-a pirate radio station is a radio station that broadcasts without a valid license
Why did they begin?
-people began broadcasting from off shore sites (boats or sea forts) as a loophole to avoid needing a broadcasting license, as they weren't technically in the country requiring such licenses.
-the stations could play whatever music they liked, such as pop and rock music, which was not played by the BBC at the time (1960s)
"Nightclub owner and music manager Ronan O'Rahilly was frustrated by the hold that major record labels and other organisations had over BBC radio, and decided to take them all on by broadcasting illegally from a boat off the east coast of England. Radio Caroline started transmitting in 1964, and teenagers in the UK and large parts of Western Europe were able to hear modern pop, rock, jazz and soul on their radios for the first time."
-in the 80s a new generation felt they weren't being represented on the airwaves, and pirate radio stations catered for the UKs black community.
Why was it so popular?
-a lot of young people tuned in as they weren't interested in the broadcasts by the BBC and wanted to listen to rock and pop music
-people could write in with requests for songs to be played
-a lot of the DJs were very charismatic and gained big fan bases
-there was a sense of community amongst listeners and DJs
Facts
-In reaction to the popularity of pirate radio, BBC radio was restructured in 1967, establishing BBC Radio 1, Radio 2, Radio 3 and Radio 4. A number of DJs of the newly formed Radio 1 came from pirate stations.
-home-made transmitters were sometimes constructed inside biscuit tins so they could be hidden in raids.
-The 1970s and 1980s saw a wave of land-based pirate radio, broadcasting mostly in larger towns and cities, transmitting from flats and tower blocks. These included community-focused local stations as well as stations emerging for the first time to specialise in particular music genres.
-In London, a notable moment would be the launching of Britain's first black owned music station Dread Broadcasting Corporation (DBC) in 1980. DBC played reggae and soca as well as other black music
-the growth of pirate radio in the 1980s was so rapid that at one point pirate radio operators outnumbered legal broadcasters
-Although UK pirate radio has in the main concentrated on broadcasting music not catered for by the mainstream, there has been some overt political pirate radio.
-The earliest of these was Radio Free Scotland, which hijacked the sound channels of BBC television after closedown.
-Similarly, Voice of Nuclear Disarmament would do the same for a short period in the early 1960s in London.
-In 1982, Our Radio was broadcasting music, anarchism, and other left wing views to London. Our Radio once evaded arrest by setting up a dummy antenna for the Home Office to find.
-During the 1984–1985 miners' strike, Radio Arthur operated in the Nottinghamshire area.
-Political programming has been a feature of the many black community pirate radio stations that have grown in the UK since the 1980s. For the likes of Galaxy Radio, part of their mission is to: "de-brainwash the black community". The station combines reggae and soca with robust articulation of "black empowerment against a system designed our oppress our brothers and sisters" and live phone-in discussions
-pirate radio was important in popularising many underground UK music genres such as jungle, acid house and grime, which mainstream radio stations wouldn't play.
-The stations gave immigrant communities programming in their native languages, championed local interests, and provided a platform for alternative music
-“I think there’s the same energy behind it as there was with pirate radio, but internet radio is that step between pirate and mainstream. You’ve got their freedom, but you’re still legit. You hear the stories about the pirate radio stations in the ’90s where you’d have to get a coat hanger to be able to listen to it, or the police would turn up and [the station owners] would have to pack up their gear and just leg it. Obviously, we’re in a space where this is a proper thing and we’re a company, but we’re still not creatively limited by anything. We can work with who we want and put whatever we want on air, which is an amazing place to be.” - Ami Bennett, Foundation FM founder
-"It’s still a form of protest, because you’re occupying space,” says Shy One. “Mainstream radio is very status quo: there’s no form of expression in there, and it’s all very contrived and programmed and strictly regulated. When people are independently creating and taking up space in the same medium, what they’re actually doing is making a really obvious, non-violent protest. One that is pro-community and pro-culture.” - Shy One
-"At the beginning of the 1990s there were more than 500 illegal stations broadcasting in the UK"
Video and stills from a 16mm film that shows visits to Radio London, Radio 355 and Radio Caroline South. All three stations are visited and the (tender) Offshore 1 is used to travel between the stations, 1967.
photos and a DJ timetable from a boat visit in around 1973
Sticker promoting K-I-N-G radio
Radio City Memorabilia
Radio Caroline's ship, the Ross Revenge
Radio City's Shivering Sands fort
the Mebo II, Radio Northsea International's ship
"In August 1964 I was 12 years old and on the annual family holiday at Walton-on-Naze. On a blisteringly hot and hazy day we took a boat trip out to the Mi Amigo with sweets and chocolate for those on board. The sea was as smooth as glass. The boat we went on was called the Joanne and was manned by the guy who normally ran pleasure trips on the Bumblebee from the Mabel Greville groyne. Like the weather then, my memory is a little hazy but I have found some photos of the day."
A pirate radio DJ being mobbed by fans for autographs at a fair.
Wedding taking place on the radio caroline ship.
Radio 390
Radio city poster and membership card
Red sands fort
Radio Caroline
DJs on the mv.Laissez-Faire
The DJ booth on Radio Essex
The studio of Balamii & flyers for one of their events
factsheet produced by Ofcom condemning pirate radio
Rebel sounds: A brief history of pirate radio in the UK
What do you do if radio stations aren't playing your music? Start broadcasting it yourself. Here's a brief history of a movement that spawned iconic stations such as Kiss FM and Rinse.
Written by Chris ParkinPublished on
Pirate radio stations aren't just a London thing. Over the past 80 years, they've popped up all over the world, from Brussels and Paris to Miami, New York and beyond. Most of them have had one unifying reason for existing – to give voice to something that established legal stations refuse to broadcast.
In the UK and elsewhere, this has almost always been black club music. Indeed, the history of UK pirate radio is a universal story that helps explain the enduring appeal of – and the continuing need for – pirate radio stations everywhere.
1930s
The concept of popular pirate radio began with Radio Luxembourg in the 1930s. The station was already broadcasting legally around Europe from the tiny nation of Luxembourg, but with no commercial radio allowed in the UK thanks to the BBC's monopoly of the airwaves, entrepreneurs decided to use Radio Luxembourg's transmitter – the most powerful privately owned transmitter in the world – to broadcast sponsored programmes to Britain and Ireland, 'pirating' those country's wavelengths. The station had a huge influence on British and Irish youth right up until the 1950s, but its primary purpose was to sell advertising and make a buck.
1960s
With the advent of commercial TV in the UK, Radio Luxembourg's star waned and it was another pirate radio station that ruled the 1960s, setting the template for stations whose main concern was the music they played.
Nightclub owner and music manager Ronan O'Rahilly was frustrated by the hold that major record labels and other organisations had over BBC radio, and decided to take them all on by broadcasting illegally from a boat off the east coast of England. Radio Caroline started transmitting in 1964, and teenagers in the UK and large parts of Western Europe were able to hear modern pop, rock, jazz and soul on their radios for the first time.
It wasn't the first offshore station – there were examples in California in the 1930s, as well as off the coasts of Denmark and Sweden in the 1950s – but Caroline inspired others to drop anchor, such as Radio London, and forced the UK government to draft new legislation – 1967's Marine Offences Act – to ban them. It also inspired the launch of the BBC's new pop station, Radio 1.
1980s
The future of broadcasting on the open waves was all but over when the Marine Offences Act came into force, and pirate radio dwindled until the 1980s, when a new generation decided they weren't being represented on air. Black music stations such as Horizon, Jazz Funk Music, Dread Broadcasting Corporation, LWR and, most famously, Gordon Mac's iconic Kiss FM specialised in soul, reggae, funk and other music absent from UK radio.
Broadcasting from high-rise tower blocks across the country, these stations were involved in a cat-and-mouse game with Department Of Trade And Industry agents, but as these pirates became more and more popular, they invested in new technology that made it harder for the DTI to trace them.
Early 1990s
Pirate radio stations sprang up everywhere in the '90s. Not just in the UK, but in other countries too. FG, Nova and Generations in France; Fire, Wah Gwan and Bashment in New York; Bass FM, Bass Side and Hot in Miami. The severe lack of diversity on UK stations, though, made it a real hotbed for pirates.
At the beginning of the 1990s there were more than 500 illegal stations broadcasting in the UK, with dance and rave stations such as Sunrise, Centreforce and Fantasy joining more established pirates – especially after Radio 1 claimed that acid house and rave culture was going nowhere.
It didn't take long for the government to try and clamp down, though. They offered stations a deal. Go off air and become eligible for one of many new legal radio licenses being created. Kiss FM took the deal, while the government got tough with those remaining.
Late '90s and 2000s
A new, raw, grassroots kind of pirate radio exploded from 1992 onwards. Stations such as Weekend Rush, Kool FM, Pulse and Innocence wanted to represent the streets and promote local scenes. They were chaotic. MCs and DJs hyped over tracks, shows were more like rowdy parties and audience participation was encouraged.
In 1994, Slimzee and Geeneus launched Rinse FMwith an aerial stuck to a broom handle. Before it gained legal status in 2010, it had been a pivotal platform for UK garage, grime and dubstep, launching the careers of more artists and DJs than we've got space to list here.
Modern pirate radio has had a heavy influence on popular culture. Artists such as Dizzee Rascal, Wiley and Boy Better Know, plus a whole raft of big name DJs and producers, were given early platforms on pirate radio. The BBC launched 1Xtra in response to stations such as Rinse, and the sound and feel of pirate radio culture can be heard in the music of The Streets, Paul Woolford's Special Request and myriad other artists' music.
The internet has changed the landscape for pirate radio, but the scene lives on with setups still being impounded every year. So keep it locked on.
The influence of pirate radio has endured despite government crackdowns and the rise of legitimate alternatives – today, it continues to thrive, both legally and otherwise
Drive around some parts of London today and you’re still liable to hear mainstream radio broadcasts drowned out by fleeting bursts of unfamiliar music. Pirate radio stations have been illegally hijacking the FM dial since the 1990s, but while the pirate scene is far smaller than it was in its heyday, the movement is still thriving on a local scale, and a vibrant array of online-only stations are inspired by the energy and spirit of the pirates. To put it simply, pirate radio never left London.
The UK’s pirate radio story starts with Ronan O’Rahilly’s Radio Caroline back in the 1960s, famously avoiding the authorities by broadcasting from international waters, but it was really the 1990s that paved the way for pirate radio in this country. Its evolution loosely follows that of the underground rave scene, which mainstream radio wouldn’t touch in its early days. “It’s the closest thing to mass organised zombie-dom,” BBC Radio 1 DJ Peter Powell said of acid house. “I really don’t think it should go any further.” Needless to say, it wasn’t going anywhere, and between 1988 and 89, pirate radio stations rapidly started to appear to serve a youth hungry for new sounds that weren’t being catered to by mainstream radio. By 1989, there were over 60 pirate radio stations operating in London alone.
While the first pirates – from Sunrise to Centreforce to Fantasy – mostly played music from America and European countries like Belgium, it didn’t take long for the British youth to start doing their own thing. “The UK kids realised people were making music in their bedrooms and they thought ‘I can fucking do that!’” exclaims Uncle Dugs, one of the UK’s leading authorities on pirate radio. Having been involved in radio (both legal and otherwise) for over 20 years, Dugs’ new book Rave Diaries and Tower Block Tales documents life as a young raver turned award-winning DJ after years on the pirate scene. As he explains, by 1991, London’s underground music landscape had become “99% UK producers and DJs,” transforming from acid house to hardcore and then to jungle. As London’s underground grew, so did its pirate presence, with legendary stations like Weekend Rush, Kool FM, Pulse FM, Innocence, and Defection springing up by the end of 1991. “You could flick through the radio and at every .2 on the dial there was a pirate station,” Dugs laughs. “There wasn’t even space on the radio for a new one.”
“If you weren’t accepted in other walks of life, pirate gave you the feeling of, ‘It’s me and my mates against the world’” – Uncle Dugs
“It was all about sharing new music,” adds Chef, another pirate radio OG and Kool FM resident for 12 years. “We were like, ‘There’s this new thing, and it’s our thing. I want everyone to know about it.’” As those people got sucked into the world of pirate radio, stations became more than just places to play music. “You became part of the station, so you started having to go up with them on the roof, carrying scaff poles for the aerials. You’d be up there in the night, with the wind blowing a force ten gale and someone on the phone going, ‘Left a bit, right a bit. Stand still!’” For kids coming from council estates, the radio provided a sense of camaraderie. “If you weren’t accepted in other walks of life, pirate gave you the feeling of, ‘It’s me and my mates against the world,’” Uncle Dugs says. “It was definitely a ‘council estate of mind,’” adds Chef.
People were willing to risk it all to get on air and stay there 24 hours a day. “It’s probably stupid in most people’s eyes,” Dugs says. “But being on meant more than anything. You couldn’t be off, even if it meant risking your life.” And for listeners? Chef calls it the very first social media platform. Pirates were fresh. They came from local communities and had their fingers on London’s pulse. “It was the first place to get information about what was going on,” Chef says. Mainstream outlets couldn’t keep up because they weren’t getting the first taste of new sounds from estates. “In 92, I was hearing stuff like Acen’s ‘Trip II The Moon’ and other massive rave tunes on legal radio,” Dugs recalls, “but they only supported really big songs.” By 93, producers were playing with hardcore, blending it with ragga, hip hop, and soul, and jungle emerged. Kool FM stepped into the limelight, serving as the capital’s leading pirate station for the next few years. Kool championed jungle tracks still famous today like UK Apache’s “Original Nuttah” and “The Helicopter Tune” by Deep Blue. Within two years of being on the dial, Kool changed the game, becoming a worldwide phenomenon through tape swapping. “I know of people who drove for hours to get into the catchment area to listen to that station,” Dugs says, somewhat incredulously.
1994 saw the birth of arguably the most recognisable name from the pirate radio era, Rinse FM. Founded by east London natives Slimzee and Geeneus, Rinse started in the same way that all pirates did – young people making something for themselves. “They wanted to be jungle DJs and MCs, and none of them could get on Kool,” Dugs explains. “When they started, they didn't have a clue. The first aerial they put up was on a broom handle.” Starting life as a jungle station, Rinse could never compete with Kool’s monopoly on the music – but luckily UK garage, London’s latest darling genre, started to grow during the station’s formative years, giving them the chance to step up and push this new sound. Garage MCs like Creed, Blakey, and Charlie Brown were making names for themselves in the city, but younger aspiring MCs found themselves locked out. “The older guys didn’t want the younger guys on with them,” says Dugs. “Creed would be bubbling nice and then Wiley would come on a hundred miles an hour talking about killing everyone.”
And that’s how grime started to emerge. Having overseen grime’s introduction to the station, Dugs is well positioned to talk about Rinse’s relationship with the genre. In much the same way that pirate stations were a reaction against mainstream radio programming, Rinse was essential for giving space to grime when other stations wouldn’t embrace it. Partly, this was because the station was run by people from the same postcodes as many of grime’s earliest MCs. “While other stations might not understand if an MC was talking about guns or muggings or violence, because they had all grown up together, Rinse got it,” Dugs explains. “No one else was going to say, ‘Hey, there’s this 16-year-old called Dizzee Rascal, let’s give him a show on Radio 1.’”
“We’re doing good radio, but we’re a community too... even when people aren’t playing, you’ll find them on the sofa drinking tea” – Harriet Taylor, Radar Radio
Throughout pirate radio’s history – but particularly with the genesis of grime – pirate was viewed frostily by the mainstream. On top of the Department of Trade and Industry’s (DTI) mission to eradicate pirates from the airwaves, the communities themselves were under attack. The media painted pirates as an underground drug/gangster movement, with a cycle of violence perpetrated by the music they promoted. One rumour was that pirates were drug kingpins selling on air through coded messages. “They said they were shifting hundreds of pounds a day,” Dugs says, “Like, are you for real? It was total bollocks.” Mainstream radio wasn’t totally oblivious to the music’s popularity, however, and Radio 1 launched 1xtra to cater for underground tastes in 2002 – although Chef is contemptuous. “They realised there was an urban pound note – they saw the pirates as feeders,” he says. “Why build your own fanbase when there’s something already established?” While Dugs and Chef both agree that the mainstream might not be perfect, seeing artists like Skepta, JME, Dizzee Rascal, Wiley, and others come up through the pirate scene and gain superstardom makes them feel their job as a station is done.
Today, the spirit of those old FM pirates has been embraced by a new generation of online stations, like Reprezent and Balamii in south London and Radar Radio in east. Radar’s station manager Ben Fairclough gives a simple explanation as to why pirate-style radio continues to thrive: “Tune into Kool, or Rinse, or Radar and you’ll hear something different,” he says. Radar’s staff grew up listening to pirate radio and try to capture that energy in their own programming, even if the nature of the station is vastly different. “You can do pirate stuff without being illegal, which has opened the gates,” says senior development manager Gavin Douglas. “If you’re streaming independently online, you can do whatever you want.” By the time mainstream radio starts hyping an artist, it’s likely these stations will already have had them on – Reprezent, for example, was crucial for spotlighting artists like Stormzy and Novelist, and at Radar, big names like Dizzee Rascal have come through while legends like Ray Keith continue to make magic. But the stations are also a hotbed of young talent – kids who weren’t even been born when pirate ruled the airwaves – often acting as a community hub as much as a radio station. “We’re doing good radio, but we’re a community too,” laughs Harriet Taylor, another of Radar’s managers. “It’s such a vibe. Even when people aren’t playing, you’ll find them on the sofa drinking tea.”
By broadcasting legally online, stations from Radar to Rinse to NTS have built identifiable brands that are recognisable on t-shirts, festivals, and clubnights around the city (and, increasingly, around the world). With this comes commercial and brand partnership opportunities that are inaccessible to pirates – but that doesn’t mean there aren’t still stations broadcasting illegally, if you know where to look. Imaginary Forces is an experimental producer/DJ who cut his teeth DJing drum’n’bass on the pirate scene in the 1990s, and he continues to float between legal and pirate radio today. “I’m not gonna say any names of pirates still broadcasting,” he grins. “It does them damage, and while I can handle myself, I don’t want a few man turning up at my door.” For a generation dependent on the internet, finding pirate stations on Google won’t bear much fruit. “Obviously none of them advertise,” he adds. “The only way is word-of-mouth, or do a radio scan. You’ll find them. You can still spot rigs and aerials. They’re still there – even the ones that have been denying it for the past ten years. Pirate will never stop; it’s cyclical. If you push people hard enough, they’ll find a mode of expression. The internet has been pretty cool for that, but it’s not the be-all-and-end-all.”
“There always is and there always has been pirate radio. It never went away – people just lost track of it” – Imaginary Forces
Imaginary Forces is clear about the differences between new generation internet stations and pirate radio. One of them is audience interaction: while quick to say that playback is something he’s into, he feels that the nature of internet stations (where shows are often pre-recorded) means that a crucial element is often missing. “Radar and NTS are cool, but these stations can’t ever capture the pirate vibe,” he says. “On pirate, people have to tune in to listen. You can do shout-outs. I love that.” He also sees a lack of identity in stations that play a spread of music, rather than honing in on one genre – though he’s doesn’t necessarily see this as a negative. “It’s great, because now the youngers are going to the internet stations. They’re full of young people keen for new stuff.” Nevertheless, modern day pirates are generally genre-specific, allowing their DJs to showcase various permutations of any one style. “Pirates can have a stronger, deeper focus on particular niche areas. They can show you the full spectrum of that music.”
Fundamentally, the illicit nature of pirate is key. Even though illegal broadcasters aren’t targeted so relentlessly today, there’s still a risk in broadcasting. “There’s an edge missing, that rough-and-ready, DIY feeling,” says Imaginary Forces. “If I go up pirate, I’m hiding my bag of records. It’s still very covert.” It’s a world away from the increasing professionalism of online stations and former pirates alike. “(Most) pirates don’t have aspirations to become the next Rinse. They want to stay pirate. The managers are very singular individuals; they’re a breed apart.” Despite the legwork, the costs, and the legal risks, pirate radio stations are just as obsessed with broadcasting on the airwaves today as they have been for decades. Knowing this adds an air of weight to what Imaginary Forces says next. “There’s no doubt in my mind that there are young people out there doing stuff. New stations come and go all the time, literally overnight. There always is and there always has been pirate radio. It never went away – people just lost track of it."
HOW PIRATE RADIO WENT DIGITAL: MEET THE REBEL DJS FORGING AHEAD IN 2020
In the ‘90s, pirate stations ruled the airwaves. Three decades on, that spirit of rebellion is finding a new audience on the internet.
Written by Lou Boyd Published on The Red Bulletin
Driving around London in the early ’90s, you could turn the radio dial and find hundreds of illegal stations secretly transmitting via unlicenced aerials on the roofs of nearby tower blocks.
Rebelling against the mainstream, these ‘pirates’ provided an easy access point to the capital’s underground music culture, from jungle and acid house to – at the turn of the millennium – the nascent grime scene. The stations gave immigrant communities programming in their native languages, championed local interests, and provided a platform for alternative music, all the while staying a step ahead of regulators desperate to shut them down.
Fast forward to 2020 and the landscape is very different. While a handful of illegal FM stations still exist, they operate largely untroubled by regulators, and the days of pirates ruling London’s musical counterculture have passed. Now is the time of internet radio.
A new generation of stations, as well as old pirates such as Rinse FM and Kool FM (now Kool London) that have been reborn online, have picked up the broadcasting baton. These crews no longer have to climb the sides of tower blocks in order to transmit their shows, but instead use the freedom of the internet to share London’s underground vibes legitimately with little more than a laptop and a microphone.
As the daughter of former Kiss FM legend Trevor Nelson and the goddaughter of pirate-radio icon and musician Jazzie B, London-based DJ/producer Shy One has a rare insight into the city’s underground radio scene.
“My earliest memories of radio were going to Kiss [FM] when it was still a pirate [the station was finally granted a legal licence, on its second attempt, in December 1989],” she says. “I remember visiting my dad and knowing that it was the place that the stuff I listened to at home came from.
These online stations are not only different in their method of transmission, but also in their musical output. “Whenever I hop in a car now and pick up a pirate, it’s like a different world that exists,” Shy One explains. “These pirates you come across play ‘big-people music’: reggae, rare groove, soul. The people who are still listening to them are older black people, people’s parents.”
New stations online, however, are transmitting music of every genre for every kind of audience; among them are many different collectives such as Touching Bass, and BBZ for queer women of colour.
“[Underground radio] is still a necessity,” says Shy One. “If you turn on mainstream radio, it’s crap. It’s just playlists and it’s unbearable because it’s always the same stuff. You need to give people a diverse offering; it’s essential to get certain types of music out there, to give actual space to let all people showcase their talents, because you’re not going to hear about it otherwise.”
One of London’s most exciting underground stations is Balamii, owned by radio fanatic James Browning. Located at the back of a run-down shopping arcade on Rye Lane, south London, at the end of a long corridor illuminated with fluorescent strip lighting, the station’s HQ is easy to miss. Browning’s office – a windowless space around the same size as the single toilet with which it shares a wall – is behind the studio; in the corner is a bucket to catch water dripping from the ceiling.
Independent radio is a form of protest, because you're occupying space
Shy One
Balamii has stayed true to the spirit of underground community radio, with local DJs spinning every flavour from the surrounding area, from house to jazz to grime, techno and more. Reputable DJs, including Shy One, play shows alongside university students who are just starting out, and the station enforces a vibe of inclusivity and creative freedom, championing safe spaces and musical integrity.
In the corner of Browning’s office is an old poster printed on A4. “That’s a flyer from the first event I ever put on, when I was 15,” he says. “When I was that age, I was always listening to pirates with friends in the car or at our houses. All of us had decks, so we’d just go around to each other’s places to make mixes.”
From there, Browning went on to help out at Resonance FM at the age of 18, then he shadowed other radio DJs throughout his time at university in Brighton. It was more than a decade later, however, after years working in the capital, that he decided to take a risk and launch his own independent station based in the South London music scene he’d grown up with.
“I’d wanted to run a radio station since I was a teenager – it had always been my dream – but I never thought it would happen,” he says. “Then, one day, I just thought, ‘Fuck it, I’m going to take all the money I’ve been saving for a house and spend it trying to do what I’ve always loved the most.’”
After locating a suitable space by talking to people from the Peckham area, Browning set about building the station using resources from the community. “I went down the road and got all the timber from a local place and just built it with mates,” he says. “I spent my life savings on it. Then, when I ran out of cash, I borrowed the rest of the equipment.”
From these modest beginnings, Balamii has grown into a fully-fledged station with listeners in the UK, Europe and America; it also runs events that attract hundreds of people from across the capital.
“I still think that people have dedication to the cause of underground radio,” says Browning. “You don’t have to go running up on houses, putting aerials up and climbing shafts and shit like that, but you need to make sure you’re correct with the music you’re playing, the way it comes across and what you represent.”
All internet radio does not look the same. Just down the road from Balamii, also on Rye Lane, is an entirely different kind of operation. Foundation FM was set up with a clear mission statement: “To showcase the hottest emerging talent in the underground music scene, led by a diverse group of women, LGTBQI+ persons and talented creatives, with women at the forefront.”
Although the online station is entirely independent, Foundation FM’s co-founders – Becky Richardson, Ami Bennett and Frankie Wells – have extensive radio experience at BBC Radio 1Xtra, Capital Xtra, BBC Asian Network and Radar Radio. This station could rely on more than goodwill, local timber and borrowed speakers: it received funding from the outset, and the three women have a studio that can only be described as ‘Instagrammable’.
Polaroids of all those who have appeared on the station are spread across the coffee table, and a rack of merchandise stands in the corner. A huge neon Foundation FM sign is reflected in the window of a professional studio where DJ Kamilla Rose (Boiler Room, BBC Radio 1Xtra) is in the middle of her daily show.
While Foundation FM may share a mission statement with the original independent stations, this is a world away from illegal aerials and police raids. “The whole [reason for setting up] Foundation was to provide a space for people who we thought had good things to say, or were doing great things, but didn’t have a place to do it,” Bennett explains.
“I think there’s the same energy behind it as there was with pirate radio, but internet radio is that step between pirate and mainstream. You’ve got their freedom, but you’re still legit. You hear the stories about the pirate radio stations in the ’90s where you’d have to get a coat hanger to be able to listen to it, or the police would turn up and [the station owners] would have to pack up their gear and just leg it. Obviously, we’re in a space where this is a proper thing and we’re a company, but we’re still not creatively limited by anything. We can work with who we want and put whatever we want on air, which is an amazing place to be.”
Foundation FM works as a breeding ground for women in the industry, to create a more equal environment at the very top. “We make sure that everyone who spends time with us gets something in return,” says Wells.
“Whether that’s learning how to run a desk or produce a show or edit or whatever, if you come in and tell us what you need to know, as long as it’s possible, we’ll teach you how to do it. The more we do that, the more things are going to creep up and start to balance out at the top [of the industry], which is what we want.”
The station works with programmes such as Normal Not Novelty – the workshop for female-identifying DJs – and also runs classes in radio for 16-to-18-year-olds. “When we ran a workshop, it was really eye-opening for us and the girls were all super-inspired,” says Wells. “How cool is that? We made an impact on them that could lead them to take a career in radio or music.” Foundation FM is now looking into staging more events outside the studio, and the station will be at the SXSW Music Festival in Austin, Texas, this March.
“Internet radio is just a really exciting space to be in,” says Wells. “And as accessible as it is now, I think it’s going to become even more so. Being part of the first generation, we’re at the start of this change, so we can kind of direct it. Then again, Foundation is an entity all of her own and she does what she wants – we just go along with her.”
While Balamii and Foundation FM are different in many ways, both epitomise the state of underground music in London in 2019: a scene that allows young people to lawfully create alternative narratives to the mainstream in a way that their counterparts in the ’90s couldn’t. Today’s broadcasters don’t need to hang aerials to share their music: instead, they utilise the internet tools available to them to create artistic spaces for many different cultures to exist. But while homegrown independent radio is no longer illegal, its relevance has not been diminished.
“It’s still a form of protest, because you’re occupying space,” says Shy One. “Mainstream radio is very status quo: there’s no form of expression in there, and it’s all very contrived and programmed and strictly regulated. When people are independently creating and taking up space in the same medium, what they’re actually doing is making a really obvious, non-violent protest. One that is pro-community and pro-culture.”
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