Local radio arrived in Birmingham on 9 November 1970 with
the opening of BBC Radio Birmingham broadcasting from the newly opened
broadcasting centre at Pebble Mill.
Radio services had first started from the city some 48 years
earlier when station 5IT began transmitting. It became the base for the
Midlands regional service (post-war the Midlands Home Service) in 1927 and
moved into new studios at 282 Broad Street. In the mid-50s additional studios
and offices were acquired at 52 Carpenter Road, Edgbaston. Pebble Mill housed
the television studios, with the foyer famously used for Pebble Mill at One, and radio studios for Radio Birmingham and network
programmes. The station also had a shop and information centre at 80 New Street
Radio Birmingham became BBC WM is November 1981 to better
reflect its coverage area and in the summer of 2004 moved into city centre Mailbox
development.
When it launched the station was managed by Jack Johnston a "fiercesome Glaswegian" who'd worked
in the Broad Street newsroom, and his deputy, the programme organiser, Brian
Harris. Jack was succeeded by John Pickles in 1981 (ex Radio Durham, Radio
Oxford and Radio Scotland) and by Tony Inchley in 1987 (ex Radios Stoke,
Manchester and Leicester).
Like many of the new BBC local stations they employed a mix
of experienced and inexperienced hands. But the voice chosen to look after the
breakfast show had zero broadcasting experience. He was Peter Powell a 19-year
old local club DJ who just happened to live next door the secretary of producer
Michael Ford (already a music producer for Birmingham-based shows on the Light
Programme he'd go on to produce the
Early
Show and Charlie Chester's show for Radio 2). To his astonishment Powell passed
a couple of auditions and got the job. But by his own admission "I was,
quite frankly, useless". He'd left by the following summer but it did lead
to a try-out on Radio 1 with some Saturday afternoon shows in late 71/early 72
before Radio Luxembourg beckoned.
In fact Peter wasn't the first voice on air. That honour
fell to new born Robert Clifford Joiner who had arrived into the world earlier
that morning to proud parents Valerie and Bob. Young Robert would make an
appearance each year on the anniversary date as the BBC Radio Birmingham baby.
The person who took over from Peter Powell on the breakfast
show, titled On the Move, was Les
Ross. He been with the station from the start co-presenting the Saturday
morning Ross and Henry Show with John
Henry (later Head of Music at Buzz FM). In 1965 Leslie Meakin had already
successfully auditioned for a Mecca ballroom DJ gig, beating Johnnie Walker,
but after leaving school he secured a day job at IBM on Hagley Road and then as
a clerk at Witton Cemetery. He was on Radio Birmingham until the Spring of 1975
by which time he was still hosting the Saturday morning Leslie Ross Show and the weekday mid-morning show.
The launch of commercial rival BRMB in 1974 saw the opening
of the transfer window between the two Birmingham stations. Les Ross
unsuccessfully applied to BRMB in 1974 but would actually end up at Radio Tees
when it started in June 1975. He was encouraged to move by Bob Hopton, a
Birmingham-based network music producer, who was to be the first programme
controller at Tees. Ross did get to BRMB in March 1976 where he stayed until
2002, including four years on sister station Xtra AM, and where for the
majority of the time he presented the breakfast shows. After a spell at Saga he
returned to the BBC (2005-2009), had a few months at Big City Radio and these
days is on Wolverhampton's community station WCRFM.
In 2015 Les returned to BBC WM for two shows as part of
their 45th anniversary Legends Weekend.
In these blog posts I normally include some early Radio Times programme schedules but in
the case of Radio Birmingham the first one I have in my collection is for the
week commencing 12 April 1975.
The station had an early start at 5 am (earlier indeed than
national radio which at this time didn't wake-up until 6 am on Radio 2) with
On the Move presented by David Hoare. David
had gained his on-air experience aged just 15 with the Gibraltar Broadcasting
Corporation before coming to the UK in 1974 and working at Radio Birmingham. He
too moved to Radio Tees just a few weeks after this programme schedule was
published. In 1978 he returned to Gibraltar where he continued to work in both
radio and TV and was also ordained as a minister of the Church of England. He
died in 2016.
The breakfast show was Heart
of the Nation with former BFBS Malta presenter John McLeod. Looking after
the Thursday edition is Pete Simpkin. Pete came into broadcasting as an
engineer at Southern TV, ATV and the BBC in Southampton before joining Radio
Birmingham as a station assistant in 1971.
Les Ross was working out his contract on the mid-morning
show. He was followed by the phone-in Morning
Call with Chris Smith (Mon), Derek Dingle (Tues-Wed), Jo Abraham (Thurs)
and Mike Gandon (Fri).
After joining Radio 4 for The World at One and The
Archers (also coming from Pebble Mill of course) the afternoon schedule was
a bit of a mixed bag. On Tuesday and Thursday there was 80 New Street which "discussed topics with local experts and
passers-by". One of the presenters of the arts magazine Showtime (Friday) is Ken Dudeney. Ken
was on the station for over 20 years having previously joined the BBC as a
station manager in London. He presented
a country music show Sounds Country
(Wed) which later became Town and Country
and it was his voice that closed Radio Birmingham and opened BBC WM in 1981.
The station's drivetime show was given the slightly offbeat
title of Home James! All the
presenters took a turn on this show, this week it was Pete Simpkin. In the 80s
the programme was rebadged as the more prosaic Coming Home and Steve Woodhall was its regular presenter.
|
Extract from 1977 BBC booklet Serving Neighbourhood and Nation |
The large Asian population of the West Midlands had a
dedicated programme
East in West with
Mohammed Ayyub. Born in Pakistan he moved to the city in 1961. He would co-found
the Oriental Star Agencies record label and by the late 60s was volunteering
for Birmingham Hospital radio. He worked for the BBC between 1971 and 1995
initially on Radio Birmingham and then for the Asian Network when both BBC WM
and Radio Leicester hived off their MW transmitters for part of the time. He
then founded the Asian station Radio XL.
Radio Birmingham's transmission area covered Wolverhampton
and there was a programme for that part of the world called Wulfrun Echo. Here it's presented by
Chris Phipps. Chris was the full-time Wolverhampton reporter based at their
offices in the Grand Theatre. He presented Wulfrun
Echo for seven years and on BBC1 in the Midlands was one of the presenters
of contemporary music show Look Hear!
that was introduced by Toyah Willcox. He moved to Tyne-Tees TV and was one of
the producers on The Tube.
The best known name here must be Jim Rosenthal, for decades
a presenter and commentator for ITV Sport. Jim had joined the station in 1972 from
the Oxford Mail. Initially a news
reporter he was encouraged to cover the sport which for football fans included
the Big Six: Birmingham City, Coventry City, Aston Villa, Wolves, West Brom and
Walsall. Others on Birmingham's sports team included Roger Moody (later a
manager for BBC Sport and then at Sky for 13 years) and Nick Owen (also initially
taken on as a news reporter and later, of course, on ATV, TV-am and Good Morning with Anne and Nick). Jim
moved to the Radio Sports Unit in 1976 working on Sport on 2 before heading off to ITV in 1980. Earlier this year he
spoke to BBC WM's Adrian Goldberg, you can that conversation here.
Presenting Soccer
Special is Norman Wheatley. Norman is better known for presenting folk
music shows: Gentlefolk (1975-78) on
Radio Birmingham, on Mercia Sound in 1980 with Mercia Folk and then a general music show on BRMB (1981-85).
|
Barry Lankester (photo from Paul R. Jackson's Showreel website) |
The most experienced broadcaster on the station
at this time was Barry Lankester. Barry had
joined the BBC in the Midlands in 1955 as a studio manager. During the 1960s he
was an announcer, presenter and newsreader presenting
Midlands Today when it started in 1964, compereing
Friday Night is Music Night in the days
when they had regional editions and making the 'story so far' announcements at
the beginning of
The Archers. At
Radio Birmingham it's his voice you hear on the opening announcements (with
jingles recorded by the Midland Radio Orchestra). Barry would specialise in
music programme production hence his involvement here in
Music Room and the
Birmingham
Brass competition.
The station's first news editor was print journalist Roger
Clark but he left to join LBC and three years later on BBC Radio Oxford. Following
Roger in the news editor post was Martin Henfield, though this year (1975) he
was to make the move up to Manchester initially as deputy manager, becoming the
manager for five years in 1988. On television he read the news on Look North and later North West Tonight.
Martin's brother Mike also briefly worked for Radio
Birmingham in the Wolverhampton office. A journalist on the Birmingham Post he had a long career in
commercial radio as deputy news editor at BRMB in 1974, news editor at Mercia
Sound in 1980 and then management positions at Radio Wyvern, Red Rose, GWR and
Jazz FM in Manchester.
Others on the news team around this time included Bob
Sinkinson who was the BBC's Midlands Correspondent for many years and Frances
Coverdale who moved on to Midlands Today,
was a BBC national news reader and then presenter of Radio 4's PM.
When there was nothing on the telly on Saturday mornings the
kids could tune into
Radio Brum Club and even send off for their membership badge.
The regular presenters were George Parry and Roger Thomas but they encouraged
the local children to come into the studio and participate. Two kids that did
join the Club were broadcaster Bill Buckley and composer David Lowe. David
would end up freelancing at the station and formed the band Cool Fish with
Samantha Meah who's had two stints on BBC WM, most recently returning in 2019.
Like many of the BBC local stations radio Birmingham
attempted to cater for all music tastes. Shows included Reggae Reggae with Barry Curtis (later at Beacon Radio), Jazz Club with Mike Johnson, Caribbean Corner presented by Dave
Charlesworth and Philip Nanton (now an author and poet resident in Barbados),
progressive music with Malcolm Jay in Heavy
Pressure which would also feature specially recorded sessions made in
Pebble Mill's Studio 2.
Moving on from the mid-70s here are just a taste of some of
the other names that have appeared on Birmingham/WM.
Ed Doolan: Birmingham became Ed's adopted home from 1974
when he joined BRMB, moving to Radio Birmingham six years later. I wrote about
Ed following his death in January 2018.
Nicky Steele: another DJ that made the BRMB to BBC leap in
the 1980s. Moved on to Xtra AM. Died in 2001 aged 53.
Peter York: a former pirate radio jock (Radio City) and club
DJ who was on the station in the late 80s before moving to BBC Radio Oxford.
Malcolm Boyden: print journalist who started broadcasting at
Beacon Radio before moving to WM in 1993. Has also worked at BBC CWR and Radio
Oxford and can currently he heard on BBC Hereford & Worcester.
Tony Butler: a sports broadcaster who has ping-ponged
between BBC and commercial radio in the Midlands for the past half century.
Alastair Yates: spent the greater part of his career as a
newsreader on BBC TV, ITV and Sky News but had started in radio at Radio Derby
before joining Radio Birmingham in 1978 for a mid-morning show.
Alan Dedicoat: was the breakfast show presenter when Radio Birmingham
switched over to BBC WM. Alan had appeared on hospital radio in Birmingham
before joining as a station assistant in 1979. In 1983 he went to Radio Devon
and four years later was at Radio 2 as an announcer and where he stayed as
presenter and newsreader for 28 years.
Stuart Roper: an ex-press photographer before he moved into
radio, initially helping out at Birmingham Hospital Radio and then joining the
BBC in the 1970s as a TO. With Viv Ellis he co-presented the mid-morning The 206 Club in the early to mid-80s.
Viv Ellis: former print journalist she worked at Radio
Birmingham/WM on The 206 Club before
moving into TV production and direction (e.g. Network East, Top Gear
and Pebble Mill at One). From 1990 on
working in a number of production roles for various companies.
Gordon Astley: had two stints at BBC WM in the 90s. His
radio career started at BBC Radio Stoke around 1971. Later at Mercia Sound, Beacon and BBC
Southern Counties.
Andrew Peach: was just a teenager when he got to Pebble Mill
as often as he could (1987-92), helping out Ed Doolan, making trails etc. After
joining Radio Oxford and then Radio Berkshire in 1994 he was back in Birmingham
on BBC WM to host the breakfast show (2008-11). A Radio 2 newsreader from 1998,
also on the World Service and Radio 4 continuity shifts he currently presents
the breakfast show on Radio Berkshire.
Rev Michael Blood: was a religious affairs producer at
Birmingham from 1970 and had a Sunday morning 'god slot' for many years called
A Word in Advance. Also presented other shows, for example in 1981 he was one
of the presenters of the lunchtime Good Company programme. He left the station
in 2005.
Carl Chinn: on BBC WM with a weekday daily show from 1994 to
2013. He has written and lectured extensively on local history.
Paul Franks: joined the station in 1979 and in more recent
years hosted the drivetime show.
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The BBC WM schedule for w/c 30 July 1994 |
Jenny Wilkes: joined from BRMB in 1982 initially presenting
a youth-orientated show Fast Forward. Until earlier this year was presenting a
Sunday afternoon soul show as well as working as an events manager for the BBC but
has recently announced her retirement.
Phil Upton: another ex-BRMB DJ who joined BBC WM in 2006 as
the weekday breakfast presenter. Now on BBC CWR.
Joanne Malin: joined from Central News in 2009 to present a
mid-morning show. Moved back to TV in late 2012 to read the news for Midlands Today.
Caroline Martin: joined in 2012. Her radio career started on
the offshore Radio Caroline in 1986 and then at Contact 94 and a number of
other stations including BRMB and Free.
Graham Torrington: recently retired from radio, Graham
presented his Late Night Graham
Torrington show from 2012-2020. His start in radio came at BRMB and he's also
appeared on Buzz FM, Kix 96, the GWR/GCap network and BBC Radio Bristol.
[At time of publishing I'm still adding to this list]
BBC WM don't have any special programmes planned to mark
their 50 years but back in 2010 Janice Long (who was on the station in the late
2000s) did present this recap of the first 40 years.
With thanks to Tony Worrall