transmissions
were heard on medium wave 495 meters:
test transmission Friday March 3, 1961 Live from MS Bon
Jour
The anonymous radio voice was counting "one - two
- three - five, five". Why did the voice drop out
"four - and why did it repeat "five"? Strange...
test transmission Tuesday March 7, 1961 Live from
MS Bon Jour
They also announced instructions addressed to what
was called the contest participants. Everyone
listening to 495 wanted to candidate for that contest,
but how? Of course, the intention was to make the impression
that something exciting was going on, and to catch as
many listeners as possible.
A minor frequency adjustment was made to avoid an interference,
audible as a constant tone of 4 kHz caused by the strong
transmitter in Lyon, France. Radio Nord changed from 606
kHz to exactly the same frequency as Lyon, 602 kHz. Radio
Nord's wavelength then became 498,2 meters, but they always
annonced their wavelengt as "495 meters".
A few days later it finally happened - the big premiere
at 10 am.
Premier, Wednesday March 8, 1961 The
12 first minutes of this recording also reflects that
they played non-stop music prior to the hour. Then they
played the first Radio Nord jingle. It was on the tune
"Bye bye Blackbird" in which we also hear a
voice-over by Radio Nord's own jingle wizard Henry Fox.
Announced by Gert Landin followed an introduction speech
by Jack Kotschack. With his Finnish-Swedish dialect he
started:
-Dear listeners, Radio Nord is a reality. After more
than two years of preparations, after many overcome obstacles,
I have the pleasure to introduce this new, contemporary
radio station.
Radio Nord is a radio in tune with the times; it should
be there when you want to hear it. We at Radio Nord never
sleeps, we bring our programs to you, 24 hours a day.
Radio Nord has been designed to offer pleasant entertainment,
current news, exciting competitions and interesting information;
we have done our best to create a program to suit YOU
- our listeners. But we know that neither Rome nor Radio
Nord was built in a day. We greatly appreciate your interest
and opinion. We make our programs to you. Therefore, let
us know what you think about them. Cooperation with our
audience gives us guidance for the future. Please write
to us, to Radio Nord (address). [...]
Jack's speech was followed by a song for the day, The
Radio Nord waltz, composed and performed by Sweden's
then, and still today, most beloved poet and troubadour,
Evert Taube (search Google).
It was an honor to the company Radio Nord that he appeared
with his dedicated composition, almost like a hymn or
a poem, to the new radio station.
The station's first commercial was for the then completely
unknown brand for dishwashers, Westinghouse, which eventually
became Sweden's most famous, but nowadays it's completely
forgotten. The program was filled with music in many diverse
genres, Swedish pop, Frank Sinatra, Swedish accordion
music, Ray Conniff, Elvis Presley, Swedish light music,
and so on.
The
response after the premiere showed that many had been
surprised by the station's programming style. The audience
and the newspapers had expected that Radio Nord would
sound quite similar to what they had heard from Radio
Luxembourg. Most music stations in those days used to
have hours and half hours allocated to different musical
preferences, rock music, old time, South American, etc.
At this point Jack made something completely different
in European radio. True, he had carefully studied Gordon's
famous Policy Books on how to achieve success, but Jack
had his very own views on how to format his station. His
thesis was that no new entrant listener would get the
time to be bored and shut off their radios because the
entertainment he or she prefers was not heard soon enough
in the program. Any listener would be able to go in and
out of the program at any time - no programming times
to keep track of and there should never be a programming
content that referred to something that had occurred previously
in the program.
Jack's idea was that each group of listeners really is
a minority. The group that prefers to hear rock music
is small compared with those who want to hear anything
else. The same can be said about all other groups of listeners.
It is always harder to make a listener to turn the radio
on than to turn it off. If a listener has shut down the
radio because of dissatisfaction with what was offered
just then, it is much harder to re-gain that listener.
It was important that no listeners would get to be unhappy
with Radio Nord. The music should always, within a reasonable
time, appeal to each listener.
Radio Nord had offices and studios in central Stockholm
and became very popular with their mix of popular music,
deejays and news 24 hours a day. In the earlier stages,
the announcers often appeared as pre-recorded, rather
stiff voice features. Soon enough they developed a more
easygoing style on how the program was announced. I think
Larsan Sorenson helped to ease up the sound of the station
and how the announcers appeared. He had worked many years
as a cabaret artist and as an early stand-up comedian,
and he was a great inspiration source to the other announcers
on the station.
At the autumn of 1961, after 8 months on the air, they
introduced a growing number of live broadcasts from the
MS Bon Jour. Radio Nord was the first offshore pirate
to discover that it was possible to broadcast live out
at sea from the ship - to actually use turntables. Before
they examined it, everybody assumed that turntables could
not be used in such a rocking environment, that the tone
arm would helplessly lose track over and over again. What
they discovered was that the rocking, even in fairly rough
weather, was not that hard and jerky, and the tone arm
remained on track mostly without any problems at all.
Radio
Nord's most popular program was Top 20 where they played
the 20 most popular discs each week. In the first months
it was hosted by Gert Landin, later by Larsan Sorenson.
The listeners voted through letters sent to Radio Nord
where they could choose up to three songs, later a maximum
of five. No record store wanted to be without the important
top 20 posters which also offered good publicity to the
discs that were hot each week. Between about each other
song, the host took some time to talk about the current
week's sponsor for the program. Sometimes they also had
a popular artist in the studio who was interviewed in
the show.
From November 12 they introduced De Tio, a Top 10 of
only Swedish language songs. The program had been suggested
by two record dealers who had noticed the importance of
the Top 20 list and asked if it could be supplemented
by a list of Swedish recordings. The program came as a
welcome change to the program menu on Sunday mornings
where they, before this, had been a little too afraid
of being perceived as vulgar if they played popular music
in the middle of the Sunday worship time. In order to
not offend any opinion they had chosen to play a light
and melodic selection of classical music, which really
wasn't the right niche for Radio Nord. After they broke
this caution and introduced this rather innocent chart
program, it became a great success. A success that still
remains after all those years, because Radio Sweden immediately
competed with a full-alike program that still remain in
their programming today.
Despite politics and religious issues being banned at
the station, it was forced to close down when the Swedish
government introduced the "Lex Radio Nord" of
1962, criminalizing the act of buying advertising time
on the station. The adventure ended when Radio North closed
at midnight June 30, 1962. The Swedish offshore radio
legislation became a model for the British Marine Broadcasting
Offences act of 1967 and to other European countries where
their governments wanted to retain monopoly radio.
The Swedish radio monopoly remained unchanged during the
many years until 1993 when the Swedish parliament finally
approved the establishment of independent local radio
stations. This occurred only after the former Soviet republics
- and even Albania - had already done so. After all those
years, Radio Nord still plays an important part in the
Swedish radio history.
The Swedish "Lex Radio Nord" came into effect
on August 1, 1962, but the company still chose to shut
down a month earlier, at midnight, June 30 / July 1. In
an interview I did in 1981 with Jack Kotschack he told
me about this episode of Radio Nord's last days:
"In the last days of Radio Nord I was visited
by a ship owner's son who was named Ronan O'Rahilly, together
with a Swede. Their business was that they wanted to buy
the boat, eh,, their appearance and behavioral impression
on me was that it was empty talk, so,,, I,,, didn't bother
to take their offer seriously."
Perhaps Ronan (then 22 years) failed to give an appropriate
impact. However, Jack had already received a proposal
from a different company, and that was the actual reason
why they closed down a month "too soon". At
the time it seemed as if they were in the final stages
of the negotiations with an Australian businessman, Alan
Crawford and his consortium Project Atlanta Ltd. with
Alan's associates Kitty Black and Oliver Smedley. Alan
was a former president of the dominant American music
publisher Southern Music. He had formed his own company,
Merit Music, and with the Atlanta project, he would start
a radio station on international waters outside the Thames
estuary. The station was expected to reach an audience
of millions of radio listeners in the London area. Alan's
intention was to use his radio station to promote his
record label operations, and Radio Nord's vacant broadcasting
ship offered him the total solution for a rapid implementation
of his idea.
|
| Radio
Nord's Bon Jour passes past the stern of Radio Syd's
ship Cheeta 2, where someone was attentive with the
camera. The two ships never came closer than this
and there was no reason to exchange collegial greetings
between the two pirates either - there were no radio
staff on board. Just passing... |
 |
| An
image from October 1962. Mi Amigo has anchored near
Veronica's Borkum Riff off the Dutch coast. |
 |
Caroline
and her father John F. in 1962 |
On July 4, 1962, four days after Radio Nord's closing,
she left her former anchorage, with new-recruit Polish
staff on board to take her out of the Baltic Sea. On Radio
Nord her name had always been mentioned as Bon Jour, but
since about seven months, her name had been re-registered
"Magda Maria". On board were now all the studio
equipment loaded, including all the equipment used at
the studios in Stockholm. She was also loaded with the
entire grammophone archive, both the minor which had been
on board and the much larger from the premises in Stockholm.
All of the commercial value of the company were now gathered
in the ship and its cargo. The owners felt concern that
any further intervention from any authority would occur
during the trip, not least on her passage through the
narrow strait between Denmark and Sweden. But this time
the ship had an easy trip all the way to the North Sea.
The owners were still Bob Thompson and Clint Murchison.
Behind them was Gordon McLendon, who preferred a less
official position, but he was in fact the foremost in
the negotiations, and it was he who had invented the name
of the new project; Radio Atlanta, as a tribute to the
city in Texas where he grew up. A few years later he would
also be involved in another business partnership with
a certain Don Pierson (1925-1996). With him, he drew up
the guidelines for a mirror image of the one of his radio
stations that he was most proud of, the KLIF. In the Thames
estuary it was agreed to be called KLIF-London. However,
at the premiere on December 16, 1964 - and thereafter
- it became known as Wonderful Radio London. But that's
a different story.
During the negotiations between the owners and Alan Crawford,
Magda Maria on August 2, 1962 arrived at the port of El
Ferrol in northwestern Spain, where she would undergo
some restoration work. On September 14, 1962, it seemed
that the negotiations had ended successfully and that
the transaction was made, and old Bon Jour, now renamed
"MV Mi Amigo", sailed from El Ferrol bound for
Dover in England.
However, the negotiations were not completed at all,
and yet in January 1963, the future of the Atlanta Company
remained uncertain. Mi Amigo's hull was repainted in a
green color, and as a modern Flying Dutchman she sailed
on the North Sea. She had a crew of a total of 8, the
captain and the crew were Poles, but they knew nothing
about what would happen next. As a gloomy memory of the
days of Radio Nord, she was filled with her precious cargo,
wrapped in plastic. She was usually anchored at sea off
the Dutch coast, near her fellow pirate ship, Borkum Riff,
used by Radio Veronica - which also was doomed to uncertainty
until the Dutch authorities would take decision on her
fate. An incident that had darkened the prospects for
Radio Veronica, and even more for the Atlanta Project,
was the heavy-handed police intervention, which had been
made against Radio Mercur :
Radio Mercur had illegally resumed transmissions two
weeks after the Danish 'Pirate Radio Law" had come
into force on August 1, 1962. After three days of broadcasts,
the ship was boarded by the Danish police, which then
towed the vessel to the port of Tuborg, where she was
seized and the transmitting equipment was smashed to pieces
to ensure that it would never be used anymore. The measure
was so disturbing to Crawford's financiers that they eventually
withdrew their interest in the deal. In his desperation,
Crawford tried to propose the owners that he would lease
the vessel, but they turned his offer down. The future
of offshore broadcasting seemed very dark, not only to
Alan Crawford and his investors who had abandoned him,
but also to the Americans.
On January 26, 1963, the latter company took the Mi Amigo
to cross the Atlantic, to Galveston, Texas, where she
arrived on March 9, 1963. Their immediate plan was to
release her from her unfruitful broadcasting adventures
and convert her into a luxury yacht. The continuation
of this story tells us that the mast was demolished and
all the radio equipment was mounted out of her. Nevertheless,
some nine months later, Crawford finally managed to raise
sufficient capital, and the deal was completed, at last,
on December 18, 1963. The ship was now officially owned
by Rosebud Shipping of Panama (Radio Atlanta). Ten days
after the deal was finished, the Mi Amigo departed Galveston,
and after a lot of drama, she on January 30th, 1964 arrived
at the shipyard of El Ferrol, Spain, again, where work
would be carried out to improve her stability to carry
a higher mast construction than before. On March 3, she
was bound for the shipyard of Greenore, Ireland, were
she would be fitted with the new mast with the height
of 43 meters - five meters higher than the one used for
Radio Nord. The shipyard was, by the way, owned by Ronan
O'Rahilly's father.
Ronan (1940) was the manager to a number of pop artists,
including Georgie Fame. He discovered that the record
industry was dominated by "the big four" - the
EMI, Decca, Pye and Philips labels. They also had dominance
over the BBC, which completely ignored all the smaller
labels, as Ronan's. He tried on Radio Luxembourg, but
found that their programs were usually sponsored by the
same four labels, who thus "owned" the program.
Ronan felt that the only way to get his artists played
on the radio was to start his own radio station. In Ronan's
reflections on his station, he soon started to call it
Radio Caroline. He had been caught by a photograph in
a newspaper where the U.S. president John F. Kennedy 's
daughter Caroline looked up with a magical look that made
her seem just so young, free and fresh like Ronan imagined
in his thoughts for the station he wanted to create. A
dreamer, he was perhaps, but still a lot smarter than
Alan. Ronan had been aware from the outset how to organize
an initiative of this kind. Alan had not understood anything
of what had happened in the past. In interviews, he said
that he needed 12 lawyers before anyone found out how
one would do (ie, the usual procedure to circumvent the
law - the same as already had been used by other pirates:
flag from a country that was not a member of the International
Telecommunication Union, a holding company in Luxembourg
or Liechtenstein, and so on).
Ronan had offered Alan to use the yard's resources in
exchange for Ronan's company to use Crawford's recording
studio for Radio Caroline. Thus, there were two different
companies and two vessels anchored close to each other
at Greenore, both in fierce competition to become the
first to reach the important broadcast premiere. Ronan's
ship was a former Danish passenger ferry, "Fredericia",
which now was renamed the "MV Caroline". Several
suspected acts of mutual sabotage occured - both companies
did their best to delay the other's launch. Radio Atlanta's
Mi Amigo became the first to leave Greenore on March 28,
but then she got some sudden stability problems with the
rigging of the mast. Later on, in April 21, the mast also
broke when the ship was caught in a gale, and needed further
repairs to be carried out in Portsmouth.
Radio Caroline managed to be the first on air on March
28, 1964, anchored at a position three and a half miles
south-east off Frinton-on-Sea, Essex, broadcasting on
1520 kHz, "This is Caroline on one-nine-nine
- your all day music station. The music all day, every
day, on one-nine-nine meters medium wave".
Radio Atlanta needed another fortnight for preparations
before test transmissions could be commenced on May 12,
1964 from a position outside Felixstowe, Suffolk, England.
Radio Atlanta started their tests immediately
after Radio Caroline closed for the evening, and used
the same frequency. Radio Atlanta's intention was to take
over Radio Caroline's audience and then make them all
tune to Radio Atlanta when they switched to a new, more
permanent frequency at 1495 kHz. Radio Atlanta carefully
instructed the listeners about the new frequency before
switching over.
However, the Radio Atlanta venture lasted for less than
2 months and was finally closed on July 2, 1964. They
didn't manage to reach near the audience figures and advertising
revenue that the company had expected, and it all ended
in a merger with Radio Caroline and the MV Mi Amigo remained
off the coast of Essex as the new broadcast ship for Radio
Caroline South. The MV Caroline was then moved to an anchorage
off the Isle of Man and was then broadcasting in the name
of Radio Caroline North.
Two years had passed since Radio Nord closed but the
adventures would be continued. Through the years, from
March 1961 to the same month in 1980, the 19th, she continued
as a radio ship and survived all the other pirate ships,
and over the years she became the oldest of them, before
it all ended in a north-easterly storm, which first got
her anchor chain broke and got her then drifting away
for ten miles before she ran aground at Long Sands Bank
off the Kent Coast, where she sunk. Her hull was damaged
at the generator room and water was pooring in, but her
mast remained standing upright as a proud and defiant
memory. It wasn't until the ending of July, 1986, when
it was reported that the mast had collapsed. A can buoy
was placed at the location to mark where the wreck is.
 |
Ove
Sjöström in a studio of MV Caroline in
July 1964 |
 |
Oves
assistant Jan Gunnarsson in the same studio |
The former technical manager at Radio Nord, Ove Sjöström,
was hired by Ronan O'Rahilly on recommendations from the
American owners of the 'Mi Amigo', to carry out the installations
of studio and transmitter equipment on board 'MV Caroline'.
When Ove arrived in Greenore, he realized the amount of
work that would be necessary, and he asked one of his
colleagues from Radio Nord, technician Jan Gunnarsson,
to be his assistant. It was urgent to Ronan's team to
launch their station before their rival Radio Atlanta.
Ove suggested that they would choose the same selection
of equipment that had proved good reliability at the Bon
Jour, ie Ampex 350b tape recorder, Gates turntables and
the Gates "Studioette" mixer, Continental Electronics
10kW transmitter, etc. Before his departure from Sweden,
Ove arranged with Ronan that the equipment would be immediately
ordered from the U.S., and when Ove arrived at Greenore,
the equipment was already on its way.
Ove enjoyed very much working in the Caroline team. When
they had finished all the technical preparations for the
premiere, Ove and Jan paid a visit on their good old ship,
the MV Mi Amigo. The two radio companies had certain things
they were disagreed on, and there was fierce competition
to become the first to start their broadcasts, and Ove
has told me that on his visit he took the opportunity
to manipulate the transmitters by disconnecting the screen
grids of the power tubes, BX 5000. Next time the transmitter
was powered on, this had the result that the power tubes
were burned. It would mean a complicated troubleshooting
to find the error, and when it was found it would take
at least a week further to fly new ones of the expensive
power tubes from the U.S.
a recording made in the studio of MV Caroline in July
1964 where Ove describes how his and Jan’s work
is proceeding onboard the ship. For those who don't understand
Swedish, here is a translation. Ove:
"I begin by saying thank you for the tape - it
was great to hear that it sounds so good in Kallhäll
[Stockholm suburb]. I'm sorry I wasn’t able to get
back to you after the conversation we had when I was in
Stockholm in May.
I just thought I should give you a brief description on
how the station is built here on the motor vessel MV Caroline.
First and foremost we have a Gates mixer, two line channels
and two microphone channels, where we mix the music that
comes from two turntables and three Ampex tape recorders.
The signal then passes further to a Gates limiter, from
where it is connected to either of the two Continerntal
Electronics ten kilowatters. From there, it goes up to
the half-wave folded unipole [aerial]. In the studio we
also have a modulation monitor - Gates - we have a cue
amplifier – Gates too. As you hear, most of the
equipment is American. The studio I'm sitting in right
now is about 2 x 4 meters - a small studio, where I'm
talking about half a meter from the microphone so you
can hear background noise coming from the generators.
The noise is not audible so much in the broadcasts; I
have cut the low frequency range so that at 250 Hz it’s
approximately -1 dB, and at 30 Hz it’s approximately
-10 dB. From 500 Hz up to 15 000, the frequency deviation
is less than half a dB. That means that there is more
or less hi-fi sound on this station, and it's nice to
be able to keep it that way.
Generators, well they are two Mercedes, diesel engines,
each of 125 horsepower. Then there is a switch panel where
everything is handled automatically – we are yet
unable to start the generators from up here, but I'm working
to get it connected so that we will be able to. The workforce
on board is myself as technical manager, plus three "panel
operators"[?]. The broadcasting hours start at six
in the morning until nine at night, and from 5 minutes
past midnight to three in the morning. The three hours
intermission is because we have interferences from the
Czech which becomes excessive at that time. It's thought
that we should change frequency, which we probably will
do in the fall, they are now trying to find a better frequency.
The antenna makes it possible to go down to 1175 kHz,
so we have a lot,, we can change,,, and if we can go down
to 300 meters, we would improve the coverage for our ground
wave, which of course matters most to us.
Currently, there are two disc jockeys on board and
they have five hours each, the rest is music from tapes
and discs. Right now we are anchored outside Ramsey on
the Isle of Man, and we are approximately five kilometers
from ship to shore.
Ove Sjöström, April 14, 2007
a speech about his technical expereiences from Radio
Nord and Radio Caroline. I made this recording which
covers also the chat with us radio fans afterwards. |
 |
Ove
Sjöström - my photo 2007 |
At the end of August the program will probably be
changed altogether. As we have now merged with Atlanta,
all recordings will be made in London. They are currently
building four studios in order to manage all recordings
from there. They will dub the tapes and send a copy to
each of the ships. We will broadcast the same programs
simultaneously from the boats and probably all programming
will be broadcast from tape in the future - no live broadcasts
from the ship, as they have been, mostly, until now.
The marine crew's captain, mate, four seamen, stewart,
chef, and four motormen. Why such a big crew? If I compare
with Radio Nord, it is, because this vessel is larger,
and must have a sufficient number of men on board, because
of insurance policies. If the ship had been smaller than
500 tonnes, as the Mi Amigo - or Bon Jour as she was called
outside of Stockholm, it wouldn’t have been necessary.
But now we need to be this many on board, and we will
[anyhow] need to be this many in another six
months because there is still much work to do on the ship
- she was built in 1928, so she isn't exactly up to date.
Ummm, I notice that I put some English words into
my Swedish, uh, probably because this is the first Swedish
I’ve spoken since about three weeks, otherwise it
has been only English. Aaah, I had a technician to help
me, from Radio Nord, too, but he has left, and returned
to Sweden - don't know when I will - the future
will tell.
Well,,,, I do not know if there's so much more to
talk about, other than that I have changed the tape you
sent us to the tape we use. It is a professional tape,
and as far as I know it can’t be purchased on the
market, and it should be a better one, so you may well
have it for,,, eh,,, the help you have given. Ummm, unfortunately,
I haven’t been to London that much, at our headquarters,
and therefore I haven’t been able to gather much
data about the station, photos and stuff. I will go to
London again in mid-August. With me home I'll try to bring
all photographs from here, at the ship, and from the studios
in London, and the information that may be of interest
to you.
You may have noticed that we have shifted the frequency
one kHz, which I can say is caused by you, because I entirely
based the adjustment on your notes, so that now we'll
be in exactly the same frequency as the Czechs. Ummm,
he still interferes too much because he cut through too
strong, so our music and speech is not understandable.
I think we’ll end here by playing one of the themes
of the disc jockeys, and farewell and thank you, and I'll
call you when I get home in mid-August, so until then,
bye and thanks from the Irish Sea. [plays “Caroline”
The Fortunes]
 I
took this photo (left) at the pirate radio conference
"Flashback 67", at Heathrow Airport Centre
Hotel, London, in August 1977. It was then ten years
since the introduction of the Marine Broadcasting
Offences Act of 1967 The picture shows how these
three formed a discussion panel at the podium, and
from the left is Mark Stuart, Alan West and Graham
Gill.
During
the two days of his conference, Radio Mi Amigo and
Radio Caroline managed to perform "live"
broadcasts with interviews of interesting radio
pesonalities from the conference, over the radio
ship Mi Amigo, as can be heard
on this recording from August 14, 1977.
However,
rumors told us that the broadcasts were not live
at all. There were peculiar "blip" sounds
repeatedly heard in those broadcasts, very typical
how it used to sound when a cassette tape was set
on pause now and then during a recording. When recording
was completed, they took the cassette apart and
the tape roll was encapsuled in a waterproof casing,
and then flown to the MV Mi Amigo with the help
of a pigeon, landing on the ship. The tape roll
was then easily mounted back in an blank cassette
shell before it was used for the "live"
broadcast.
At
some point
a police patrol turned up at the conference. Ronan
O'Rahilly quickly went out to the car park, I do
not know if there was any particular reason for
that. In all cases, it gave me the rare opportunity
to catch him with my camera, but the police soon
disappeared, and everything calmed down again.
Flashback
-67 really was an event that made us pirate radio
enthusiasts want to meet again, and on July 1978,
the next year, in Nordwijk, Holland a new conference
opened, Zeesenders 20, to commemorate the 20 years
that had passed since the very first offshore pirate
started in 1958, Radio Mercur.
's
a recording of lectures in English
about the Nordic offshore pirate stations. Paul
"Dane" Foged starts with a lecture about
Radio Mercur. Nils Thalin talks about Radio Nord,
and Hasse Hansson talks about Radio Syd.
By
a coincidence (?) during this conference, the carrier
from Radio Caroline dropped and remained off the
air for 36 hours. In between the lectures, this
incident was vividly discussed with rumours and
fears of what was going on. There were also many
deejays and others among us with experiences of
life on board the MV Mi Amigo.
I happened to start my tape recorder
in the very moment when they went
back on 319m at 8 p.m. (July 30th). The next morning
when I awoke at 8.15 Radio Mi Amigo
was back too
|
|