Английская Википедия:1995 in British radio

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Версия от 04:39, 21 декабря 2023; EducationBot (обсуждение | вклад) (Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2023}} {{Year nav topic5|1995|British radio|British television|British music}} This is a list of events in British radio during 1995. ==Events== ===January=== * January – As part of major changes on the network, old music (typically anything recorded before 1990) is banned from the Radio 1 daytime playlist. ===February=== * 14 February...»)
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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Year nav topic5 This is a list of events in British radio during 1995.

Events

January

  • January – As part of major changes on the network, old music (typically anything recorded before 1990) is banned from the Radio 1 daytime playlist.

February

  • 14 February – Talk Radio UK becomes the last of three national commercial radio stations to go on air. It broadcasts on the mediumwave frequencies previously occupied by Radio 1.

March

  • No events.

April

  • 10 April – Virgin Radio starts broadcasting on FM in London. The station is a full simulcast of the national service apart from a 45-minute weekday early evening program. Consequently, at around this time, the national station is rebranded from Virgin 1215 to Virgin Radio.
  • 15 April – BBC Radio 3 launches a weekly music discussion programme called Private Passions.
  • 21 April – Steve Wright[1] and Bruno Brookes present their final shows for BBC Radio 1. Both had been at the station for more than ten years. Steve leaves the following differences with the station's new management over restructuring.
  • 23 April – Following Bruno Brookes’s departure, Mark Goodier begins his second stint as presenter of the Sunday afternoon Top 40 show.
  • 24 April – Chris Evans takes over the Radio 1 Breakfast Show from Steve Wright.

May

June

  • No events.

July

  • No events.

August

  • Rather than merely broadcasting the usual mix of non-stop music and promos, Heart 106.2's test transmissions include live broadcasts of New York station WPLJ.[2] The station launches on 5 September.

September

October

  • 9 October –
    • BBC Radio 3 begins broadcasting an hour earlier on weekdays with breakfast show On Air extended from two hours to three hours.[4]
    • Paul Gambaccini joins Radio 3 to present a new morning program called Morning Collection. Consequently, This Week's Composer moves to the later time of 12noon.
  • 21 October – Johnnie Walker ends his third and final stint at BBC Radio 1.

November

  • No events.

December

  • No events.

Unknown

  • The roll-out of BBC Radio 1’s FM network is completed and the station now has the same coverage on FM as the other BBC national stations and having been known on-air as Radio 1 FM, or even simply as 1FM, since the start of the decade to promote the station's move to FM, the on-air name reverts to Radio 1.
  • Radio Harmony is rebranded as Kix 96 and changes frequency.
  • The BBC last uses the Paris Theatre in central London as a venue for recording radio comedy and music with a live audience.[5]

Station debuts

Closing this year

Programme debuts

Continuing radio programmes

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

Ending this year

Deaths

See also

References