The Netherlands 1395 Big L didn’t start at 2200 UTC Tuesday evening with their religious service. Wednesday morning also off. Tuesday evening WEGP Presque Isle was booming in. (Bengt Ericson, ARC, Växjö)
Visar inlägg med etikett Big L. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett Big L. Visa alla inlägg
onsdag 26 januari 2011
torsdag 3 december 2009
ARC Newsflash: Big L now on the air again on 1395 kHz
Big L 1395 was heard at 1700 UTC today with a great signal booming into Southern Sweden. It was not on the air as late as 1600. Many KBC Radio spots and the station says it is directed at truckers on the continent. (Bengt Ericson, ARC, Växjö)
Etiketter:
1395 kHz,
AM,
ARC Newsflash,
Big L,
medium wave
torsdag 26 november 2009
No sign of Big L on 1395 sofar
No sign of Big L on 1395 kHz over the weekend. It is only the pirates Energy Power AM and WNKR still fighting on the frequency. (Bengt Ericson, ARC, Växjö) It may not have any significance for the Big L comeback but one of the station's main profiles, Mike Read, is selling off his entire music library and related items on the 30th Nov 2009 at Chiswick Auctions (West London).
fredag 10 april 2009
Pirate BBC Essex now on the air!
Today it's Good Friday. I wonder what Jesus would have said about choosing such a name for the day? I suspect his Friday felt like a quite long one….
Forty-five years ago today the BBC monopoly in the UK was challenged as Radio Caroline started broadcasting from a former Danish passenger ferry off the Essex coast. Since that day British broadcasting was changed forever and one "pirate" after another took to the airwaves. During the three years which the stations were on the air British listeners got accustomed to a continous diet of music 24 hours a day and the BBC had to follow suit by establishing its own pop channel, Radio One.
The m/v Caroline, previously Fredericia, home of Radio Caroline in 1964.
If you want to enjoy some real radio nostalgia you can listen in to Pirate BBC Essex over the web. You may also be able to pick up the signal on MW 729, 765 or 1530 kHz although these frequencies are pretty crowded. The transmissions will continue until April 13. Incidentally, the LV18 is also featured as a broadcasting vessel in thed current film The Boat that Rocked the World.
Tune in and turn on!
Forty-five years ago today the BBC monopoly in the UK was challenged as Radio Caroline started broadcasting from a former Danish passenger ferry off the Essex coast. Since that day British broadcasting was changed forever and one "pirate" after another took to the airwaves. During the three years which the stations were on the air British listeners got accustomed to a continous diet of music 24 hours a day and the BBC had to follow suit by establishing its own pop channel, Radio One.

Forty-five years later BBC Radio Essex is celebrating the memory of the start of offshore radio by special broadcasts from the former lightship LV18. Many wellknown names from the golden days of offshore radio are participating. At the time of writing I am listening to good old "Cardboard Skues", Keith Skues, who in the 1960s could be heard on both Radio Caroline and Radio London (BigL).

Tune in and turn on!
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