Sunset 102 was a radio station broadcasting to Manchester between 1989 and 1993.
Broadcast area | Manchester |
---|---|
Frequency | 102 MHz |
Programming | |
Format | Dance |
History | |
First air date | 22 October 1989 |
Last air date | October 1993 |
History
editSunset 102 launched as the first of a series of stations in areas which were already served by an Independent Local Radio station. Known as Incremental radio stations, they had to offer output not already available on ILR, such as specialist music or unique programmes for a specific section of the community. Sunset chose to offer a service of dance music and local community programming.
One of the station's founders was Mike Shaft, who was Managing Director and Programme Controller. The station proved popular with listeners, but Shaft left the station in 1990 due to disagreement with some members of the Board about the direction that the station was taking.
In May 1993, the Radio Authority prematurely terminated Sunset's licence, apparently accusing the station of providing inaccurate information about its financial and management affairs. In August 1993, the station reportedly had its transmission facilities withdrawn by NTL for non-payment. Following a brief return to the air, the liquidator was called in and the station fell silent in October 1993.
The liquidator was later to re-apply on behalf of Sunset Radio for its re-advertised licence - but lost out to Faze FM, who had proposed a dance music format. Faze used the name Kiss 102 for their station which they licensed from London station Kiss 100. It was later sold to Chrysalis Radio and re-branded to Galaxy 102. Their owners were then bought by Global Radio and the station became part of the Galaxy Network.[1]
On 3 January 2011, Galaxy, along with Global's Hit Music Network and several other stations were all rebranded to form the Capital network. Other than the weekday drivetime shows and local news, the majority of Capital's output is networked from London.
Relaunch
editAt 7am on Monday 12 October 2015 the station relaunched as The New Sunset Radio streaming on the internet and DAB Digital radio, in the Manchester area, as part of a 9-month trial that includes several other stations.
The output is similar with many of the original DJs including Mike Shaft, Steve Quirk and Audrey L. Hall.
Sunset DJs/presenters
edit- Ray Rose
- Pete Baker
- Duncan Smith
- Steve Quirk
- Jagger & Woody
- Mix Factory (Higgy, Mark XTC, Dave Pullen, Keith Biggs, Stubby)
- Andy Wiz****
- Hacienda DJs (Dave Rofe,Pete Robinson)
- Mike Lewis
- Hewan Clarke
- Dave Mason
- Massey & Frankie Shields
- Simon M
- 808 State
- Mike Shaft
- DJ Leaky Fresh
- Terry Christian[2]
- Liam Howlett[3]
- Sami B[4]
- Paul Hollins
- Deval[5]
- Greg Edwards
- Paul Harvey
- Cousin Matty
- Laney D
- Clash FM - DJ Carlos (Renegade FM), DJ Jay Wearden, DJ Moggy, JFMC (MC)
- Larry Benji
- DJ Clarkee
- Limit FM - Rick Jones, Reka
References
edit- ^ "A Guide to stations off the air: Why do commercial radio stations stop broadcasting?". Archived from the original on 2010-02-12. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ^ "Reference to Terry Christian's involvement". Archived from the original on 2010-12-08. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Reference to Liam Howlett's involvement". Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ^ "Reference to Sami B and DJ Stubbi's involvement". Retrieved 2010-05-23.
- ^ "Reference to Deval's involvement". Archived from the original on 2006-02-15. Retrieved 2010-05-23.
External links
edit- Manchester Evening News article
- New Sunset Radio website Archived 2015-11-18 at the Wayback Machine
- Sunset Radio returns to Manchester on DAB
- Sunset 102 The Kickin FM group on Facebook
- YouTube Channel dedicated to archiving all available Sunset 102 broadcasts
- Sunset 102 history part 1 Archived 2008-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
- Sunset 102 history part 2 Archived 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine
- Sunset 102 programme schedule Archived 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine
- 808 State show on Sunset 102 Archived 2011-05-31 at the Wayback Machine