Northants 96

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Northants 96
Image:StationImage4.jpg
Broadcast area Northampton
First air date November 30, 1986
Frequency 96.6 MHz
Format Contemporary
Owner GCap Media
Website www.northants96.co.uk

Northants 96 is a local commercial radio station in the United Kingdom.

Northants 96 broadcasts to the whole of Northamptonshire on 96.6 FM from its studios in Northampton town centre, via the transmitter located in the Kingsthorpe area. It is owned by GCap Media.

Contents

However Northants Radio was not the first local commercial radio station broadcasting in the county. Hereward Radio provided programmes from Peterborough in the early 80s, using its former frequency of 104.6 FM. Shortly afterwards due to general difficulties within the commercial radio industry at the time Hereward decided to pull out (Hereward continued in Peterborough). In 1985 the Independent Broadcasting Authority decided to reattribute the Independent Local Radio franchise to a new company, Northants Radio Ltd.

Northants' launch followed another less difficult period in broadcasting when local radio frequencies on the FM band were expanded and re-organised to form 'sub-bands' (104-105 MHz were reserved for BBC Local Radio, whereas 96.1-97.7MHz were given over to independent local radio). Local radio in the Northamptonshire's went as follows:

Northants 96 launched at 10.00am on November 30 1986 with Tony West broadcasting the first regular programmes on the station. Following a synthesised alarm clock ticking saying: "Good Morning. 10am , Sunday 30th of November 1986, and this is the new sound of radio in Northamptonshire- Northants 96!" followed by a station idetification jingle and a welcome message from the then Lord Lieutenant of Northamptonshire.

Notable disc jockeys on Northants included Northants' first breakfast show, future well-known hypnotist Paul McKenna and Davd Prever, who would later move to Wiltshire's GWR FM

Its to be noted that Northants 96 and Northants Radio were interchangeable names for the station and also it relayed programmes on a mediumwave frequency- 1557kHz which opened on June 25, 1990.

Northants 96 was essentially part of a regional collective of commercial stations- Chiltern Radio, based in Luton and Bedford. Station directors had to tackle a major concern in the area; "how do you make this station appear more 'local' than the previous incumbent, while saving money at the same time?" The result was that programmes were syndicated from Chiltern headquarters in Luton during the day, consisting of popular middle of the road music whilst 'opting out' for hourly local news bulletins. Thus The Hot FM sustaining service was born.

The Chiltern Radio Group did this by making use of new technology whereby a disc-jockey interjects with a identification jingle during a networked/syndcated programme by pressing a button with the result that depending on where the listener was, you heard "Northants 96- The Hot FM" or "Chiltern Radio 97.6- The Hot FM". This solved the problem of inexpensive local radio with the added benefit of totally opting out of the network for local emergencies, for example snow reports or flooding information.

In 1988 the Home Office declared that the independent local radio industry was sufficient enough to support a permanent split in AM-FM broadcasting and enforce this rule through the IBA. All BBC and ILR stations were required to broadcast separate programming or lose their licences.

The Chiltern Radio Network responded to this by launching its second sustaining service, SuperGold on July 15 1980. SuperGold was a general golden oldies station broadcasting to {Hertfordshire|Herts]], Beds, Bucks and Cambridge on the medium wave band with Northants Radio SuperGold following suit. Both the classic and contemporary FM and the oldies AM stations were rated very highly, consistently beating its local competitor BBC Radio Northampton.

The Chiltern Radio Group, then a plc received a hostile takeover bid from GWR Group plc in 1995 which was reluctantly accepted. This affected both FM and AM stations and networked programming- The Hot FM closed and associated stations were rebranded "The New______- A Better Music Mix" while SuperGold was absorbed into GWR Group's existing Classic Gold network.

Northants 96 however was less affected by this major change than other stations in the enlarged group (Chiltern Radio for example) becoming The New Northants 96 whereas its AM station Northants Radio SuperGold became Classic Gold 1557. The significance of this takeover was more resources meant a more local service; up to 15 hours a day were broadcast locally on FM as opposed to a mere 4 under "The Hot FM" whilst Classic Gold retained 8 hours.

Programming-wise Northants 96 underwent a subtle shift towards more upbeat contemporary and chart hits and less in the way of talk. A past slogan voiced by Eddy Temple-Morris claimed that "other radio stations talked over the end of songs, whilst we [didn't]- That's the Northants 96 difference". This over time evolved into the Better Music Mix of the 80s 90s and today and Today's Best Mix for Northamptonshire.

Nowadays Northants 96 is a solidly performing local radio station.see here.

Jagger and Woody present the breakfast show, Cat James hosts mid-mornings and Neil Grayson presents drivetime.

  • The Hot FM [1]
  • Radio Authority Pocket Book 1994-2002
  • Media UK [2]

Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.