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Wikipedia

BBC Radio 1

BBC Radio 1 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC. It specialises in modern popular music and current chart hits throughout the day. The station provides alternative genres at night, including electronica, dance, hip hop and indie, while its sister station 1Xtra plays black contemporary music, including hip hop and R&B. Radio 1 also runs two online streams, Radio 1 Dance, dedicated to dance music, and Radio 1 Relax, dedicated to chill-out music; both are available to listen only on BBC Sounds.

BBC Radio 1
Logo used since 2021
Broadcast areaUnited Kingdom and internationally via BBC Sounds
Frequencies
RDSRadio 1
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatContemporary hit radio, with specialist programming at night
Ownership
OwnerBBC
BBC Radio 1Xtra
BBC Radio 1 Dance
BBC Radio 1 Relax
History
First air date
30 September 1967; 55 years ago (1967-09-30)
Former call signs
BBC Light Programme
Former frequencies
  • FM: 104.8 MHz (London)
  • 96.0 MHz (Belfast)
    • AM: 1053 kHz
    • 1089 kHz
  • 1215 kHz
Links
WebsiteBBC Radio 1

Radio 1 broadcasts throughout the UK on FM between 97.1 MHz and 99.7 MHz, digital radio, digital TV and BBC Sounds. It was launched in 1967 to meet the demand for music generated by pirate radio stations, when the average age of the UK population was 27.[1] The BBC claims that it targets the 15–29 age group,[2] and the average age of its UK audience since 2009 is 30.[3] BBC Radio 1 started 24-hour broadcasting on 1 May 1991.[4]

According to RAJAR, the station broadcasts to a weekly audience of 8.1 million with a listening share of 4.8% as of September 2022.

History

First broadcast

Radio 1 was established in 1967 (along with the more middle-of-the-road BBC Radio 2) as a successor to the BBC Light Programme, which had broadcast popular music and other entertainment since 1945. Radio 1 was conceived as a direct response to the popularity of offshore pirate radio stations such as Radio Caroline and Radio London, which had been outlawed by Act of Parliament.[5] The new service was initially promoted in the summer of 1967 by trails (voiced by Kenny Everett) which referred to it as "Radio 247",[6][7] the station's temporary working title.[8]

Radio 1 was launched at 7:00 am on Saturday 30 September 1967.

Broadcasts were on 1215 kHz AM (247 metres), using a network of transmitters which had carried the Light Programme.[9] Most were of comparatively low power, at less than 50 kilowatts, leading to patchy coverage of the country.

The first disc jockey to broadcast on the new station was Tony Blackburn, whose cheery style, first heard on Radio Caroline and Radio London, won him the prime slot on what became known as the Radio 1 Breakfast Show. The first words on Radio 1 – after a countdown by the Controller of Radios 1 and 2, Robin Scott, and a jingle, recorded at PAMS in Dallas, Texas, beginning "The voice of Radio 1" – were:[10][11]

And, good morning everyone. Welcome to the exciting new sound of Radio 1.

— BBC Radio 1 opening message

This was the first use of US-style jingles on BBC radio, but the style was familiar to listeners who were acquainted with Blackburn and other DJs from their days on pirate radio. The reason jingles from PAMS were used was that the Musicians' Union would not agree to a single fee for the singers and musicians if the jingles were made "in-house" by the BBC; they wanted repeat fees each time one was played.[citation needed]

The first music to be heard on the station was an extract from "Beefeaters" by Johnny Dankworth.[12]"Theme One", specially composed for the launch by George Martin was played for the first time before Radio 1 officially launched at 7 am. The first complete record played on Radio 1 was "Flowers in the Rain" by The Move, the number 2 record in that week's Top 20 (the number 1 record, by Engelbert Humperdink, would have been inappropriate for the station's sound). The second single was "Massachusetts" by the Bee Gees. The breakfast show remains the most prized slot in the Radio 1 schedule, with every change of breakfast show presenter generating considerable media interest.[13]

The initial rota of staff included John Peel, Pete Myers, and a gaggle of others, some transferred from pirate stations, such as Keith Skues, Ed Stewart, Mike Raven, David Ryder, Jim Fisher, Jimmy Young, Dave Cash, Kenny Everett, Simon Dee, Terry Wogan, Duncan Johnson, Doug Crawford, Tommy Vance, Chris Denning, and Emperor Rosko. Many of the most popular pirate radio voices, such as Simon Dee, had only a one-hour slot per week ("Midday Spin.")[14]

1970s

I want to slag off all the people in charge of radio stations. Firstly, Radio 1. They outlawed the pirates and then didn't, as they promised, cater for the market the pirates created. Radio 1 and 2, most afternoons, run concurrently and the whole thing has slid right back to where it was before the pirates happened. They've totally fucked it. There's no radio station for young people any more. It's all down to housewives and trendies in Islington. They're killing the country by having that play list monopoly.

Joe Strummer[15]

Initially, the station was unpopular with some of its target audience who, it is claimed, disliked the fact that much of its airtime was shared with Radio 2 and that it was less unequivocally aimed at a young audience than the offshore stations, with some DJs such as Jimmy Young being in their 40s. The very fact that it was part of an "establishment" institution such as the BBC was a turn-off for some, and needle time restrictions prevented it from playing as many records as offshore stations had. It also had limited finances and often, as in January 1975, suffered disproportionately when the BBC had to make financial cutbacks, strengthening an impression that it was regarded as a lower priority by senior BBC executives.

Despite this, it gained massive audiences, becoming the most listened-to station in the world, with audiences of over ten million claimed for some of its shows (up to twenty million for some of the combined Radio 1 and Radio 2 shows). In the early-to-mid-1970s Radio 1 presenters were rarely out of the British tabloids, thanks to the Publicity Department's high-profile work. The touring summer live broadcasts called the Radio 1 Roadshow – usually as part of the BBC 'Radio Weeks' promotions that took Radio 1, 2 and 4 shows on the road – drew some of the largest crowds of the decade. The station undoubtedly played a role in maintaining the high sales of 45 rpm single records, although it benefited from a lack of competition, apart from Radio Luxembourg and Manx Radio in the Isle of Man. (Independent Local Radio did not begin until October 1973, took many years to cover virtually all of the UK and was initially a mixture of music and talk). Alan Freeman's "Saturday Rock Show" was voted "Best Radio Show" five years running by readers of a national music publication, and was then axed by controller Derek Chinnery.

News coverage on the station was boosted in 1973 when Newsbeat bulletins aired for the first time, and Richard Skinner joined the station as one of the new programme's presenters.[16]

On air, 1978 was the busiest year of the decade. David Jensen replaced Dave Lee Travis as host of the weekday drivetime programme[17] so that DLT could replace Noel Edmonds as presenter of the Radio 1 Breakfast show.[18] Later in the year the Sunday teatime chart show was extended from a Top 20 countdown to a Top 40 countdown, and Tommy Vance, one of the station's original presenters, rejoined the station to present a new programme, The Friday Rock Show.[19] and on 23 November Radio 1 moved from 247m (1214 kHz) to 275 & 285m (1053 & 1089 kHz) medium wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception, and to conform with the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975.[20][21]

Annie Nightingale, whose first Radio 1 programme aired on 5 October 1969, was Britain's first national female DJ (the earliest record presenter is thought to be Jean Metcalfe of Family Favourites, but given that Metcalfe only presented the programme she is not considered a "true" DJ) and is now the longest-serving presenter, having constantly evolved her musical tastes with the times.[22]

In 1978, Al Matthews became the first black disc jockey to join Radio 1. His Saturday night show Discovatin' was broadcast for over two years. During the summer months a Wednesday show was also broadcast featuring live acts.

1980s

At the start of 1981, Mike Read took over The Radio 1 Breakfast Show from Dave Lee Travis. Towards the end of the year, Steve Wright started the long-running Steve Wright in the Afternoon show. In 1982, the new Radio 1's Weekend Breakfast Show started, initially with Tony Blackburn supported by Maggie Philbin and Keith Chegwin. Adrian John and Pat Sharp also joined for the early weekend shows. Gary Davies and Janice Long also joined, hosting Saturday night late and evening shows respectively.

In 1984, Robbie Vincent joined to host a Sunday evening soul show. Mike Smith left for a while to present BBC1's Breakfast Time; Gary Davies then took over the weekday lunchtime slot. Bruno Brookes joined and replaced Peter Powell as presenter of the teatime show, with Powell replacing Blackburn on a new weekend breakfast show.[23][24]

In 1985, Radio 1 relocated from its studios in Broadcasting House to Egton House.[25] In March 1985, Ranking Miss P became the first black female DJ on the station, hosting a reggae programme. In July, Andy Kershaw also joined the station.[26]

Simon Mayo joined the station in 1986, while Smith re-joined to replace Read on the breakfast show.[27]

In response to the growth in dance and rap music, Jeff Young joined in October 1987 with the Big Beat show. At the end of the year Nicky Campbell, Mark Goodier and Liz Kershaw all joined, and Janice Long left.

Mayo replaced Smith on the breakfast show in May 1988.[28] In September, Goodier and Kershaw took over weekend breakfasts with Powell departing. Campbell took over weekday evenings as part of a move into night-time broadcasting as 1 October 1988 saw Radio 1 extend broadcast hours until 02:00; previously the station had closed for the night at midnight.

From September 1988, Radio 1 began its FM switch-on, with further major transmitter switch-ons in 1989 and 1990. It was not until the mid-1990s that all existing BBC radio transmitters had Radio 1 added. Previously, Radio 1 had "borrowed" Radio 2's VHF/FM frequencies for around 25 hours each week.

1990s

On 1 May 1991, Radio 1 began 24-hour broadcasting, although only on FM, as the station's MW transmitters were switched off between midnight and 06:00.

In 1992, Radio 1, for the first and only time, covered a general election. Their coverage was presented by Nicky Campbell.[29]

In his last few months as controller, Johnny Beerling commissioned a handful of new shows that in some ways set the tone for what was to come under Matthew Bannister. One of these "Loud'n'proud" was the UK's first national radio series aimed at a gay audience, which was produced in Manchester and aired from August 1993. Far from being a "parting quirk", the show was a surprise hit and led to the network's first coverage of the large outdoor Gay Pride event in 1994.[30]

The Man Ezeke became Radio 1's first black regular daytime presenter when he began hosting on Sunday lunchtimes in January 1993.[31]

Bannister took the reins fully in October 1993. His aim was to rid the station of its "Smashie and Nicey" image in order to appeal to the under-25s. Although originally launched as a youth station, by the early 1990s, its loyal listeners and DJs had aged with the station over its 25-year history. Many long-standing DJs, such as Simon Bates, Dave Lee Travis, Alan Freeman, Bob Harris, Paul Gambaccini, Gary Davies, and later Steve Wright, Bruno Brookes and Johnnie Walker left the station or were dismissed, and in January 1995, older music (typically anything recorded before 1990) was dropped from the daytime playlist.

Many listeners rebelled as the first new DJs to be introduced represented a crossover from other parts of the BBC (notably Bannister and Trevor Dann's former colleagues at the BBC's London station, GLR) with Emma Freud and Danny Baker. Another problem was that, at the time, Radio 2 was sticking resolutely to a format which appealed mainly to those who had been listening since the days of the Light Programme, and commercial radio, which was targeting the "Radio 1 and a half" audience, consequently enjoyed a massive increase in its audience share at Radio 1's expense.

After the departure of Steve Wright, who had been unsuccessfully moved from his long-running afternoon show to the breakfast show in January 1994,[32] Bannister hired Chris Evans to present the breakfast show in April 1995. Evans was a popular presenter but was dismissed in 1997 after he demanded to present the breakfast show for only four days per week. Evans was replaced from 17 February 1997 by Mark and Lard[33] Mark Radcliffe and his sidekick Marc Riley – who found the slick, mass-audience style required for a breakfast show did not come naturally to them. They were replaced by Zoe Ball and Kevin Greening eight months later in October 1997; Greening soon moved on, leaving Ball as sole presenter. The reinvention of the station happened at a fortuitous time, with the rise of Britpop in the mid-1990s – bands like Oasis, Blur and Pulp were popular and credible at the time, and the station's popularity rose with them. Documentaries like John Peel's Lost in Music, which looked at the influence that the use of drugs have had over popular musicians, received critical acclaim but were slated inside Broadcasting House.

At just before 09:00 on 1 July 1994, Radio 1 broadcast on mediumwave for the final time.[34]

In March 1995, Radio 1 hosted an "Interactive Radio Night" with Jo Whiley and Steve Lamacq broadcasting from Cyberia, an internet café and featuring live performances by Orbital via ISDN.[35]

Later in the 1990s the Britpop boom declined, and manufactured chart pop (boy bands and acts aimed at sub-teenagers) came to dominate the charts. New-genre music occupied the evenings (indie on weekdays and dance at weekends), with a mix of specialist shows and playlist fillers through late nights. The rise of rave culture through the late 1980s and early 1990s gave the station the opportunity to move into a controversial and youth-orientated movement by bringing in club DJ Pete Tong amongst others. There had been a dance music programme on Radio 1 since 1987 and Pete Tong was the second DJ to present an all dance music show. This quickly gave birth to the Essential Mix where underground DJs mix electronic and club based music in a two-hour slot. Dance and urban music has been a permanent feature on Radio 1 since with club DJs such as Judge Jules, Danny Rampling,[36] Trevor Nelson, and the Dreem Teem all moving from London's Kiss 100 to the station.

2000s

 
Chris Moyles outside Radio 1's radio studios
 
Steve Lamacq, Jo Whiley and Zane Lowe at Glastonbury as part of Radio 1's coverage

Listening numbers continued to decline but the station succeeded in targeting a younger, cross-gender age group. Eventually, this change in content was reflected by a rise in audience that is continuing to this day. Notably, the station has received praise for shows such as The Surgery, Bobby Friction and Nihal's show, The Evening Session and its successor Zane Lowe's show. Its website has also been well received.

However, the breakfast show and the UK Top 40 continued to struggle. In 2000, Zoe Ball was replaced in the mornings by close friend and fellow ladette Sara Cox, but, despite heavy promotion, listening figures for the breakfast show continued to fall. In 2004 Cox was replaced by Chris Moyles. The newly rebranded breakfast show was known as The Chris Moyles Show and it increased its audience, ahead of the Today programme on Radio 4 as the second most popular breakfast show (after The Chris Evans Breakfast Show hosted by Chris Evans). Moyles continued to use inappropriate ways to try to tempt listeners from the Wake Up to Wogan show. In 2006, for example, creating a SAY NO TO WOGAN campaign live on-air. This angered the BBC hierarchy, though the row simmered down when it was clear that the 'campaign' had totally failed to alter the listening trends of the time – Wogan still increased figures at a faster rate than Moyles. The chart show's ratings fell after the departure of long-time host Mark Goodier, amid falling single sales in the UK. Ratings for the show fell in 2002 whilst Goodier was still presenting the show, meaning that commercial radio's Network Chart overtook it in the ratings for the first time. However, the BBC denied he was being sacked. Before July 2015, when the chart release day was changed to Friday, the BBC show competed with networked commercial radio's The Big Top 40 Show which was broadcast at the same time.

Many DJs either ousted by Bannister or who left during his tenure (such as Johnnie Walker, Bob Harris and Steve Wright) have joined Radio 2 which has now overtaken Radio 1 as the UK's most popular radio station, using a style that Radio 1 had until the early 1990s. The success of Moyles' show has come alongside increased success for the station in general. In 2006, DJs Scott Mills and Zane Lowe won gold Sony Radio Awards, while the station itself came away with the best station award.

A new evening schedule was introduced in September 2006, dividing the week by genre. Monday was mainly pop-funkrock-oriented, Tuesday was R&B and hip-hop, Thursdays and Fridays were primarily dance, with specialist R&B and reggae shows.

Following the death of John Peel in October 2004, Annie Nightingale is now the longest-serving presenter, having worked there since 1970.

2010s

 
Scott Mills in the Radio 1 studio, 2011

The licence-fee funding of Radio 1, alongside Radio 2, is often criticised by the commercial sector. In the first quarter of 2011 Radio 1 was part of an efficiency review conducted by John Myers.[37] His role, according to Andrew Harrison, the chief executive of RadioCentre, was "to identify both areas of best practice and possible savings."[37]

The controller of Radio 1 and sister station 1Xtra changed to Ben Cooper on 28 October 2011, following the departure of Andy Parfitt. Ben Cooper answered to the Director of BBC Audio and Music, Tim Davie.[38]

On 7 December 2011, Ben Cooper's first major changes to the station were announced. Skream & Benga, Toddla T, Charlie Sloth and Friction replaced Judge Jules, Gilles Peterson, Kissy Sell Out and Fabio & Grooverider. A number of shows were shuffled to incorporate the new line-up.[39] On 28 February 2012, further changes were announced. Greg James and Scott Mills swapped shows and Jameela Jamil, Gemma Cairney and Danny Howard joined the station. The new line-up of DJs for In New DJs We Trust was also announced with B.Traits, Mosca, Jordan Suckley and Julio Bashmore hosting shows on a four weekly rotation.[40] This new schedule took effect on Monday, 2 April 2012.

In September 2012, Nick Grimshaw replaced Chris Moyles as host of "Radio 1's Breakfast Show". Grimshaw previously hosted Mon-Thurs 10pm-Midnight, Weekend Breakfast and Sunday evenings alongside Annie Mac. Grimshaw was replaced by Phil Taggart and Alice Levine on the 10pm-Midnight show.

In November 2012, another series of changes were announced. This included the departure of Reggie Yates and Vernon Kay. Jameela Jamil was announced as the new presenter of The Official Chart. Matt Edmondson moved to weekend mornings with Tom Deacon briefly replacing him on Wednesday nights. Dan Howell and Phil Lester, famous YouTubers and video bloggers, joined the station. The changes took effect in January 2013.[41]

Former presenter Sara Cox hosted her last show on Radio 1 in February 2014 before moving back to Radio 2. In March 2014, Gemma Cairney left the weekend breakfast show to host the weekday early breakfast slot, swapping shows with Dev.

In September 2014, Radio 1 operated a series of changes to their output which saw many notable presenters leave the station – including Edith Bowman, Nihal and Rob da Bank. Huw Stephens gained a new show hosting 10 pm – 1 am Monday–Wednesday with Alice Levine presenting weekends 1 pm – 4 pm. Radio 1's Residency also expanded with Skream joining the rotational line-up on Thursday nights (10 pm – 1 am).

From December 2014 to April 2016, Radio 1 included a weekly late night show presented by a well known Internet personality called The Internet Takeover. Shows have been presented by various YouTubers such as Jim Chapman and Hannah Witton.[42]

In January 2015, Clara Amfo replaced Jameela Jamil as host of The Official Chart on Sundays (4 pm – 7 pm) and in March, Zane Lowe left Radio 1 and was replaced by Annie Mac on the new music evening show.

In May 2015, Fearne Cotton left the station after 10 years of broadcasting. Her weekday mid-morning show was taken over by Clara Amfo. Adele Roberts also joined the weekday schedule line-up, hosting the Early Breakfast show.

In July 2015, the Official Chart moved to a Friday from 4 pm to 5:45 pm, hosted by Greg James. The move took place to take into account the changes to the release dates of music globally. Cel Spellman joined the station to host Sunday evenings.

In September 2017, a new slot namely Radio 1's Greatest Hits was introduced for weekends 10am-1pm. The show started on 2 September 2017.[43] On 30 September 2017, Radio 1 celebrated its 50th birthday. Commemorations included a three-day pop-up station, 'Radio 1 Vintage', celebrating the station's presenters and special on-air programmes on the day itself, including a special breakfast show co-presented by the station's launch DJ Tony Blackburn, which is also broadcast on BBC Radio 2.[44]

In October 2017, another major schedule change was announced. Friction left the station. The change features Charlie Sloth gained a new slot called 'The 8th' which aired Mon-Thu 9-11pm. Other changes include MistaJam took over Danny Howard on the Dance Anthems. Katie Thistleton joined Cel Spellman on Sunday evenings, namely 'Life Hacks' (4-6pm) which features content from the Radio 1 Surgery, and Most Played (6-7pm). Danny Howard would host a new show on Friday 11pm-1am. Huw Stephens's show pushed to 11pm-1am. Kan D Man and DJ Limelight joined the station to host a weekly Asian Beats show on Sundays between 1-3am,[45] Rene LaVice joined the station with the Drum & Bass show on Tuesdays 1-3am. Phil Taggart presented the Hype Chart on Tuesdays 3-4am.[46]

In February 2018, the first major schedule change of the year happened on the weekend. This saw Maya Jama and Jordan North join BBC Radio 1 to present the Radio 1's Greatest Hits, which would be on Saturday and Sunday respectively. Alice Levine moved to the breakfast slot to join Dev. Matt Edmondson would replace Alice Levine's original slot in the afternoon and joined by a different guest co-presenter each week. The changes took into effect on 24 February 2018.[47][48]

In April 2018, another major schedule change was made due to the incorporation of weekend schedule on Fridays. This means that Nick Grimshaw, Clara Amfo and Greg James would host four days in a week. Scott Mills became the new host for The Official Chart and Dance Anthems, which replaces Greg James, and Maya Jama would present The Radio 1's Greatest Hits on 10am-1pm. Mollie King joined Matt Edmondson officially on the 1-4pm slot, namely 'Matt and Mollie'. The changes took into effect on 15 June 2018.[49][50]

In May 2018, it was announced that Nick Grimshaw would leave the Breakfast Show after six years, the second longest run hosting the show in history (only second to Chris Moyles). However, Grimshaw did not leave the station, but swapped slots with Greg James, who hosted the home time show from 4-7pm weekdays. This change took place as of 20 August 2018 for the Radio 1 Breakfast Show (which was then renamed to Radio 1 Breakfast).[51] Grimshaw's show started on 3 September 2018.

In June 2018, another series of schedule changes was announced. This sees the BBC Introducing Show with Huw Stephens on Sundays 11pm-1am. Jack Saunders joined the station and presented Radio 1 Indie Show from Monday-Thursday 11pm-1am. Other changes include the shows rearrangement of Sunday evenings. Phil Taggart's chillest show moved to 7-9pm, then followed by The Rock Show with Daniel P Carter at 9-11pm. The changes took into effect in September 2018.[52]

In October 2018, Charlie Sloth announced that he was leaving Radio 1 and 1Xtra after serving the station for nearly 10 years. He was hosting The 8th and The Rap Show at that point. His last show was expected to be on 3 November 2018.[53] However, Charlie had been in the spotlight for storming the stage and delivering a sweary, Kanye West-esque rant at the Audio & Radio Industry Awards (ARIAS) on Thursday 18 October 2018, which points towards Edith Bowman. Charlie was nominated for best specialist music show at the ARIAS – a category he lost out on to Soundtracking with Edith Bowman and prompting him to appear on stage during her acceptance.[54] He apologised on Twitter regarding this issue and Radio 1 had agreed with Charlie that he will not do the 10 remaining shows that were originally planned.[55] This meant that his last show ended on 18 October 2018. From 20 October 2018 onwards, Seani B filled his The Rap Show slot on 9pm-11pm[56] and Dev covered "The 8th" beginning 22 October 2018.[57]

In the same month, B.Traits announced that she was leaving BBC Radio 1 after six years of commitment. She said she feels as though she can no longer devote the necessary time needed to make the show the best it can be, and is moving on to focus on new projects and adventures. Her last show was on 26 October 2018.[58] The Radio 1's Essentials Mix is then shifted earlier to 1am-3am, followed by Radio 1's Wind-Down from 3 am to 6 am. The changes took effect from 2 November 2018 onwards.[59]

At the end of October 2018, Dev's takeover on The 8th resulted in the swapping between Matt Edmondson and Mollie King's show with Dev and Alice Levine's show. This meant that Matt and Mollie became the new Weekend Breakfast hosts, and Dev and Alice became the afternoon show hosts.[60] The changes came into effect on 16 November 2018.[61][62]

On 15 November 2018, Radio 1 announced that Tiffany Calver, who has previously hosted a dedicated hip-hop show on the new-music station KissFresh, would join the station and host the Rap Show. The change took effect from 5 January 2019.[63]

On 26 November 2018, Radio 1 announced that the new hosts for the evening slot previously hosted by Charlie Sloth would be Rickie Haywood-Williams, Melvin Odoom, and Charlie Hedges. The trio previously presented on Kiss's breakfast show. The change took effect in April 2019.[64]

In July 2019 it was announced that there would be two new shows on the weekend, the weekend early breakfast show and best new pop, both of which started on 6 September 2019.[65]

The weekend early morning breakfast show would be and is currently hosted by Arielle Free. It is broadcast between 04:00–06:00 on Friday and Saturday and Sunday between 05:00–07:00.[66] 

Best new pop would be and is currently hosted by Mollie King and is currently broadcast between 06:00–06:30 on a Friday Morning.

This in turn changed the timing of the Weekend Breakfast Show hosted by Mollie King and Matt Edmondson, which is now broadcast at Friday 06:30–10:00 and between 07:00–10:00 on Saturday & Sunday.

2020s

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there were temporary changes.

In March 2020, Radio 1 Breakfast began later at 7 am to 11 am. Scott Mills would also present his show from 1 pm-3 pm with Nick Grimshaw starting until 6 pm. BBC Radio 1 Dance Anthems now started from 3 pm with 2 hours Classic Anthems and it would end at 7 pm.

In July 2020, Alice Levine and Cel Spellman announced their resignation from BBC Radio 1. In September, Vick Hope was announced to join Katie Thisleton, replacing Spellman.

In September 2020, a new schedule was announced.

This meant that The Radio 1 Breakfast Show was extended by 30 minutes until 10:30 am. Also, Scott Mills' show was shortened by 30 minutes from 4 to 3:30 pm. Toddla T was also announced to be leaving the show after 11 years. Annie Mac's evening show moved from 7 pm to 6 pm with Rickie, Melvin and Charlie from 8 pm. Jack Saunders would host a new show called Radio 1's Future Artists with Jack Saunders from Monday to Wednesday.

Friday Schedule was also announced. Radio 1 Party Anthems moved from 6 pm to 3 pm and it would be hosted by Dev. Also, Annie Mac, Danny Howard, Pete Tong and Essential Mix shows moved 1 hour earlier. Dance Anthems on Saturday have been confirmed starting to its original time slot from 4 pm.

On 26 September 2020, MistaJam left BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 1Xtra after 15 years. It was announced that Charlie Hedges would take over Dance Anthems from 3 October 2020.

BBC Radio 1 Dance launched on Friday 9 October. The station is broadcast exclusively on BBC Sounds.

In November 2020 it was confirmed that Dev Griffin, Huw Stephens, and Phil Taggart would all be leaving the station at the end of the year. From January 2021, Radio 1 Breakfast was to return to five days per week while Arielle Free would host Early Breakfast (Mon-Thu 0500–0700) and three new presenters were to take turns hosting the early breakfast slot on Fridays.[67] Adele Roberts left Early Breakfast after five years, moving to Weekend Breakfast (Sat-Sun 0700–1030). Matt Edmondson and Mollie King returned to Weekend Afternoons (Fri-Sun 1300–1600). On Sunday evenings, Sian Eleri replaced Phil Taggart as host of the Chillest Show and Gemma Bradley replaced Huw Stephens on BBC Introducing.

On 9 April 2021, BBC Radio 1 and other BBC radio stations were cut at 12:10 pm for the national anthem following the death of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, and the stations then carried the BBC Radio News special programme until 4 pm. Radio 1 then played music without vocals and on 10 and 11 April 2021 played downtempo and chilled music. The Official Chart was not aired, for the second time since Princess Diana's death.

On 20 April 2021, Annie Mac tweeted that she would leave BBC Radio 1 after 17 years. It was also announced that Diplo would be leaving after 10 years. On Weeknights, Clara Amfo replaced Annie on Radio 1's Future Sounds (Mon-Thu 1800–2000). On Fridays, Danny Howard replaced Annie at 6 pm – with Sarah Story, a former Capital FM presenter, hosting from 8 pm. Rickie, Melvin and Charlie were announced as new hosts of the Live Lounge slot, replacing Clara Amfo. Jack Saunders also moved to an earlier time slot (Mon-Thu 2000–2200), replacing Rickie, Melvin and Charlie. Sian Eleri gained 3 new shows per week, hosting Radio 1's Power Down Playlist from 10pm-11pm Mon-Wed. BBC Introducing Dance with Jaguar airs at this time slot on a Thursday evening.

On 21 April 2021, Radio 1 Relax launched on BBC Sounds, playing relaxing music and sounds such as wind and rain.[68]

After 14 years on BBC Radio 1, Nick Grimshaw announced he would be leaving the station, with Vick Hope and Jordan North taking over the time-slot. Grimshaw broadcast his final show on 12 August 2021.[69] Vick and Jordan's new show first aired on 6 September 2021.[70] Vick continued to co-host Life Hacks alongside Katie Thistleton, while Dean McCullough joined BBC Radio 1 to host Friday-Sunday 1030–1300.

In September 2022, DJ Target and René LaVice left the station, making loads of changes, first of all, 'Radio 1's Soundsystem with Jeremiah Asimiah has moved from 2300 on Saturday to 0100 on Sundays to Saturdays from 1900-2100, replacing DJ Target. Radio 1's Drum & Bass Show has been moved to Saturdays 2300 to Sundays 0100, now being presented by Charlie Tee. Radio 1's Indie Show with Jack Saunders has been moved from Thursdays 2000-2200 to Sundays 2100-2300, Future Artists is still being broadcast Mon-Wed 2000-2200. On Mondays, Radio 1's Rock Show with Daniel P Carter will move from Sundays 2100-2300 to Mondays 2300 to Tuesdays 0100, followed by a new 'Future Rock' with Alyx Hylcombe on Tuesdays 0100-0200, and ending off with Future Alternative with Nels Hylton 0200-0300, moving from Thursdays 0300-0400. And a new programme is shown called Future Pop with Mollie King on Thursdays 2000-2200, Mollie will still host Weekends 1300-1600 with co-host Matt Edmondson. On 25 August 2022, Scott Mills and co-host Chris Stark aired their final show. Their radio time slots have been given to Dean McCullough and Vicky Hawksworth while the role of hosting the Official Chart has been given to Jack Saunders.[citation needed]

On 8 September 2022, Radio 1 and the other radio stations were cut at 6:32 pm to report the Death of Queen Elizabeth II and were carrying a BBC Radio News special. The Official Chart did not air on the Friday, which was the third time in two years since the death of the Duke of Edinburgh. Radio 1 returned to normal programming on 11 September 2022.

Broadcast

Studios

 
Yalding House, the home of Radio 1 1996–2012
 
BBC Radio 1 now broadcasts from Broadcasting House, London

From inception for over 20 years, Radio 1 broadcast from an adjacent pair of continuity suites (originally Con A and Con B) in the main control room of Broadcasting House. These cons were configured to allow DJs to operate the equipment themselves and play their own records and jingle cartridges (called self-op). This was a departure from traditional BBC practice, where a studio manager would play in discs from the studio control cubicle. Due to needle time restrictions, much of the music was played from tapes of BBC session recordings. The DJs were assisted by one or more technical operators (TOs) who would set up tapes and control sound levels during broadcasts.

In 1985, Radio 1 moved across the road from Broadcasting House to Egton House. The station moved to Yalding House in 1996, and Egton House was demolished in 2003 to make way for an extension to Broadcasting House. This extension would eventually be renamed the Egton Wing, and then the Peel Wing.

Until recently, the studios were located in the basement of Yalding House (near to BBC Broadcasting House) on Great Portland Street in central London. They used to broadcast from two main studios in the basement; Y2 and Y3 (there is also a smaller studio, YP1, used mainly for production). These two main studios (Y2 and Y3) are separated by the "Live Lounge", although it is mainly used as an office; live sets are rarely recorded from it, for Maida Vale Studios is used instead for larger set-ups. The studios are linked by webcams and windows through the "Live Lounge", allowing DJs to see each other when changing between shows. Y2 is the studio from where The Chris Moyles Show was broadcast and is also the studio rigged with static cameras for when the station broadcasts on the "Live Cam". The station moved there in 1996 from Egton House.

In December 2012, Radio 1 moved from Yalding House to new studios on the 8th floor of the new BBC Broadcasting House, Portland Place, just a few metres away from the "Peel Wing", formerly the "Egton Wing", which occupies the land on which Egton House previously stood: it was renamed the "Peel Wing" in 2012 in honour of the long-serving BBC Radio 1 presenter, John Peel, who broadcast on the station from its launch in 1967 until his death in 2004.

Programmes have also regularly been broadcast from other regions, notably The Mark and Lard Show, broadcast every weekday from New Broadcasting House, Oxford Road, Manchester for over a decade (October 1993–March 2004) – the longest regular broadcast on the network from outside the capital.

In August 2022, the studio 82A (from which Radio 1 broadcasts) was renamed 82Mills, following the departure of the long-running DJ Scott Mills.[71]

UK analogue frequencies

Radio 1 originally broadcast on 1214 kHz[72] AM (or 247 metres). On 23 November 1978, the station was moved to 1053 kHz and 1089 kHz (275 and 285 m).

The BBC had been allocated three FM frequency ranges in 1955, for the then Light Programme (now BBC Radio 2), Third Programme (now BBC Radio 3) and Home Service (now BBC Radio 4) stations. Thus, when Radio 1 was launched, there was no FM frequency range allocated for the station. The official reason was that there was no space, even though no commercial stations had yet been launched on FM. To solve this issue, from launch until the end of the 1980s Radio 1 was allocated Radio 2's FM transmitters for a few hours per week. These were Saturday afternoons, Sunday teatime and evening – most notably for the Top 40 Singles Chart on Sunday afternoons and up until midnight; 10 pm to midnight on weeknights including Sounds of the Seventies until 1975, and thereafter the John Peel show (Mon–Thurs), The Friday Rock Show with Tommy Vance and most Bank Holiday afternoons when Radio 2 was broadcasting a Bank Holiday edition of Sport on 2.

Full-time FM broadcasting

Due to the rising competition from commercial FM stations, the BBC began to draw up plans for Radio 1 to broadcast on FM full time. This process began in London on 31 October 1987, at low power on a temporary frequency of 104.8 MHz.[73] The Home Office in the UK began to free up FM police communication bandwidths, which at the time were operating from 97.9 MHz to 102.0 MHz, in preparation for new FM radio stations planned for the future, which included BBC Radio 1. The BBC acquired 97.9 FM to 99.8 FM specifically for Radio 1.

The rollout of Radio 1 on FM nationally began on 1 September 1988, starting with Central Scotland (98.6 MHz), the Midlands (98.4 MHz) and the north of England (98.8 MHz). On 24 November 1988, Belfast was added to the network on another temporary frequency on 96.0 MHz.

Due to the expansion of Radio 1's FM broadcast hours, Radio 1 scaled back its airtime on Radio 2's FM frequencies - ending on weeknights (10pm–midnight), Saturday afternoons from 1pm until 7pm and Sunday evenings (7pm–midnight). The only programme continuing to broadcast on Radio 2's FM frequency was the UK Top 40, which broadcast between 5pm and 7pm on Sunday afternoon and evening; at the finish of the Top 40 show, the FM transmitters were handed back to Radio 2 at 7pm.

By September 1990, with further expansion of Radio 1 FM's frequencies, after 23 years all usage of Radio 2's FM frequencies came to an end, resulting in BBC Radio 2 transmitting on FM full-time. This was due to the then new BBC Radio 5 Live broadcasting on Radio 2's former AM frequencies on 603 & 909 MW.

Radio 1 made great efforts to promote its new FM service, renaming itself on-air initially as 'Radio 1 FM' and later as '1FM' until 1995. After reorganisation and a change of transmitter reallocation of the FM frequencies, especially in London (from 104.8 to 98.8 MHz), the Midlands (98.4 to 97.9 MHz) and Belfast (96.0 to 99.7 MHz), the engineering programme was completed in 1995.

End of medium wave broadcasting - 1053 / 1089 kHz

The Conservative government decided to increase competition on AM and disallowed the simulcasting of services on both AM and FM, affecting both BBC and Independent Local Radio. Radio 1's medium wave frequencies were reallocated to Independent National Radio. Radio 1's last broadcast on MW was on 1 July 1994, with Stephen Duffy's "Kiss Me" being the last record played on MW just before 9 am. For those who continued to listen, just after 9 am, Radio 1 jingles were played in reverse chronological order ending with its first jingle from 30 September 1967. In the initial months after this closure, a pre-recorded message by Mark Goodier was played to advise listeners that Radio 1 was now an "FM-only" station and to retune to the FM frequency.[74] Around this time, Radio 1 began broadcasting on spare audio subcarriers on Sky Television's via Astra's SES satellite analogue service; initially in mono (on UK Gold) and later in stereo (on UK Living) transponders. The 1053 / 1089 frequencies were allocated to the then newly-created Talk Radio UK.

Digital distribution

The BBC launched its national radio stations on DAB digital radio in 1995, however the technology was expensive at the time and so was not marketed, instead used as a test for future technologies. DAB was "officially" launched in 2002 as sets became cheaper. Today it can also be heard on UK digital TV services Freeview, Virgin Media, Sky and the Internet as well as FM. In July 2005, Sirius Satellite Radio began simulcasting Radio 1 across the United States as channel 11 on its own service and channel 6011 on Dish Network satellite TV. Sirius Canada began simulcasting Radio 1 when it was launched on 1 December 2005 (also on channel 11). The Sirius simulcasts were time shifted five hours to allow US and Canadian listeners in the Eastern Time Zone to hear Radio 1 at the same time of day as UK listeners. On 12 November 2008, Radio 1 made its debut on XM Satellite Radio in both the US and Canada on channel 29,[citation needed] moving to XM 15 and Sirius 15 on 4 May 2011.[75][76] Until the full station was removed in August 2011, Radio 1 was able to be heard by approximately 20.6 million listeners in North America on satellite radio alone. BBC Radio 1 can be heard on cable in the Netherlands at 105.10 FM.

SiriusXM cancellation in North America

At midnight on 9 August 2011, Sirius XM ceased carrying BBC Radio 1 programming with no prior warning. On 10 August 2011 the BBC issued the following statement:

The BBC’s commercial arm BBC Worldwide has been in partnership with SIRIUS Satellite Radio to broadcast Radio 1 on their main network, since 2005. This agreement has now unfortunately come to an end and BBC Worldwide are in current discussions with the satellite radio station to find ways to continue to bring popular music channel, BBC Radio 1, to the US audience. We will keep you posted.[77]

Thousands of angry Sirius XM customers began a campaign on Facebook and other social media to reinstate BBC Radio 1 on Sirius XM Radio.[78][non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed] One week later, Sirius and the BBC agreed on a new carriage agreement[79] that saw Radio 1 broadcast on a time-shifted format on the Sirius XM Internet Radio platform only, on channel 815.

Starting on 15 January 2012, The Official Chart Show began broadcasting on SiriusXM 20on20 channel 3, at 4 pm and 9 pm Eastern Standard Time.[80]

On 19 August 2014, SiriusXM again stopped carrying BBC Radio 1 programming with no advanced notice. The stream is no longer available on the Internet Radio platform.[citation needed]

Regionalisation

From 1999 until 2012, Radio 1 split the home nations for localised programming in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, to allow the broadcast of a showcase programme for regional talent. Most recently, these shows were under the BBC Introducing brand. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland had their own shows, which were broadcast on a 3-week rotational basis in England.

From January 2011 until June 2012, Scotland's show was presented by Ally McCrae.[81] Previously it was hosted by Vic Galloway (who also presents for BBC Radio Scotland); who had presented the show solo since 2004, after his original co-host Gill Mills departed.

Wales's show was hosted by Jen Long between January 2011 until May 2012.[82] Previously Bethan Elfyn occupied the slot, who had at one time hosted alongside Huw Stephens,[83] until Stephens left to join the national network, although he still broadcasts a show for Wales – a Welsh-language music show on BBC Radio Cymru on Thursday evenings.

Phil Taggart presented the Northern Ireland programme between November 2011 and May 2012. The show was formerly presented by Rory McConnell. Before joining the national network, Colin Murray was a presenter on The Session in Northern Ireland, along with Donna Legge;[83][84] after Murray's promotion to the network Legge hosted alone for a time, and on her departure McConnell took her place.

The regional opt-outs originally went out from 8 pm to 10 pm on Thursdays (the Evening Session's time slot) and were known as the "Session in the Nations" (the "Session" tag was later dropped due to the demise of the Evening Session); they later moved to run from 7:30 pm to 9 pm, with the first half-hour of Zane Lowe's programme going out across the whole of the UK. On 18 October 2007 the regional programmes moved to a Wednesday night/Thursday morning slot from midnight to 2 am under the BBC Introducing banner, allowing Lowe's Thursday show to be aired across the network; prior to this change Huw Stephens had presented the Wednesday midnight show nationally. In January 2011, BBC Introducing was moved to the new time slot of midnight to 2 am on Monday mornings, and the Scottish and Welsh shows were given new presenters in the form of Ally McCrae and Jen Long.

The opt-outs were only available to listeners on the FM frequencies. Because of the way the DAB and digital TV services of Radio 1 are broadcast (a single-frequency network on DAB and a single broadcast feed of Radio 1 on TV platforms), the digital version of the station was not regionalised.

The BBC Trust announced in May 2012 that the regional music programmes on Radio 1 would be replaced with a single programme offering a UK-wide platform for new music as part of a series of cost-cutting measures across the BBC.[85] In June 2012, the regional shows ended and were replaced by a single BBC Introducing show presented by Jen Long and Ally McCrae.[86]

Content

Music

Because of its youth-orientated nature, Radio 1 plays a broad mix of current and potential future hits, including independent/alternative, hip hop, rock, dance/electronica and pop. This made the station stand out from other top 40 stations, both in the UK and across the world. Since its progressive view on modern electronic music, the BBC Radio 1 is well-liked and known in the worldwide drum and bass community, frequently hosting producers and DJs like Hybrid Minds or Wilkinson.

Due to restrictions on the amount of commercial music that could be played on radio in the UK until 1988 (the "needle time" limitation) the station has recorded many live performances. Studio sessions (recordings of about four tracks made in a single day), also supplemented the live music content, many of them finding their way to commercially available LPs and CDs. The sessions recorded for John Peel's late night programme are particularly renowned. The station has continued to record live music with its Live Lounge feature and the Piano Sessions, which started in November 2014.[87]

The station also broadcasts documentaries and interviews. Although this type of programming arose from necessity it has given the station diversity. The needletime restrictions meant the station tended to have a higher level of speech by DJs. While the station is often criticised for "waffling" by presenters, an experimental "more music day" in 1988 was declared a failure after only a third of callers favoured it.

News and current affairs

Radio 1 has a public service broadcasting obligation to provide news, which it fulfills through Newsbeat bulletins throughout the day. Shared with 1Xtra and Asian Network, short news summaries are provided roughly hourly on the half-hour between 06:30 and 16:30, with two additional 15-minute bulletins at 12:45 and 17:45 and nine summaries over the weekend and Bank Holiday between 07:30 and 15:30.

Online visualisation and social media

In recent years Radio 1 has used social media to help reach a younger audience. Its YouTube channel now has over 7.5 million subscribers.[88] The highest viewed videos on the channel are predominately live music performances from the Live Lounge.

The station also has a heavy presence on social media, with audience interaction occurring through Facebook and Twitter as well as text messaging.

It was announced in 2013 that Radio 1 had submitted plans to launch its own dedicated video channel on the BBC iPlayer[89] where videos of live performances as well as some features and shows would be streamed in a central location. Plans were approved by the BBC Trust in November 2014 and the channel launched on 10 November 2014.[90]

Special programming

Bank Holiday programming

Radio 1 provides alternative programming on some Bank Holidays. Programmes have included 'The 10 Hour Takeover', a request-based special, in which the DJs on air would encourage listeners to select any available track to play, 'One Hit Wonder Day' and 'The Chart of the Decade' where the 150 biggest selling singles in the last 10 years were counted down and played in full.

Anniversary programming

On Sunday 30 September 2007, Radio 1 celebrated its 40th birthday.[91] To mark this anniversary Radio 1 hosted a week of special features, including a re-creation of Simon Bates' Golden Hour, and 40 different artists performing 40 different covers, one from each year since Radio 1 was established. On Saturday 30 September 2017, Radio 1 celebrated its 50th birthday. Tony Blackburn recreated the first ever Radio 1 broadcast on Radio 2,[92] simulcast on pop-up station Radio 1 Vintage,[93] followed by The Radio 1 Breakfast Show celebration, tricast on Radio 1, Radio 2 and Radio 1 Vintage, presented by Tony Blackburn and Nick Grimshaw, featuring former presenters as guests Simon Mayo, Sara Cox and Mike Read.[94]

Charity

Radio 1 regularly supports the BBC's in house charities Comic Relief, Sport Relief and Children in Need.

On 18 March 2011, BBC's Radio 1 longest-serving breakfast DJ Chris Moyles and sidekick Dave Vitty broadcast for 52 hours as part of a Guinness World Record attempt, in aid of Comic Relief. The pair stayed on air for 52 hours in total setting a new world record for 'Radio DJ Endurance Marathon (Team)’ after already breaking Simon Mayo's 12-year record for Radio 1's Longest Show of 37 hours which he set in 1999, also for Comic Relief.

The presenters started on 16 March 2011 and came off air at 10:30 am on 18 March 2011. During this Fearne Cotton made a bet with DJ Chris Moyles that if they raise over £2,000,000 she will appear on the show in a swimsuit. After passing the £2,000,000 mark, Cotton appeared on the studio webcam in a stripy monochrome swimsuit. The appearance of Cotton between 10:10 am and 10:30 am caused the Radio 1 website to crash due to a high volume of traffic.

In total the event raised £2,622,421 for Comic Relief.[95]

Drama

In 1981, Radio 1 broadcast a radio adaptation of the space opera film, Star Wars.[96] The 13-episode serial was adapted for radio by the author Brian Daley and directed by John Madden, and was a co-production between the BBC and the American Broadcaster NPR.[97]

In 1994, Radio 1 broadcast a radio adaptation of the Batman comic book storyline Knightfall, as part of the Marc Goodier show, featuring Michael Gough recreating his movie role as Alfred.[98] Later that same year, Radio 1 also broadcast a re-edited version of the Radio 4 Superman radio drama.[99]

Events

Radio 1 Roadshows

 
Radio 1 Roadshow in Southsea, 1990

The Radio 1 Roadshow, which usually involved Radio 1 DJs and pop stars travelling around popular UK seaside destinations, began in 1973, as a response to the imminent introduction of local commercial radio stations.[100] hosted by Alan Freeman in Newquay, Cornwall, with the final one held at Heaton Park, Manchester in 1999. Although the Roadshow attracted large crowds and the style changed with the style of the station itself—such as the introduction of whistlestop audio postcards of each location in 1994 ("2minuteTour")—they were still rooted in the older style of the station, and therefore fit for retirement.[101]

BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend

 
Radio 1's Big Weekend stage, 2007

In March 2000, Radio 1 decided to change the Roadshow format, renaming it One Big Sunday in the process. Several of these Sundays were held in large city-centre parks. In 2003, the event changed again and was rebranded One Big Weekend, with each event occurring biannually and covering two days. Under this name, it visited Derry in Northern Ireland, as part of the Music Lives campaign, and Perry Park in Birmingham.

The most recent change occurred in 2005 when the event was yet again renamed and the decision taken to hold only one per year, this time as Radio 1's Big Weekend. Venues under this title have included Herrington Country Park, Camperdown Country Park, Moor Park–which was the first Weekend to feature a third stage–Mote Park, Lydiard Park, Bangor and Carlisle Airport.

Tickets for each Big Weekend are given away free of charge, making it the largest free ticketed music festival in Europe.[102]

BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend was replaced by a larger festival in 2012, named 'Radio 1's Hackney Weekend', with a crowd capacity of 100,000. The Hackney Weekend took place over the weekend of 23–24 June 2012 in Hackney Marshes, Hackney, London. The event was to celebrate the 2012 Cultural Olympiad in London and had artists such as Rihanna, Jay-Z and Florence and the Machine.[103]

In 2013, Radio 1's Big Weekend returned to Derry as part of the City of Culture 2013 celebrations. So far, Derry is the only city to have hosted the Big Weekend twice.

In May 2014, Radio 1's Big Weekend was held in Glasgow, Scotland. Acts which played at the event included Rita Ora, The 1975, Katy Perry, Jake Bugg and Pharrell Williams. The event was opened on the Friday with a dance set in George Square, featuring Radio 1 Dance DJs such as Danny Howard and Pete Tong, and other well-known acts such as Martin Garrix and Tiesto.

In 2015, the event was held in Norwich and featured performances from the likes of Taylor Swift, Muse, David Guetta, Years & Years and others.

2016 saw the event make its way to Exeter. It was headlined by Coldplay, who closed the weekend on the Sunday evening.

The event was in Hull in 2017 and saw performances by artists such as Zara Larsson, Shawn Mendes, Stormzy, Katy Perry, Little Mix, Sean Paul, Rita Ora, The Chainsmokers, Clean Bandit and Kings of Leon.[104]

To take advantage of Glastonbury Festival's fallow year in 2018, 4 separate Big Weekends were held simultaneously between 25 and 28 May. Stylized as "BBC Music's Biggest Weekend", events were held in Swansea (with a line-up curated by Radio 1), Coventry and Perth (both curated by Radio 2) and Belfast (curated by Radio 6 Music). Tickets sold out for the Swansea, Perth and Coventry Big Weekends.

In 2020, the Big Weekend at Dundee was cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2020, Radio 1 announced a virtual Big Weekend. It took place from 22 to 24 May and featured performances from artists like Mabel and Anne-Marie.[105]

Ibiza Weekend

Radio 1 has annually held a dance music weekend broadcast live from Ibiza since the 1990s. The weekend is usually the first weekend in August and has performances from world-famous DJs and Radio 1's own dance music talent such as Pete Tong and Annie Mac.

BBC Radio 1's Teen Awards

In 2008, Radio 1 launched an annual event for teenagers aged 14 to 17 years. Originally named BBC Switch Live, the first event was held on 12 October 2008 at the Hammersmith Apollo. The event has been hosted by various Radio 1 DJs and guest co-hosts. In 2010 the event was renamed 'BBC Radio 1's Teen Awards' now hosted at Wembley Arena.

Year Date Presenter(s) Source
2014 19 October Nick Grimshaw [106]
Rita Ora
2015 8 November Nick Grimshaw [107]
Demi Lovato
2016 23 October Nick Grimshaw [108]
Dua Lipa
2017 23 October Nick Grimshaw
Rita Ora
2018 21 October Greg James [109]
Mollie King
Maya Jama
2019 24 November Greg James [110]
Mollie King
Maya Jama

Edinburgh Festival

Radio 1 often has a presence at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Past events have included 'The Fun and Filth Cabaret' and 'Scott Mills: The Musical'.

Europe's Biggest Dance Show

Europe's Biggest Dance Show is a series of radio specials produced by Radio 1.

The first, Europe's Biggest Dance Show 2019, was broadcast on Friday 11 October 2019 where Radio 1 joined with several European radio stations, all members of the European Broadcasting Union, including Swedish SR P3, German 1LIVE and RBB Fritz, Belgian VRT Studio Brussel, Irish RTÉ 2fm, French Radio France Mouv and Dutch NPO 3FM.[111]

A second show, Europe's Biggest Dance Show 2020, was broadcast on Friday 8 May 2020. It had the same contributing stations as 2019, however it had begun at 7 pm BST, rather than 8 pm as the previous year.[112]

A third show, Europe's Biggest Dance Show 2021, will be broadcast on Friday 29 October 2021.[113]

Online-only sister stations

On 17 September 2020, the BBC announced that it would launch an online-only sister station for BBC Radio 1, called BBC Radio 1 Dance, which would primarily play all kinds of songs from the Dance genre. The station was launched on 9 October 2020 at 6 pm BST.[114] A second online-only sister station, BBC Radio 1 Relax, was launched on 22 April 2021. The station plays a selection of relaxation and well-being focussed shows.[115]

Controllers/Head of Station

Years served Controller
1967–1969 Robin Scott
1969–1976 Douglas Muggeridge
1976–1978 Charles McLelland
1978–1985 Derek Chinnery
1985–1993 Johnny Beerling
1993–1998 Matthew Bannister
1998–2011 Andy Parfitt
2011–2020 Ben Cooper
2020–present Aled Haydn Jones

Former logos

Awards and nominations

International Dance Music Awards

Radio 1 has won the International Dance Music Awards every year from 2002 to 2020 with the exception of 2010.

See also

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Sources

Further reading

  • Edwards, M (30 September 2007). "Radio 1: Established 1967". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 3 October 2007.

External links

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radio, other, stations, known, radio, radio, british, national, radio, station, owned, operated, specialises, modern, popular, music, current, chart, hits, throughout, station, provides, alternative, genres, night, including, electronica, dance, indie, while, . For other stations known as Radio 1 see Radio 1 BBC Radio 1 is a British national radio station owned and operated by the BBC It specialises in modern popular music and current chart hits throughout the day The station provides alternative genres at night including electronica dance hip hop and indie while its sister station 1Xtra plays black contemporary music including hip hop and R amp B Radio 1 also runs two online streams Radio 1 Dance dedicated to dance music and Radio 1 Relax dedicated to chill out music both are available to listen only on BBC Sounds BBC Radio 1Logo used since 2021London and ManchesterBroadcast areaUnited Kingdom and internationally via BBC SoundsFrequenciesFM 97 1 MHz 99 7 MHzDAB 12B BBC National DAB Freesat 700Freeview 700Sky UK only 0101Virgin Media 901Virgin Media Ireland 907Astra 2E 28 2 E Intelsat 901 18 W RDSRadio 1ProgrammingLanguage s EnglishFormatContemporary hit radio with specialist programming at nightOwnershipOwnerBBCSister stationsBBC Radio 1XtraBBC Radio 1 DanceBBC Radio 1 RelaxHistoryFirst air date30 September 1967 55 years ago 1967 09 30 Former call signsBBC Light ProgrammeFormer frequenciesFM 104 8 MHz London 96 0 MHz Belfast AM 1053 kHz1089 kHz1215 kHzLinksWebsiteBBC Radio 1Radio 1 broadcasts throughout the UK on FM between 97 1 MHz and 99 7 MHz digital radio digital TV and BBC Sounds It was launched in 1967 to meet the demand for music generated by pirate radio stations when the average age of the UK population was 27 1 The BBC claims that it targets the 15 29 age group 2 and the average age of its UK audience since 2009 is 30 3 BBC Radio 1 started 24 hour broadcasting on 1 May 1991 4 According to RAJAR the station broadcasts to a weekly audience of 8 1 million with a listening share of 4 8 as of September 2022 Contents 1 History 1 1 First broadcast 1 2 1970s 1 3 1980s 1 4 1990s 1 5 2000s 1 6 2010s 1 7 2020s 2 Broadcast 2 1 Studios 2 2 UK analogue frequencies 2 3 Full time FM broadcasting 2 4 End of medium wave broadcasting 1053 1089 kHz 2 5 Digital distribution 2 6 SiriusXM cancellation in North America 2 7 Regionalisation 3 Content 3 1 Music 3 2 News and current affairs 3 3 Online visualisation and social media 3 4 Special programming 3 4 1 Bank Holiday programming 3 4 2 Anniversary programming 3 4 3 Charity 3 4 4 Drama 4 Events 4 1 Radio 1 Roadshows 4 2 BBC Radio 1 s Big Weekend 4 3 Ibiza Weekend 4 4 BBC Radio 1 s Teen Awards 4 5 Edinburgh Festival 4 6 Europe s Biggest Dance Show 5 Online only sister stations 6 Controllers Head of Station 7 Former logos 8 Awards and nominations 8 1 International Dance Music Awards 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditFurther information Timeline of BBC Radio 1 First broadcast Edit Radio 1 was established in 1967 along with the more middle of the road BBC Radio 2 as a successor to the BBC Light Programme which had broadcast popular music and other entertainment since 1945 Radio 1 was conceived as a direct response to the popularity of offshore pirate radio stations such as Radio Caroline and Radio London which had been outlawed by Act of Parliament 5 The new service was initially promoted in the summer of 1967 by trails voiced by Kenny Everett which referred to it as Radio 247 6 7 the station s temporary working title 8 Radio 1 was launched at 7 00 am on Saturday 30 September 1967 Broadcasts were on 1215 kHz AM 247 metres using a network of transmitters which had carried the Light Programme 9 Most were of comparatively low power at less than 50 kilowatts leading to patchy coverage of the country The first disc jockey to broadcast on the new station was Tony Blackburn whose cheery style first heard on Radio Caroline and Radio London won him the prime slot on what became known as the Radio 1 Breakfast Show The first words on Radio 1 after a countdown by the Controller of Radios 1 and 2 Robin Scott and a jingle recorded at PAMS in Dallas Texas beginning The voice of Radio 1 were 10 11 And good morning everyone Welcome to the exciting new sound of Radio 1 BBC Radio 1 opening message This was the first use of US style jingles on BBC radio but the style was familiar to listeners who were acquainted with Blackburn and other DJs from their days on pirate radio The reason jingles from PAMS were used was that the Musicians Union would not agree to a single fee for the singers and musicians if the jingles were made in house by the BBC they wanted repeat fees each time one was played citation needed The first music to be heard on the station was an extract from Beefeaters by Johnny Dankworth 12 Theme One specially composed for the launch by George Martin was played for the first time before Radio 1 officially launched at 7 am The first complete record played on Radio 1 was Flowers in the Rain by The Move the number 2 record in that week s Top 20 the number 1 record by Engelbert Humperdink would have been inappropriate for the station s sound The second single was Massachusetts by the Bee Gees The breakfast show remains the most prized slot in the Radio 1 schedule with every change of breakfast show presenter generating considerable media interest 13 The initial rota of staff included John Peel Pete Myers and a gaggle of others some transferred from pirate stations such as Keith Skues Ed Stewart Mike Raven David Ryder Jim Fisher Jimmy Young Dave Cash Kenny Everett Simon Dee Terry Wogan Duncan Johnson Doug Crawford Tommy Vance Chris Denning and Emperor Rosko Many of the most popular pirate radio voices such as Simon Dee had only a one hour slot per week Midday Spin 14 1970s Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message I want to slag off all the people in charge of radio stations Firstly Radio 1 They outlawed the pirates and then didn t as they promised cater for the market the pirates created Radio 1 and 2 most afternoons run concurrently and the whole thing has slid right back to where it was before the pirates happened They ve totally fucked it There s no radio station for young people any more It s all down to housewives and trendies in Islington They re killing the country by having that play list monopoly Joe Strummer 15 Initially the station was unpopular with some of its target audience who it is claimed disliked the fact that much of its airtime was shared with Radio 2 and that it was less unequivocally aimed at a young audience than the offshore stations with some DJs such as Jimmy Young being in their 40s The very fact that it was part of an establishment institution such as the BBC was a turn off for some and needle time restrictions prevented it from playing as many records as offshore stations had It also had limited finances and often as in January 1975 suffered disproportionately when the BBC had to make financial cutbacks strengthening an impression that it was regarded as a lower priority by senior BBC executives Despite this it gained massive audiences becoming the most listened to station in the world with audiences of over ten million claimed for some of its shows up to twenty million for some of the combined Radio 1 and Radio 2 shows In the early to mid 1970s Radio 1 presenters were rarely out of the British tabloids thanks to the Publicity Department s high profile work The touring summer live broadcasts called the Radio 1 Roadshow usually as part of the BBC Radio Weeks promotions that took Radio 1 2 and 4 shows on the road drew some of the largest crowds of the decade The station undoubtedly played a role in maintaining the high sales of 45 rpm single records although it benefited from a lack of competition apart from Radio Luxembourg and Manx Radio in the Isle of Man Independent Local Radio did not begin until October 1973 took many years to cover virtually all of the UK and was initially a mixture of music and talk Alan Freeman s Saturday Rock Show was voted Best Radio Show five years running by readers of a national music publication and was then axed by controller Derek Chinnery News coverage on the station was boosted in 1973 when Newsbeat bulletins aired for the first time and Richard Skinner joined the station as one of the new programme s presenters 16 On air 1978 was the busiest year of the decade David Jensen replaced Dave Lee Travis as host of the weekday drivetime programme 17 so that DLT could replace Noel Edmonds as presenter of the Radio 1 Breakfast show 18 Later in the year the Sunday teatime chart show was extended from a Top 20 countdown to a Top 40 countdown and Tommy Vance one of the station s original presenters rejoined the station to present a new programme The Friday Rock Show 19 and on 23 November Radio 1 moved from 247m 1214 kHz to 275 amp 285m 1053 amp 1089 kHz medium wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception and to conform with the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 20 21 Annie Nightingale whose first Radio 1 programme aired on 5 October 1969 was Britain s first national female DJ the earliest record presenter is thought to be Jean Metcalfe of Family Favourites but given that Metcalfe only presented the programme she is not considered a true DJ and is now the longest serving presenter having constantly evolved her musical tastes with the times 22 In 1978 Al Matthews became the first black disc jockey to join Radio 1 His Saturday night show Discovatin was broadcast for over two years During the summer months a Wednesday show was also broadcast featuring live acts 1980s Edit At the start of 1981 Mike Read took over The Radio 1 Breakfast Show from Dave Lee Travis Towards the end of the year Steve Wright started the long running Steve Wright in the Afternoon show In 1982 the new Radio 1 s Weekend Breakfast Show started initially with Tony Blackburn supported by Maggie Philbin and Keith Chegwin Adrian John and Pat Sharp also joined for the early weekend shows Gary Davies and Janice Long also joined hosting Saturday night late and evening shows respectively In 1984 Robbie Vincent joined to host a Sunday evening soul show Mike Smith left for a while to present BBC1 s Breakfast Time Gary Davies then took over the weekday lunchtime slot Bruno Brookes joined and replaced Peter Powell as presenter of the teatime show with Powell replacing Blackburn on a new weekend breakfast show 23 24 In 1985 Radio 1 relocated from its studios in Broadcasting House to Egton House 25 In March 1985 Ranking Miss P became the first black female DJ on the station hosting a reggae programme In July Andy Kershaw also joined the station 26 Simon Mayo joined the station in 1986 while Smith re joined to replace Read on the breakfast show 27 In response to the growth in dance and rap music Jeff Young joined in October 1987 with the Big Beat show At the end of the year Nicky Campbell Mark Goodier and Liz Kershaw all joined and Janice Long left Mayo replaced Smith on the breakfast show in May 1988 28 In September Goodier and Kershaw took over weekend breakfasts with Powell departing Campbell took over weekday evenings as part of a move into night time broadcasting as 1 October 1988 saw Radio 1 extend broadcast hours until 02 00 previously the station had closed for the night at midnight From September 1988 Radio 1 began its FM switch on with further major transmitter switch ons in 1989 and 1990 It was not until the mid 1990s that all existing BBC radio transmitters had Radio 1 added Previously Radio 1 had borrowed Radio 2 s VHF FM frequencies for around 25 hours each week 1990s Edit On 1 May 1991 Radio 1 began 24 hour broadcasting although only on FM as the station s MW transmitters were switched off between midnight and 06 00 In 1992 Radio 1 for the first and only time covered a general election Their coverage was presented by Nicky Campbell 29 In his last few months as controller Johnny Beerling commissioned a handful of new shows that in some ways set the tone for what was to come under Matthew Bannister One of these Loud n proud was the UK s first national radio series aimed at a gay audience which was produced in Manchester and aired from August 1993 Far from being a parting quirk the show was a surprise hit and led to the network s first coverage of the large outdoor Gay Pride event in 1994 30 The Man Ezeke became Radio 1 s first black regular daytime presenter when he began hosting on Sunday lunchtimes in January 1993 31 Bannister took the reins fully in October 1993 His aim was to rid the station of its Smashie and Nicey image in order to appeal to the under 25s Although originally launched as a youth station by the early 1990s its loyal listeners and DJs had aged with the station over its 25 year history Many long standing DJs such as Simon Bates Dave Lee Travis Alan Freeman Bob Harris Paul Gambaccini Gary Davies and later Steve Wright Bruno Brookes and Johnnie Walker left the station or were dismissed and in January 1995 older music typically anything recorded before 1990 was dropped from the daytime playlist Many listeners rebelled as the first new DJs to be introduced represented a crossover from other parts of the BBC notably Bannister and Trevor Dann s former colleagues at the BBC s London station GLR with Emma Freud and Danny Baker Another problem was that at the time Radio 2 was sticking resolutely to a format which appealed mainly to those who had been listening since the days of the Light Programme and commercial radio which was targeting the Radio 1 and a half audience consequently enjoyed a massive increase in its audience share at Radio 1 s expense After the departure of Steve Wright who had been unsuccessfully moved from his long running afternoon show to the breakfast show in January 1994 32 Bannister hired Chris Evans to present the breakfast show in April 1995 Evans was a popular presenter but was dismissed in 1997 after he demanded to present the breakfast show for only four days per week Evans was replaced from 17 February 1997 by Mark and Lard 33 Mark Radcliffe and his sidekick Marc Riley who found the slick mass audience style required for a breakfast show did not come naturally to them They were replaced by Zoe Ball and Kevin Greening eight months later in October 1997 Greening soon moved on leaving Ball as sole presenter The reinvention of the station happened at a fortuitous time with the rise of Britpop in the mid 1990s bands like Oasis Blur and Pulp were popular and credible at the time and the station s popularity rose with them Documentaries like John Peel s Lost in Music which looked at the influence that the use of drugs have had over popular musicians received critical acclaim but were slated inside Broadcasting House At just before 09 00 on 1 July 1994 Radio 1 broadcast on mediumwave for the final time 34 In March 1995 Radio 1 hosted an Interactive Radio Night with Jo Whiley and Steve Lamacq broadcasting from Cyberia an internet cafe and featuring live performances by Orbital via ISDN 35 Later in the 1990s the Britpop boom declined and manufactured chart pop boy bands and acts aimed at sub teenagers came to dominate the charts New genre music occupied the evenings indie on weekdays and dance at weekends with a mix of specialist shows and playlist fillers through late nights The rise of rave culture through the late 1980s and early 1990s gave the station the opportunity to move into a controversial and youth orientated movement by bringing in club DJ Pete Tong amongst others There had been a dance music programme on Radio 1 since 1987 and Pete Tong was the second DJ to present an all dance music show This quickly gave birth to the Essential Mix where underground DJs mix electronic and club based music in a two hour slot Dance and urban music has been a permanent feature on Radio 1 since with club DJs such as Judge Jules Danny Rampling 36 Trevor Nelson and the Dreem Teem all moving from London s Kiss 100 to the station 2000s Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chris Moyles outside Radio 1 s radio studios Steve Lamacq Jo Whiley and Zane Lowe at Glastonbury as part of Radio 1 s coverage Listening numbers continued to decline but the station succeeded in targeting a younger cross gender age group Eventually this change in content was reflected by a rise in audience that is continuing to this day Notably the station has received praise for shows such as The Surgery Bobby Friction and Nihal s show The Evening Session and its successor Zane Lowe s show Its website has also been well received However the breakfast show and the UK Top 40 continued to struggle In 2000 Zoe Ball was replaced in the mornings by close friend and fellow ladette Sara Cox but despite heavy promotion listening figures for the breakfast show continued to fall In 2004 Cox was replaced by Chris Moyles The newly rebranded breakfast show was known as The Chris Moyles Show and it increased its audience ahead of the Today programme on Radio 4 as the second most popular breakfast show after The Chris Evans Breakfast Show hosted by Chris Evans Moyles continued to use inappropriate ways to try to tempt listeners from the Wake Up to Wogan show In 2006 for example creating a SAY NO TO WOGAN campaign live on air This angered the BBC hierarchy though the row simmered down when it was clear that the campaign had totally failed to alter the listening trends of the time Wogan still increased figures at a faster rate than Moyles The chart show s ratings fell after the departure of long time host Mark Goodier amid falling single sales in the UK Ratings for the show fell in 2002 whilst Goodier was still presenting the show meaning that commercial radio s Network Chart overtook it in the ratings for the first time However the BBC denied he was being sacked Before July 2015 when the chart release day was changed to Friday the BBC show competed with networked commercial radio s The Big Top 40 Show which was broadcast at the same time Many DJs either ousted by Bannister or who left during his tenure such as Johnnie Walker Bob Harris and Steve Wright have joined Radio 2 which has now overtaken Radio 1 as the UK s most popular radio station using a style that Radio 1 had until the early 1990s The success of Moyles show has come alongside increased success for the station in general In 2006 DJs Scott Mills and Zane Lowe won gold Sony Radio Awards while the station itself came away with the best station award A new evening schedule was introduced in September 2006 dividing the week by genre Monday was mainly pop funkrock oriented Tuesday was R amp B and hip hop Thursdays and Fridays were primarily dance with specialist R amp B and reggae shows Following the death of John Peel in October 2004 Annie Nightingale is now the longest serving presenter having worked there since 1970 2010s Edit Scott Mills in the Radio 1 studio 2011 The licence fee funding of Radio 1 alongside Radio 2 is often criticised by the commercial sector In the first quarter of 2011 Radio 1 was part of an efficiency review conducted by John Myers 37 His role according to Andrew Harrison the chief executive of RadioCentre was to identify both areas of best practice and possible savings 37 The controller of Radio 1 and sister station 1Xtra changed to Ben Cooper on 28 October 2011 following the departure of Andy Parfitt Ben Cooper answered to the Director of BBC Audio and Music Tim Davie 38 On 7 December 2011 Ben Cooper s first major changes to the station were announced Skream amp Benga Toddla T Charlie Sloth and Friction replaced Judge Jules Gilles Peterson Kissy Sell Out and Fabio amp Grooverider A number of shows were shuffled to incorporate the new line up 39 On 28 February 2012 further changes were announced Greg James and Scott Mills swapped shows and Jameela Jamil Gemma Cairney and Danny Howard joined the station The new line up of DJs for In New DJs We Trust was also announced with B Traits Mosca Jordan Suckley and Julio Bashmore hosting shows on a four weekly rotation 40 This new schedule took effect on Monday 2 April 2012 In September 2012 Nick Grimshaw replaced Chris Moyles as host of Radio 1 s Breakfast Show Grimshaw previously hosted Mon Thurs 10pm Midnight Weekend Breakfast and Sunday evenings alongside Annie Mac Grimshaw was replaced by Phil Taggart and Alice Levine on the 10pm Midnight show In November 2012 another series of changes were announced This included the departure of Reggie Yates and Vernon Kay Jameela Jamil was announced as the new presenter of The Official Chart Matt Edmondson moved to weekend mornings with Tom Deacon briefly replacing him on Wednesday nights Dan Howell and Phil Lester famous YouTubers and video bloggers joined the station The changes took effect in January 2013 41 Former presenter Sara Cox hosted her last show on Radio 1 in February 2014 before moving back to Radio 2 In March 2014 Gemma Cairney left the weekend breakfast show to host the weekday early breakfast slot swapping shows with Dev In September 2014 Radio 1 operated a series of changes to their output which saw many notable presenters leave the station including Edith Bowman Nihal and Rob da Bank Huw Stephens gained a new show hosting 10 pm 1 am Monday Wednesday with Alice Levine presenting weekends 1 pm 4 pm Radio 1 s Residency also expanded with Skream joining the rotational line up on Thursday nights 10 pm 1 am From December 2014 to April 2016 Radio 1 included a weekly late night show presented by a well known Internet personality called The Internet Takeover Shows have been presented by various YouTubers such as Jim Chapman and Hannah Witton 42 In January 2015 Clara Amfo replaced Jameela Jamil as host of The Official Chart on Sundays 4 pm 7 pm and in March Zane Lowe left Radio 1 and was replaced by Annie Mac on the new music evening show In May 2015 Fearne Cotton left the station after 10 years of broadcasting Her weekday mid morning show was taken over by Clara Amfo Adele Roberts also joined the weekday schedule line up hosting the Early Breakfast show In July 2015 the Official Chart moved to a Friday from 4 pm to 5 45 pm hosted by Greg James The move took place to take into account the changes to the release dates of music globally Cel Spellman joined the station to host Sunday evenings In September 2017 a new slot namely Radio 1 s Greatest Hits was introduced for weekends 10am 1pm The show started on 2 September 2017 43 On 30 September 2017 Radio 1 celebrated its 50th birthday Commemorations included a three day pop up station Radio 1 Vintage celebrating the station s presenters and special on air programmes on the day itself including a special breakfast show co presented by the station s launch DJ Tony Blackburn which is also broadcast on BBC Radio 2 44 In October 2017 another major schedule change was announced Friction left the station The change features Charlie Sloth gained a new slot called The 8th which aired Mon Thu 9 11pm Other changes include MistaJam took over Danny Howard on the Dance Anthems Katie Thistleton joined Cel Spellman on Sunday evenings namely Life Hacks 4 6pm which features content from the Radio 1 Surgery and Most Played 6 7pm Danny Howard would host a new show on Friday 11pm 1am Huw Stephens s show pushed to 11pm 1am Kan D Man and DJ Limelight joined the station to host a weekly Asian Beats show on Sundays between 1 3am 45 Rene LaVice joined the station with the Drum amp Bass show on Tuesdays 1 3am Phil Taggart presented the Hype Chart on Tuesdays 3 4am 46 In February 2018 the first major schedule change of the year happened on the weekend This saw Maya Jama and Jordan North join BBC Radio 1 to present the Radio 1 s Greatest Hits which would be on Saturday and Sunday respectively Alice Levine moved to the breakfast slot to join Dev Matt Edmondson would replace Alice Levine s original slot in the afternoon and joined by a different guest co presenter each week The changes took into effect on 24 February 2018 47 48 In April 2018 another major schedule change was made due to the incorporation of weekend schedule on Fridays This means that Nick Grimshaw Clara Amfo and Greg James would host four days in a week Scott Mills became the new host for The Official Chart and Dance Anthems which replaces Greg James and Maya Jama would present The Radio 1 s Greatest Hits on 10am 1pm Mollie King joined Matt Edmondson officially on the 1 4pm slot namely Matt and Mollie The changes took into effect on 15 June 2018 49 50 In May 2018 it was announced that Nick Grimshaw would leave the Breakfast Show after six years the second longest run hosting the show in history only second to Chris Moyles However Grimshaw did not leave the station but swapped slots with Greg James who hosted the home time show from 4 7pm weekdays This change took place as of 20 August 2018 for the Radio 1 Breakfast Show which was then renamed to Radio 1 Breakfast 51 Grimshaw s show started on 3 September 2018 In June 2018 another series of schedule changes was announced This sees the BBC Introducing Show with Huw Stephens on Sundays 11pm 1am Jack Saunders joined the station and presented Radio 1 Indie Show from Monday Thursday 11pm 1am Other changes include the shows rearrangement of Sunday evenings Phil Taggart s chillest show moved to 7 9pm then followed by The Rock Show with Daniel P Carter at 9 11pm The changes took into effect in September 2018 52 In October 2018 Charlie Sloth announced that he was leaving Radio 1 and 1Xtra after serving the station for nearly 10 years He was hosting The 8th and The Rap Show at that point His last show was expected to be on 3 November 2018 53 However Charlie had been in the spotlight for storming the stage and delivering a sweary Kanye West esque rant at the Audio amp Radio Industry Awards ARIAS on Thursday 18 October 2018 which points towards Edith Bowman Charlie was nominated for best specialist music show at the ARIAS a category he lost out on to Soundtracking with Edith Bowman and prompting him to appear on stage during her acceptance 54 He apologised on Twitter regarding this issue and Radio 1 had agreed with Charlie that he will not do the 10 remaining shows that were originally planned 55 This meant that his last show ended on 18 October 2018 From 20 October 2018 onwards Seani B filled his The Rap Show slot on 9pm 11pm 56 and Dev covered The 8th beginning 22 October 2018 57 In the same month B Traits announced that she was leaving BBC Radio 1 after six years of commitment She said she feels as though she can no longer devote the necessary time needed to make the show the best it can be and is moving on to focus on new projects and adventures Her last show was on 26 October 2018 58 The Radio 1 s Essentials Mix is then shifted earlier to 1am 3am followed by Radio 1 s Wind Down from 3 am to 6 am The changes took effect from 2 November 2018 onwards 59 At the end of October 2018 Dev s takeover on The 8th resulted in the swapping between Matt Edmondson and Mollie King s show with Dev and Alice Levine s show This meant that Matt and Mollie became the new Weekend Breakfast hosts and Dev and Alice became the afternoon show hosts 60 The changes came into effect on 16 November 2018 61 62 On 15 November 2018 Radio 1 announced that Tiffany Calver who has previously hosted a dedicated hip hop show on the new music station KissFresh would join the station and host the Rap Show The change took effect from 5 January 2019 63 On 26 November 2018 Radio 1 announced that the new hosts for the evening slot previously hosted by Charlie Sloth would be Rickie Haywood Williams Melvin Odoom and Charlie Hedges The trio previously presented on Kiss s breakfast show The change took effect in April 2019 64 In July 2019 it was announced that there would be two new shows on the weekend the weekend early breakfast show and best new pop both of which started on 6 September 2019 65 The weekend early morning breakfast show would be and is currently hosted by Arielle Free It is broadcast between 04 00 06 00 on Friday and Saturday and Sunday between 05 00 07 00 66 Best new pop would be and is currently hosted by Mollie King and is currently broadcast between 06 00 06 30 on a Friday Morning This in turn changed the timing of the Weekend Breakfast Show hosted by Mollie King and Matt Edmondson which is now broadcast at Friday 06 30 10 00 and between 07 00 10 00 on Saturday amp Sunday 2020s Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Due to the COVID 19 pandemic there were temporary changes In March 2020 Radio 1 Breakfast began later at 7 am to 11 am Scott Mills would also present his show from 1 pm 3 pm with Nick Grimshaw starting until 6 pm BBC Radio 1 Dance Anthems now started from 3 pm with 2 hours Classic Anthems and it would end at 7 pm In July 2020 Alice Levine and Cel Spellman announced their resignation from BBC Radio 1 In September Vick Hope was announced to join Katie Thisleton replacing Spellman In September 2020 a new schedule was announced This meant that The Radio 1 Breakfast Show was extended by 30 minutes until 10 30 am Also Scott Mills show was shortened by 30 minutes from 4 to 3 30 pm Toddla T was also announced to be leaving the show after 11 years Annie Mac s evening show moved from 7 pm to 6 pm with Rickie Melvin and Charlie from 8 pm Jack Saunders would host a new show called Radio 1 s Future Artists with Jack Saunders from Monday to Wednesday Friday Schedule was also announced Radio 1 Party Anthems moved from 6 pm to 3 pm and it would be hosted by Dev Also Annie Mac Danny Howard Pete Tong and Essential Mix shows moved 1 hour earlier Dance Anthems on Saturday have been confirmed starting to its original time slot from 4 pm On 26 September 2020 MistaJam left BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 1Xtra after 15 years It was announced that Charlie Hedges would take over Dance Anthems from 3 October 2020 BBC Radio 1 Dance launched on Friday 9 October The station is broadcast exclusively on BBC Sounds In November 2020 it was confirmed that Dev Griffin Huw Stephens and Phil Taggart would all be leaving the station at the end of the year From January 2021 Radio 1 Breakfast was to return to five days per week while Arielle Free would host Early Breakfast Mon Thu 0500 0700 and three new presenters were to take turns hosting the early breakfast slot on Fridays 67 Adele Roberts left Early Breakfast after five years moving to Weekend Breakfast Sat Sun 0700 1030 Matt Edmondson and Mollie King returned to Weekend Afternoons Fri Sun 1300 1600 On Sunday evenings Sian Eleri replaced Phil Taggart as host of the Chillest Show and Gemma Bradley replaced Huw Stephens on BBC Introducing On 9 April 2021 BBC Radio 1 and other BBC radio stations were cut at 12 10 pm for the national anthem following the death of Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh and the stations then carried the BBC Radio News special programme until 4 pm Radio 1 then played music without vocals and on 10 and 11 April 2021 played downtempo and chilled music The Official Chart was not aired for the second time since Princess Diana s death On 20 April 2021 Annie Mac tweeted that she would leave BBC Radio 1 after 17 years It was also announced that Diplo would be leaving after 10 years On Weeknights Clara Amfo replaced Annie on Radio 1 s Future Sounds Mon Thu 1800 2000 On Fridays Danny Howard replaced Annie at 6 pm with Sarah Story a former Capital FM presenter hosting from 8 pm Rickie Melvin and Charlie were announced as new hosts of the Live Lounge slot replacing Clara Amfo Jack Saunders also moved to an earlier time slot Mon Thu 2000 2200 replacing Rickie Melvin and Charlie Sian Eleri gained 3 new shows per week hosting Radio 1 s Power Down Playlist from 10pm 11pm Mon Wed BBC Introducing Dance with Jaguar airs at this time slot on a Thursday evening On 21 April 2021 Radio 1 Relax launched on BBC Sounds playing relaxing music and sounds such as wind and rain 68 After 14 years on BBC Radio 1 Nick Grimshaw announced he would be leaving the station with Vick Hope and Jordan North taking over the time slot Grimshaw broadcast his final show on 12 August 2021 69 Vick and Jordan s new show first aired on 6 September 2021 70 Vick continued to co host Life Hacks alongside Katie Thistleton while Dean McCullough joined BBC Radio 1 to host Friday Sunday 1030 1300 In September 2022 DJ Target and Rene LaVice left the station making loads of changes first of all Radio 1 s Soundsystem with Jeremiah Asimiah has moved from 2300 on Saturday to 0100 on Sundays to Saturdays from 1900 2100 replacing DJ Target Radio 1 s Drum amp Bass Show has been moved to Saturdays 2300 to Sundays 0100 now being presented by Charlie Tee Radio 1 s Indie Show with Jack Saunders has been moved from Thursdays 2000 2200 to Sundays 2100 2300 Future Artists is still being broadcast Mon Wed 2000 2200 On Mondays Radio 1 s Rock Show with Daniel P Carter will move from Sundays 2100 2300 to Mondays 2300 to Tuesdays 0100 followed by a new Future Rock with Alyx Hylcombe on Tuesdays 0100 0200 and ending off with Future Alternative with Nels Hylton 0200 0300 moving from Thursdays 0300 0400 And a new programme is shown called Future Pop with Mollie King on Thursdays 2000 2200 Mollie will still host Weekends 1300 1600 with co host Matt Edmondson On 25 August 2022 Scott Mills and co host Chris Stark aired their final show Their radio time slots have been given to Dean McCullough and Vicky Hawksworth while the role of hosting the Official Chart has been given to Jack Saunders citation needed On 8 September 2022 Radio 1 and the other radio stations were cut at 6 32 pm to report the Death of Queen Elizabeth II and were carrying a BBC Radio News special The Official Chart did not air on the Friday which was the third time in two years since the death of the Duke of Edinburgh Radio 1 returned to normal programming on 11 September 2022 Broadcast EditStudios Edit Yalding House the home of Radio 1 1996 2012 BBC Radio 1 now broadcasts from Broadcasting House London From inception for over 20 years Radio 1 broadcast from an adjacent pair of continuity suites originally Con A and Con B in the main control room of Broadcasting House These cons were configured to allow DJs to operate the equipment themselves and play their own records and jingle cartridges called self op This was a departure from traditional BBC practice where a studio manager would play in discs from the studio control cubicle Due to needle time restrictions much of the music was played from tapes of BBC session recordings The DJs were assisted by one or more technical operators TOs who would set up tapes and control sound levels during broadcasts In 1985 Radio 1 moved across the road from Broadcasting House to Egton House The station moved to Yalding House in 1996 and Egton House was demolished in 2003 to make way for an extension to Broadcasting House This extension would eventually be renamed the Egton Wing and then the Peel Wing Until recently the studios were located in the basement of Yalding House near to BBC Broadcasting House on Great Portland Street in central London They used to broadcast from two main studios in the basement Y2 and Y3 there is also a smaller studio YP1 used mainly for production These two main studios Y2 and Y3 are separated by the Live Lounge although it is mainly used as an office live sets are rarely recorded from it for Maida Vale Studios is used instead for larger set ups The studios are linked by webcams and windows through the Live Lounge allowing DJs to see each other when changing between shows Y2 is the studio from where The Chris Moyles Show was broadcast and is also the studio rigged with static cameras for when the station broadcasts on the Live Cam The station moved there in 1996 from Egton House In December 2012 Radio 1 moved from Yalding House to new studios on the 8th floor of the new BBC Broadcasting House Portland Place just a few metres away from the Peel Wing formerly the Egton Wing which occupies the land on which Egton House previously stood it was renamed the Peel Wing in 2012 in honour of the long serving BBC Radio 1 presenter John Peel who broadcast on the station from its launch in 1967 until his death in 2004 Programmes have also regularly been broadcast from other regions notably The Mark and Lard Show broadcast every weekday from New Broadcasting House Oxford Road Manchester for over a decade October 1993 March 2004 the longest regular broadcast on the network from outside the capital In August 2022 the studio 82A from which Radio 1 broadcasts was renamed 82Mills following the departure of the long running DJ Scott Mills 71 UK analogue frequencies Edit Radio 1 originally broadcast on 1214 kHz 72 AM or 247 metres On 23 November 1978 the station was moved to 1053 kHz and 1089 kHz 275 and 285 m The BBC had been allocated three FM frequency ranges in 1955 for the then Light Programme now BBC Radio 2 Third Programme now BBC Radio 3 and Home Service now BBC Radio 4 stations Thus when Radio 1 was launched there was no FM frequency range allocated for the station The official reason was that there was no space even though no commercial stations had yet been launched on FM To solve this issue from launch until the end of the 1980s Radio 1 was allocated Radio 2 s FM transmitters for a few hours per week These were Saturday afternoons Sunday teatime and evening most notably for the Top 40 Singles Chart on Sunday afternoons and up until midnight 10 pm to midnight on weeknights including Sounds of the Seventies until 1975 and thereafter the John Peel show Mon Thurs The Friday Rock Show with Tommy Vance and most Bank Holiday afternoons when Radio 2 was broadcasting a Bank Holiday edition of Sport on 2 Full time FM broadcasting Edit Due to the rising competition from commercial FM stations the BBC began to draw up plans for Radio 1 to broadcast on FM full time This process began in London on 31 October 1987 at low power on a temporary frequency of 104 8 MHz 73 The Home Office in the UK began to free up FM police communication bandwidths which at the time were operating from 97 9 MHz to 102 0 MHz in preparation for new FM radio stations planned for the future which included BBC Radio 1 The BBC acquired 97 9 FM to 99 8 FM specifically for Radio 1 The rollout of Radio 1 on FM nationally began on 1 September 1988 starting with Central Scotland 98 6 MHz the Midlands 98 4 MHz and the north of England 98 8 MHz On 24 November 1988 Belfast was added to the network on another temporary frequency on 96 0 MHz Due to the expansion of Radio 1 s FM broadcast hours Radio 1 scaled back its airtime on Radio 2 s FM frequencies ending on weeknights 10pm midnight Saturday afternoons from 1pm until 7pm and Sunday evenings 7pm midnight The only programme continuing to broadcast on Radio 2 s FM frequency was the UK Top 40 which broadcast between 5pm and 7pm on Sunday afternoon and evening at the finish of the Top 40 show the FM transmitters were handed back to Radio 2 at 7pm By September 1990 with further expansion of Radio 1 FM s frequencies after 23 years all usage of Radio 2 s FM frequencies came to an end resulting in BBC Radio 2 transmitting on FM full time This was due to the then new BBC Radio 5 Live broadcasting on Radio 2 s former AM frequencies on 603 amp 909 MW Radio 1 made great efforts to promote its new FM service renaming itself on air initially as Radio 1 FM and later as 1FM until 1995 After reorganisation and a change of transmitter reallocation of the FM frequencies especially in London from 104 8 to 98 8 MHz the Midlands 98 4 to 97 9 MHz and Belfast 96 0 to 99 7 MHz the engineering programme was completed in 1995 End of medium wave broadcasting 1053 1089 kHz Edit The Conservative government decided to increase competition on AM and disallowed the simulcasting of services on both AM and FM affecting both BBC and Independent Local Radio Radio 1 s medium wave frequencies were reallocated to Independent National Radio Radio 1 s last broadcast on MW was on 1 July 1994 with Stephen Duffy s Kiss Me being the last record played on MW just before 9 am For those who continued to listen just after 9 am Radio 1 jingles were played in reverse chronological order ending with its first jingle from 30 September 1967 In the initial months after this closure a pre recorded message by Mark Goodier was played to advise listeners that Radio 1 was now an FM only station and to retune to the FM frequency 74 Around this time Radio 1 began broadcasting on spare audio subcarriers on Sky Television s via Astra s SES satellite analogue service initially in mono on UK Gold and later in stereo on UK Living transponders The 1053 1089 frequencies were allocated to the then newly created Talk Radio UK Digital distribution Edit The BBC launched its national radio stations on DAB digital radio in 1995 however the technology was expensive at the time and so was not marketed instead used as a test for future technologies DAB was officially launched in 2002 as sets became cheaper Today it can also be heard on UK digital TV services Freeview Virgin Media Sky and the Internet as well as FM In July 2005 Sirius Satellite Radio began simulcasting Radio 1 across the United States as channel 11 on its own service and channel 6011 on Dish Network satellite TV Sirius Canada began simulcasting Radio 1 when it was launched on 1 December 2005 also on channel 11 The Sirius simulcasts were time shifted five hours to allow US and Canadian listeners in the Eastern Time Zone to hear Radio 1 at the same time of day as UK listeners On 12 November 2008 Radio 1 made its debut on XM Satellite Radio in both the US and Canada on channel 29 citation needed moving to XM 15 and Sirius 15 on 4 May 2011 75 76 Until the full station was removed in August 2011 Radio 1 was able to be heard by approximately 20 6 million listeners in North America on satellite radio alone BBC Radio 1 can be heard on cable in the Netherlands at 105 10 FM SiriusXM cancellation in North America Edit At midnight on 9 August 2011 Sirius XM ceased carrying BBC Radio 1 programming with no prior warning On 10 August 2011 the BBC issued the following statement The BBC s commercial arm BBC Worldwide has been in partnership with SIRIUS Satellite Radio to broadcast Radio 1 on their main network since 2005 This agreement has now unfortunately come to an end and BBC Worldwide are in current discussions with the satellite radio station to find ways to continue to bring popular music channel BBC Radio 1 to the US audience We will keep you posted 77 Thousands of angry Sirius XM customers began a campaign on Facebook and other social media to reinstate BBC Radio 1 on Sirius XM Radio 78 non primary source needed non primary source needed One week later Sirius and the BBC agreed on a new carriage agreement 79 that saw Radio 1 broadcast on a time shifted format on the Sirius XM Internet Radio platform only on channel 815 Starting on 15 January 2012 The Official Chart Show began broadcasting on SiriusXM 20on20 channel 3 at 4 pm and 9 pm Eastern Standard Time 80 On 19 August 2014 SiriusXM again stopped carrying BBC Radio 1 programming with no advanced notice The stream is no longer available on the Internet Radio platform citation needed Regionalisation Edit From 1999 until 2012 Radio 1 split the home nations for localised programming in Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland to allow the broadcast of a showcase programme for regional talent Most recently these shows were under the BBC Introducing brand Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland had their own shows which were broadcast on a 3 week rotational basis in England From January 2011 until June 2012 Scotland s show was presented by Ally McCrae 81 Previously it was hosted by Vic Galloway who also presents for BBC Radio Scotland who had presented the show solo since 2004 after his original co host Gill Mills departed Wales s show was hosted by Jen Long between January 2011 until May 2012 82 Previously Bethan Elfyn occupied the slot who had at one time hosted alongside Huw Stephens 83 until Stephens left to join the national network although he still broadcasts a show for Wales a Welsh language music show on BBC Radio Cymru on Thursday evenings Phil Taggart presented the Northern Ireland programme between November 2011 and May 2012 The show was formerly presented by Rory McConnell Before joining the national network Colin Murray was a presenter on The Session in Northern Ireland along with Donna Legge 83 84 after Murray s promotion to the network Legge hosted alone for a time and on her departure McConnell took her place The regional opt outs originally went out from 8 pm to 10 pm on Thursdays the Evening Session s time slot and were known as the Session in the Nations the Session tag was later dropped due to the demise of the Evening Session they later moved to run from 7 30 pm to 9 pm with the first half hour of Zane Lowe s programme going out across the whole of the UK On 18 October 2007 the regional programmes moved to a Wednesday night Thursday morning slot from midnight to 2 am under the BBC Introducing banner allowing Lowe s Thursday show to be aired across the network prior to this change Huw Stephens had presented the Wednesday midnight show nationally In January 2011 BBC Introducing was moved to the new time slot of midnight to 2 am on Monday mornings and the Scottish and Welsh shows were given new presenters in the form of Ally McCrae and Jen Long The opt outs were only available to listeners on the FM frequencies Because of the way the DAB and digital TV services of Radio 1 are broadcast a single frequency network on DAB and a single broadcast feed of Radio 1 on TV platforms the digital version of the station was not regionalised The BBC Trust announced in May 2012 that the regional music programmes on Radio 1 would be replaced with a single programme offering a UK wide platform for new music as part of a series of cost cutting measures across the BBC 85 In June 2012 the regional shows ended and were replaced by a single BBC Introducing show presented by Jen Long and Ally McCrae 86 Content EditMusic Edit Because of its youth orientated nature Radio 1 plays a broad mix of current and potential future hits including independent alternative hip hop rock dance electronica and pop This made the station stand out from other top 40 stations both in the UK and across the world Since its progressive view on modern electronic music the BBC Radio 1 is well liked and known in the worldwide drum and bass community frequently hosting producers and DJs like Hybrid Minds or Wilkinson Due to restrictions on the amount of commercial music that could be played on radio in the UK until 1988 the needle time limitation the station has recorded many live performances Studio sessions recordings of about four tracks made in a single day also supplemented the live music content many of them finding their way to commercially available LPs and CDs The sessions recorded for John Peel s late night programme are particularly renowned The station has continued to record live music with its Live Lounge feature and the Piano Sessions which started in November 2014 87 The station also broadcasts documentaries and interviews Although this type of programming arose from necessity it has given the station diversity The needletime restrictions meant the station tended to have a higher level of speech by DJs While the station is often criticised for waffling by presenters an experimental more music day in 1988 was declared a failure after only a third of callers favoured it News and current affairs Edit Main article Newsbeat Radio 1 has a public service broadcasting obligation to provide news which it fulfills through Newsbeat bulletins throughout the day Shared with 1Xtra and Asian Network short news summaries are provided roughly hourly on the half hour between 06 30 and 16 30 with two additional 15 minute bulletins at 12 45 and 17 45 and nine summaries over the weekend and Bank Holiday between 07 30 and 15 30 Online visualisation and social media Edit In recent years Radio 1 has used social media to help reach a younger audience Its YouTube channel now has over 7 5 million subscribers 88 The highest viewed videos on the channel are predominately live music performances from the Live Lounge The station also has a heavy presence on social media with audience interaction occurring through Facebook and Twitter as well as text messaging It was announced in 2013 that Radio 1 had submitted plans to launch its own dedicated video channel on the BBC iPlayer 89 where videos of live performances as well as some features and shows would be streamed in a central location Plans were approved by the BBC Trust in November 2014 and the channel launched on 10 November 2014 90 Special programming Edit Bank Holiday programming Edit Radio 1 provides alternative programming on some Bank Holidays Programmes have included The 10 Hour Takeover a request based special in which the DJs on air would encourage listeners to select any available track to play One Hit Wonder Day and The Chart of the Decade where the 150 biggest selling singles in the last 10 years were counted down and played in full Anniversary programming Edit On Sunday 30 September 2007 Radio 1 celebrated its 40th birthday 91 To mark this anniversary Radio 1 hosted a week of special features including a re creation of Simon Bates Golden Hour and 40 different artists performing 40 different covers one from each year since Radio 1 was established On Saturday 30 September 2017 Radio 1 celebrated its 50th birthday Tony Blackburn recreated the first ever Radio 1 broadcast on Radio 2 92 simulcast on pop up station Radio 1 Vintage 93 followed by The Radio 1 Breakfast Show celebration tricast on Radio 1 Radio 2 and Radio 1 Vintage presented by Tony Blackburn and Nick Grimshaw featuring former presenters as guests Simon Mayo Sara Cox and Mike Read 94 Charity Edit Radio 1 regularly supports the BBC s in house charities Comic Relief Sport Relief and Children in Need On 18 March 2011 BBC s Radio 1 longest serving breakfast DJ Chris Moyles and sidekick Dave Vitty broadcast for 52 hours as part of a Guinness World Record attempt in aid of Comic Relief The pair stayed on air for 52 hours in total setting a new world record for Radio DJ Endurance Marathon Team after already breaking Simon Mayo s 12 year record for Radio 1 s Longest Show of 37 hours which he set in 1999 also for Comic Relief The presenters started on 16 March 2011 and came off air at 10 30 am on 18 March 2011 During this Fearne Cotton made a bet with DJ Chris Moyles that if they raise over 2 000 000 she will appear on the show in a swimsuit After passing the 2 000 000 mark Cotton appeared on the studio webcam in a stripy monochrome swimsuit The appearance of Cotton between 10 10 am and 10 30 am caused the Radio 1 website to crash due to a high volume of traffic In total the event raised 2 622 421 for Comic Relief 95 Drama Edit In 1981 Radio 1 broadcast a radio adaptation of the space opera film Star Wars 96 The 13 episode serial was adapted for radio by the author Brian Daley and directed by John Madden and was a co production between the BBC and the American Broadcaster NPR 97 In 1994 Radio 1 broadcast a radio adaptation of the Batman comic book storyline Knightfall as part of the Marc Goodier show featuring Michael Gough recreating his movie role as Alfred 98 Later that same year Radio 1 also broadcast a re edited version of the Radio 4 Superman radio drama 99 Events EditRadio 1 Roadshows Edit Main article Radio 1 Roadshow Radio 1 Roadshow in Southsea 1990 The Radio 1 Roadshow which usually involved Radio 1 DJs and pop stars travelling around popular UK seaside destinations began in 1973 as a response to the imminent introduction of local commercial radio stations 100 hosted by Alan Freeman in Newquay Cornwall with the final one held at Heaton Park Manchester in 1999 Although the Roadshow attracted large crowds and the style changed with the style of the station itself such as the introduction of whistlestop audio postcards of each location in 1994 2minuteTour they were still rooted in the older style of the station and therefore fit for retirement 101 BBC Radio 1 s Big Weekend Edit Main article Radio 1 s Big Weekend Radio 1 s Big Weekend stage 2007 In March 2000 Radio 1 decided to change the Roadshow format renaming it One Big Sunday in the process Several of these Sundays were held in large city centre parks In 2003 the event changed again and was rebranded One Big Weekend with each event occurring biannually and covering two days Under this name it visited Derry in Northern Ireland as part of the Music Lives campaign and Perry Park in Birmingham The most recent change occurred in 2005 when the event was yet again renamed and the decision taken to hold only one per year this time as Radio 1 s Big Weekend Venues under this title have included Herrington Country Park Camperdown Country Park Moor Park which was the first Weekend to feature a third stage Mote Park Lydiard Park Bangor and Carlisle Airport Tickets for each Big Weekend are given away free of charge making it the largest free ticketed music festival in Europe 102 BBC Radio 1 s Big Weekend was replaced by a larger festival in 2012 named Radio 1 s Hackney Weekend with a crowd capacity of 100 000 The Hackney Weekend took place over the weekend of 23 24 June 2012 in Hackney Marshes Hackney London The event was to celebrate the 2012 Cultural Olympiad in London and had artists such as Rihanna Jay Z and Florence and the Machine 103 In 2013 Radio 1 s Big Weekend returned to Derry as part of the City of Culture 2013 celebrations So far Derry is the only city to have hosted the Big Weekend twice In May 2014 Radio 1 s Big Weekend was held in Glasgow Scotland Acts which played at the event included Rita Ora The 1975 Katy Perry Jake Bugg and Pharrell Williams The event was opened on the Friday with a dance set in George Square featuring Radio 1 Dance DJs such as Danny Howard and Pete Tong and other well known acts such as Martin Garrix and Tiesto In 2015 the event was held in Norwich and featured performances from the likes of Taylor Swift Muse David Guetta Years amp Years and others 2016 saw the event make its way to Exeter It was headlined by Coldplay who closed the weekend on the Sunday evening The event was in Hull in 2017 and saw performances by artists such as Zara Larsson Shawn Mendes Stormzy Katy Perry Little Mix Sean Paul Rita Ora The Chainsmokers Clean Bandit and Kings of Leon 104 To take advantage of Glastonbury Festival s fallow year in 2018 4 separate Big Weekends were held simultaneously between 25 and 28 May Stylized as BBC Music s Biggest Weekend events were held in Swansea with a line up curated by Radio 1 Coventry and Perth both curated by Radio 2 and Belfast curated by Radio 6 Music Tickets sold out for the Swansea Perth and Coventry Big Weekends In 2020 the Big Weekend at Dundee was cancelled as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic In May 2020 Radio 1 announced a virtual Big Weekend It took place from 22 to 24 May and featured performances from artists like Mabel and Anne Marie 105 Ibiza Weekend Edit Radio 1 has annually held a dance music weekend broadcast live from Ibiza since the 1990s The weekend is usually the first weekend in August and has performances from world famous DJs and Radio 1 s own dance music talent such as Pete Tong and Annie Mac BBC Radio 1 s Teen Awards Edit In 2008 Radio 1 launched an annual event for teenagers aged 14 to 17 years Originally named BBC Switch Live the first event was held on 12 October 2008 at the Hammersmith Apollo The event has been hosted by various Radio 1 DJs and guest co hosts In 2010 the event was renamed BBC Radio 1 s Teen Awards now hosted at Wembley Arena Year Date Presenter s Source2014 19 October Nick Grimshaw 106 Rita Ora2015 8 November Nick Grimshaw 107 Demi Lovato2016 23 October Nick Grimshaw 108 Dua Lipa2017 23 October Nick GrimshawRita Ora2018 21 October Greg James 109 Mollie KingMaya Jama2019 24 November Greg James 110 Mollie KingMaya JamaEdinburgh Festival Edit Radio 1 often has a presence at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Past events have included The Fun and Filth Cabaret and Scott Mills The Musical Europe s Biggest Dance Show Edit Main article Europe s Biggest Dance Show Europe s Biggest Dance Show is a series of radio specials produced by Radio 1 The first Europe s Biggest Dance Show 2019 was broadcast on Friday 11 October 2019 where Radio 1 joined with several European radio stations all members of the European Broadcasting Union including Swedish SR P3 German 1LIVE and RBB Fritz Belgian VRT Studio Brussel Irish RTE 2fm French Radio France Mouv and Dutch NPO 3FM 111 A second show Europe s Biggest Dance Show 2020 was broadcast on Friday 8 May 2020 It had the same contributing stations as 2019 however it had begun at 7 pm BST rather than 8 pm as the previous year 112 A third show Europe s Biggest Dance Show 2021 will be broadcast on Friday 29 October 2021 113 Online only sister stations EditMain articles BBC Radio 1 Dance and BBC Radio 1 Relax On 17 September 2020 the BBC announced that it would launch an online only sister station for BBC Radio 1 called BBC Radio 1 Dance which would primarily play all kinds of songs from the Dance genre The station was launched on 9 October 2020 at 6 pm BST 114 A second online only sister station BBC Radio 1 Relax was launched on 22 April 2021 The station plays a selection of relaxation and well being focussed shows 115 Controllers Head of Station EditYears served Controller1967 1969 Robin Scott1969 1976 Douglas Muggeridge1976 1978 Charles McLelland1978 1985 Derek Chinnery1985 1993 Johnny Beerling1993 1998 Matthew Bannister1998 2011 Andy Parfitt2011 2020 Ben Cooper2020 present Aled Haydn JonesFormer logos Edit BBC Radio 1 logo from its 1967 launch BBC Radio 1 logo from 1976 to 1988 BBC Radio 1 logo from 1988 to 1990 BBC Radio 1 logo from 1990 to 1994 BBC Radio 1 logo from 1994 to 1997 BBC Radio 1 logo from 2007 to 2021 Awards and nominations EditInternational Dance Music Awards Edit Radio 1 has won the International Dance Music Awards every year from 2002 to 2020 with the exception of 2010 See also EditList of BBC radio stations Radio 1 Podcasts BBC Radio Triple JReferences Edit Annual Population Survey Archived 10 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Office for National Statistics 1967 Radio 1 Service Licence Issued 30 April 2007 PDF BBC Trust 30 April 2007 Archived PDF from the original on 27 February 2008 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2016 BBC Retrieved 10 July 2017 2018 BBC Radio 1 s Teen Awards Teen Awards 2018 BBC Radio 1 BBC Retrieved 13 September 2018 BBC Yungblud AJ Tracey and Jax Jones announced for BBC Radio 1 s Teen Awards BBC Retrieved 14 October 2019 BBC BBC Radio 1 to host biggest dance show ever Media Centre BBC Retrieved 12 October 2019 BBC BBC Radio 1 to host return of Europe s Biggest Dance Show Media Centre BBC Retrieved 17 April 2020 Europe s Biggest Dance Show geht in eine neue Runde Seid beim Clubabend am 29 Oktober dabei und freut euch auf exklusive DJ Sets von Ben Bohmer Felix Jaehn oder Tungevaag fritz de in German Retrieved 22 October 2021 Brand new Radio 1 Dance stream to launch this October BBC Retrieved 22 June 2021 Radio 1 launches Relax music stream with ASMR and mindfulness sessions BBC News 22 April 2021 Sources Edit Coon Caroline 1977 1988 The New Wave Punk Rock Explosion London Hawthorn ISBN 0 8015 6129 9 OCLC 79262599 Archived from the original on 26 October 2007 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Further reading EditEdwards M 30 September 2007 Radio 1 Established 1967 The Sunday Times London Retrieved 3 October 2007 External links EditListen to this article 1 minute source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 17 January 2013 2013 01 17 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Official website BBC Radio 1 playlist at BBC Online BBC Radio 1 s iPlayer channel at BBC Online BBC Radio 1 on Facebook BBC Radio 1 on Instagram BBC Radio 1 at Last fm BBC Radio 1 on Twitter BBC Radio 1 s channel on YouTube Portals BBC RadioBBC Radio 1 at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title BBC Radio 1 amp oldid 1131971631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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