Radio X (United Kingdom)

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Radio X
Radio X UK logo.png
Broadcast areaUnited Kingdom
Frequency
RDSRADIO X
SloganGet Into The Music
Programming
FormatAlternative music
Ownership
OwnerGlobal Radio
Capital FM
Capital XTRA
Classic FM
Gold
Heart
Heart 70s
Heart 80s
Heart 90s
Heart Dance
Heart Extra
LBC
LBC News
Smooth Radio
History
First air date
  • 1 September 1997 (as XFM)
  • 21 September 2015 (2015-09-21) (as Radio X)
Links
WebcastGlobal Player
Websitewww.radiox.co.uk Edit this at Wikidata

Radio X is a British National commercial radio station focused on alternative music, primarily indie rock, and owned by Global. Radio X launched nationally on 21 September 2015 as a rebrand of Xfm and superseded Xfm London and Xfm Manchester.[1]

The station has employed a number of personalities that have since gone on to greater fame including Russell Brand, Karl Pilkington, Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant, Simon Pegg, Christian O'Connell, Justin Lee Collins, Adam and Joe, Alex Zane, Tim Lovejoy, Dermot O'Leary and Josh Widdicombe.

History[]

Xfm was created in London in 1992 by Sammy Jacob (who founded its precursor Q102)[2] and Chris Parry. The station became full-time on 1 September 1997. During the following year the station played a range of music from its studios in 97 Charlotte Street. Jacob would later go on to co-found NME Radio and CDNX (Camden Experience) in 2008 and 2015 respectively.

In 1998, Xfm was acquired by the Capital Radio Group (now part of Global Radio) and relocated from Charlotte Street to Capital's headquarters at Leicester Square, where it remains today. On 23 August of that year, Xfm was closed down for four days, during which a test tape featuring mainstream soft-rock acts was looped. The station subsequently relaunched with a more mainstream format, and a new advert featuring a cartoon radio saying "Don't be afraid!", which referred to the perceived inaccessibility of its old format.[according to whom?] The soft-rock revamp was not a success, culminating in listener-led protests outside the Capital Radio studios. Listeners also lodged objections with the Radio Authority, which found XFM to be acting in a manner contrary to its licence requirements, and a degree of alternative output was eventually restored, particularly through night-time playlists and specialist shows.[according to whom?]

Following the take-over by Capital, the station dropped its wide-ranging music policy, which was replaced by a format based on USA college stations. The first audience figures after this change showed a sharp decline. The DJs were no longer able to select some of their own tracks, and specialist shows were dropped. The station soon became more male-orientated and featured football coverage and "laddish" output. This came to an end after the Radio Authority fined XFM £50,000 for breakfast presenter Tom Binns's joking about bestiality on air.

Capital Radio attempted to increase XFM's listening figures, recruiting DJs such as Zoe Ball, former BBC Radio 1 presenter, and re-recruiting comedians Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant who took voluntary redundancy when Capital bought the station, after the pair rose to significance with the first airing of The Office. Together with talent such as Zane Lowe and Christian O'Connell, this yielded growing listening figures. The music was, and is today, a play-listed mix of popular indie and soft rock.[citation needed]

Host John Kennedy is the only member of the current presenter lineup that has been with the radio station since its very first broadcasts.[3] His new music show, X-Posure is the station's longest running show and is credited as being the first to give radio play to artists including Adele, Florence and the Machine, Razorlight and Mumford & Sons.[4]

Expansion of the Xfm Network[]

Xfm logo used from 2003–15.

Xfm has held 28-day Restricted Service Licence FM broadcasts in a number of British cities, including Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff and Glasgow.

In 2000, Xfm London was added to a number of DAB multiplexes around the country, and in January 2006 its reach expanded when it replaced The Storm on a number of other local multiplexes, creating near-national coverage. It was at one point reported that this 'national' version of Xfm London (known as Xfm UK) would have local content drop-ins within it (e.g. news, travel) over time, but this ultimately never came to pass. Most DAB coverage of XFM carried the London version of the station, but for a time some multiplexes in the North of England instead received a feed of XFM Manchester.

In 2001, Xfm rehired Ricky Gervais and Steve Merchant to run the Saturday afternoon show. Karl Pilkington joined them to 'just push the buttons' but eventually became the focal point of the show. The trio often called the station a 'tin pot station', 'shoddy' and 'not just a small station in London but the smallest station in that building'.

By 2002, the station had added many specialist shows, such as 'London Express', 'The A-X of Alternative Music' and 'The Remix'. Afternoon and early-evening shows with Zane Lowe and Tim Lovejoy were innovative and although the daytime playlist consisted of 40 current releases, these were changed frequently, and the overall playlist contained about 90 records. However, in time the specialist shows gradually declined in number, and the playlist was again restricted in number.

On 9 June 2005, the group was awarded a permanent FM broadcasting licence to serve the city of Manchester as Xfm Manchester. This station went on air in March 2006. Also in 2005, Xfm was among the bidders for the regional North East franchise on 97.5 FM,[5] but this licence was ultimately awarded to Smooth Radio by Ofcom.

On 4 January 2006, GCap Media relaunched its Central Scotland regional station Beat 106 as Xfm Scotland.

In 2007, a fourth station joined the network with the launch of a new regional Xfm for south Wales, based at the Cardiff studio also home to Red Dragon FM (now Capital South Wales).

Output changes[]

In May 2007, in an attempt to cut costs, the parent company of Xfm, GCap Media, announced that they would be removing all presenters from the daytime (10 am–4 pm) lineup and replacing them with a jukebox based upon listener requests through their websites.[6] On 6 March 2008 an announcement was made reversing the decision to remove daytime presenters.[7] From 25 March 2008 a new schedule restoring daytime schedules was put in place.[8]

A new schedule was launched on 12 January 2009. Changes at this date included Jo Good leaving the Afternoon Show, including Afternoon X List, and new signing Richard Skinner taking over the Morning Show from Rick Shaw. The times of the shows were also adjusted, with the morning show only becoming a two-hour show (previously a three-hour show) and the afternoon show becoming a four-hour show (previously a 3-hour show). The weekend schedule was also adjusted at this time, with Rick Shaw moving to present the Weekend Morning Show on Saturday and Sunday from 10 am to 2 pm and Lliana Bird taking over the afternoon slots. This led to other changes in the weekend schedule, such as Marsha Shandur's Sunday Brunch ending, and the air times of Marc Haynes Certificate X changing (from 1 pm – 3 pm to 6 pm – 8 pm). Jo Good left the station during these changes, but rejoined at the end of 2012.[citation needed]

On 11 February 2008 GCap Media announced that they would be selling the analogue licence for the Manchester, Scotland and South Wales stations,[9] retaining only XFM London. This decision was made in an attempt to shore up profits and concentrate on 'winning brands', calling the former nationalisation strategy into question. After this announcement, in early 2008, breakfast show host Alex Zane admitted on air that the future of the London station was also being reviewed, even making jokey references to perhaps being out of a job soon. The sale of the South Wales station went ahead, with Town and Country Broadcasting relaunching this as Nation Radio; the sale of the Scotland and Manchester stations was suspended when Global Radio entered into discussions to purchase GCap Media.

The re-appointment of a previous Programme Controller in 2011 led to a number of changes to Xfm's output. Specialist shows such as Music:Response and Mix Master Mike Show returned, as did presenter Danny Wallace.[10] In September 2011 a new Xfm schedule began, and included Mary Anne Hobbs moving to a re-launched evening show, Music:Response. A new "local" slot was introduced. Broadcaster Richard Skinner left the station after two years.[11] The show Import:Export, produced and directed by Redefined Media, was resurrected and linked to KROQ Los Angeles.[12] Further weekend signings included The Sun journalist Gordon Smart starting a three-hour Sunday show. Smart's show ended in October 2013 when he left to join the Scottish Sun as editor.[citation needed] As part of the 2013 schedule Jon Holmes took over the breakfast show. Comedian Josh Widdicombe presented a show on Saturdays between 10 am and 1 pm.[citation needed] It was announced in March 2015 that Russell Brand would be hosting a new Sunday night show, which was to first air on 15 March.[13]

Following Heart and Galaxy owner Global's takeover of GCap Media, Xfm Scotland became Galaxy (it went on to become Capital Scotland in 2011), leaving just Manchester and London with local Xfm stations.

Following Global's acquisition of Real and Smooth Ltd, the Paisley/Renfrewshire 96.3 FM service previously broadcast as Real Radio XS became a new XFM Scotland in 2014. This service was available across central Scotland over DAB.

Up until the end of the Xfm branding, the London, Manchester and Scotland stations broadcast 43 hours a week of local programming – weekday breakfast and drive, and four hours a day at weekends – with networked programming, primarily from London, at other times. TV platforms followed the London output and all three stations were streamed online.

Rebrand as Radio X[]

On 7 September 2015, it was announced that Xfm would be rebranded as Radio X on 21 September.[14] The rebrand was carried out in partnership with creative agency We Are MBC. The rebranded station launched with new presenters including Chris Moyles, Vernon Kay, Johnny Vaughan and Ricky Wilson joining some existing XFM presenters on a refreshed schedule.

XFM aired its last day of programming on Sunday 13 September 2015. XFM Scotland ceased broadcasting entirely on the same day with Global Radio handing back the Paisley licence to Ofcom.

A 'holding' service of music and announcements began transmitting on national DAB under the Radio X title the following day, with this service also taking the place of XFM on FM, TV and online until the full launch of the new Radio X at 6:30 am on Monday 21 September 2015.

The first song played on the rebranded Radio X, by Chris Moyles just before 7 am on 21 September 2015, was "Love Machine" by Girls Aloud, an off-format nod to media reports of a male bias by the new station.[15]

Radio X is now available nationally via Digital One national DAB, with all local-layer XFM carriage dropped (replaced in many cases by Gold). The new national Radio X also replaced XFM on FM in London and Manchester, and on other platforms including TV and online. There is no longer any local output on the Manchester station, and the only variance between the UK, London and Manchester services is split advertising and top-of-the-hour news intros.

In October 2019, Radio X's DAB station switched to DAB+ using a lower quality 40bps stream. The change was made to make room for LBC News on the Digital One multiplex.

Stations[]

The stations which formerly comprised the Xfm network were:

  • XFM London, which has been broadcasting on 104.9 FM in the Greater London area full-time since 1997 (and by Restricted Service Licence from 1992).
  • XFM Manchester, which was launched on 97.7 FM on 15 March 2006.

Notable presenters and programming[]

Current presenters[]

Former presenters[]

Former hosts on the network include:

References[]

  1. ^ "Radio X confirmed in single Chris Moyles tweet". RadioToday. 6 September 2015.
  2. ^ "My Life In Media: Sammy Jacob". The Independent. 8 June 2008. Retrieved 1 November 2009.
  3. ^ "Q&A: John Kennedy, XFM | Complete Music Update".
  4. ^ "John Kennedy Wins First Ever Arqiva Commercial Radio Music Champion Award".
  5. ^ XFM application for North East licence from Ofcom site (pdf) Archived 2 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Radio Today: XFM drops daytime jocks". Archived from the original on 19 May 2007. Retrieved 17 June 2007.
  7. ^ "Music Week - XFM brings back daytime DJs". Retrieved 19 March 2008.
  8. ^ "Radio Today: DJs return to Xfm daytime". Archived from the original on 10 March 2008. Retrieved 19 March 2008.
  9. ^ Plunkett, John (11 February 2008). "DAB 'not economically viable'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 February 2008.
  10. ^ Deans, Jason (4 July 2011). "Yes Man author Danny Wallace joins Xfm London as breakfast host". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2011.
  11. ^ "to Hobbs goes nightly in XFM shuffle". 22 August 2011. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  12. ^ "Import:Export with KROQ". Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  13. ^ NME.COM. "Russell Brand to make radio return with XFM Sunday evening show". NME.COM.
  14. ^ "Full line-up for Global's Radio X confirmed". RadioToday. 7 September 2015. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  15. ^ Shepherd, Jack (21 September 2015). "Chris Moyles hosts comeback Radio X show: Dismisses 'male-focussed' agenda and plays Love Machine by Girls Aloud". The Independent. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b c "How We Met: Karl Pilkington & Ricky Gervais". The Independent. 3 December 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  17. ^ "LinkedIn Profile". Linked In. Retrieved 12 February 2016.

External links[]

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