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Beacon (radio station)

Free Radio (Black Country & Shropshire)
Free Radio network logo.png
Broadcast area Shropshire, Wolverhampton and Black Country
Slogan All the biggest hits - All day long
Frequency 103.1 & 97.2 MHz
RDS: Free SHR & Free WLV
DAB
Online
First air date 12 April 1976
Format Contemporary
Audience share 5% (August 2011, [2])
ERP 2.00 kW, 2.70 kW
Owner Bauer Media Group
Website planetradio.co.uk/free/

Free Radio Shropshire & Black Country (previously known as Beacon Radio), is an Independent Local Radio station serving Shropshire and the Black Country in the West Midlands region of England. The station, owned and operated by the Bauer Media Group, broadcasts from studios in Oldbury and broadcasts on 103.1 / 97.2 FM and DAB Digital Radio, as well as online at www.freeradio.co.uk, The station is part of the Bauer City 1 network, which broadcasts a mix of chart music from the last 15 years alongside local/national news, travel, sport and weather.

Free Radio brand serves over 800,000 adults across the West Midlands alone, ( 722.000 on FM )

Free Radio has other stations in Birmingham, Coventry, Warwickshire, Herefordshire and Worcestershire and also including a sister station called Free Radio 80s on AM and DAB

Beacon Radio began broadcasting to Wolverhampton and the Black Country from studios at 267 Tettenhall Road in Wolverhampton on mediumwave 303 metres, and 97.2 MHz (from Turner's Hill) at 6 a.m. on 12 April 1976.

The first presenter was Mike Baker and the first song to be played was Eric Carmen's "Sunrise". The station originally set out to broadcast Beautiful Music including soul and country rock with a heavy bias towards American chart music with artists like Linda Ronstadt and The Eagles.

The station's original Managing Director was Jay Oliver, an American who, with his Programme Controller Allen McKenzie (a Scot/Canadian), was responsible for the Mid-Atlantic sound that flooded the West Midlands for three years (including a US-style jingle package).

As with other UK commercial stations at the time, the station's commitment to news and speech broadcasting under news editor Mike Stewart in its opening year, particularly in the evenings, was extensive; and its late-evening music programmes appeared to offer the presenters a freedom to enlighten, with a wide choice of recordings, as well as to entertain.


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