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Norddeutscher Rundfunk

Norddeutscher Rundfunk (pronounced [ˈnɔʁtˌdɔʏtʃɐ ˈʁʊntfʊŋk]; "Northern German Broadcasting"), commonly shortened to NDR (pronounced [ˌɛndeːˈʔɛʁ] ), is a public radio and television broadcaster, based in Hamburg. In addition to the city-state of Hamburg, NDR broadcasts for the German states of Lower Saxony, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Schleswig-Holstein. NDR is a member of the ARD organisation.

Norddeutscher Rundfunk
Logo used since 2001
TypeBroadcast radio, television and online
Country
Germany
AvailabilityRegional
National
International
HeadquartersHamburg, Germany
Launch date
2 May 1924 as NORAG
1 January 1956 (68 years ago) (1956-01-01) as NDR
Former names
Nordische Rundfunk AG (1924–1933)
Norddeutsche Rundfunk GmbH (1933–1934)
Reichssender Hamburg (1934–1945)
Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (1945–1955)
WebcastNDR HD TV
NDR1 Radio
NDR 90.3 FM
NDR 2 Radio
NDR Info
NDR Kultur
NDR Info Spezial
NDRPlus
NDR Blue
NDR Schlager
Official website
www.ndr.de

History edit

Pre-war edit

In 1924 broadcasting began in Hamburg, when Norddeutsche Rundfunk AG (NORAG) was created. In 1934 it was incorporated into the Großdeutscher Rundfunk, the national broadcaster controlled by Joseph Goebbels's Propagandaministerium, as Reichssender Hamburg.

In 1930, NORAG commissioned the Welte-Funkorgel – a large theatre organ custom-built by the firm of M. Welte & Sons to meet the specific acoustic requirements of radio broadcasting – and installed it in their radio studio (today the world's oldest such facility still in use) on Rothenbaumchaussee 132, Hamburg, where it continues to be played, now maintained by volunteers.[1]

Post-war edit

In the British Zone of occupied Germany, the military authorities quickly established Radio Hamburg to provide information to the population of the area.

The British Control Commission appointed Hugh Greene to manage the creation of public service broadcasting in their Zone. On 22 September 1945, Radio Hamburg became Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (North-Western German Broadcasting), the single broadcasting organisation of the British Zone.

The state of Bremen, while laying wholly within British Zone, was part of the American Zone and thus a separate broadcaster was established for this state, Radio Bremen. However, Radio Bremen and NDR cooperate in certain programmes and stations.

Länder control edit

In 1948, the Control Commission transferred the Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk (NWDR) to the control of the constituent Länder (Hamburg, Lower Saxony, North Rhine-Westphalia and Schleswig-Holstein). At first, NWDR had just one radio station, later known as NWDR1. In 1950, it introduced a regional station for the north, NWDR Nord (later to become NDR2), and a regional station for the west, NWDR West (later WDR2).

That same year, NWDR became a founding member of ARD, a joint organisation of all German regional broadcasters. The NWDR also played a founding role in launching 625-line television in Germany, starting broadcasts on 25 December 1952.

NWDR split edit

In February 1955, North Rhine-Westphalia decided to establish its broadcaster, whilst Hamburg, Lower Saxony and Schleswig-Holstein continued with the existing joint system. To this end, the NWDR was split into two broadcasters, Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) in the north and Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) in North Rhine-Westphalia.

NDR continued to operate out of Hamburg. The split was effective from 1 January 1956, although the radio station NWDR1 remained a joint operation with regional opt-outs.

The NWDR television service also remained a joint operation, from 1 April 1956 under the name Nord- und Westdeutsche Rundfunkverband (North and West German Broadcasting Federation – NWRV). NDR and WDR launched separate television services for their respective areas in 1961.

NDR history edit

 
NDR's first logo, used from 1956 to 1980
 
NDR's previous corporate logo, was used from 1980 to 2001. Its old corporate logo featured Antje the Walrus, the mascot of the broadcaster for the north.[2]

On 1 December 1956 NDR started its third radio channel, NDR3 (from 1962 to 1973, it was operated jointly with Sender Freies Berlin).

In 1958 Han Koller became the musical director of Hamburg's NDR Jazz Workshop, which became a popular radio broadcast. Numerous names in Jazz performed on these broadcasts including; Dave Brubeck, Kenny Clarke, Lucky Thompson, Wes Montgomery, Johnny Griffin, Oscar Peterson, Ben Webster, Sahib Shihab, Carmell Jones, Lee Konitz, Cecil Payne, Slide Hampton, Phil Woods, Jazz Composers Orchestra, Howard Riley, Barry Guy, John Surman, the Kuhn Brothers and Barney Wilen. Some of these have been released since 1987, while the older ones only exist as rare bootlegs, sought after by many Jazz aficionados.

On 4 January 1965 NDR, Radio Bremen and Sender Freies Berlin (SFB) began a joint "third channel" television service, Norddeutsches Fernsehen, later Nord 3 and N3. Since December 2001, this service is called NDR Fernsehen. SFB started a separate TV channel for Berlin in 1992, called B1, later SFB1, now RBB Fernsehen.

In 1977, Gerhard Stoltenberg, the minister-president of Schleswig-Holstein unilaterally cancelled the NDR-Staatsvertrag, the governing contract of NDR. This caused a discussion on how to organise broadcasting in the North German region.

In 1980, NDR signed a new contract with the three Länder, changing the pattern of broadcasting and creating new regional services. NDR1 was divided into three independent radio stations from 2 January 1981:

NDR2 and NDR3 (now NDR Kultur) continued as regional stations.

These regional services were further subdivided with opt-outs for specific areas. NDR 1 Niedersachsen established regions based around Oldenburg-Ostfriesland-Bremen-Cuxhaven, Osnabrück-Emsland, greater Hanover, Braunschweig-southern Lower Saxony and northern Lower Saxony. NDR 1 Welle Nord was subdivided with studio centres in Flensburg, Heide, Norderstedt, Lübeck and Kiel.

On 30 September 1988 NDR introduced a Teletext service on its N3 television channel. Originally called Nordtext, it became NDR Text on 2 December 2001. The Teletext service also offers information for viewers in the Radio Bremen area under the title Radio Bremen Text.

On 1 April 1989, NDR introduced its fourth radio service, NDR4. This service was later renamed NDR4 Info and since 2 June 2002 has been known as NDR Info. The station is a news and information service for the whole NDR region.

On 1 January 1992, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in former East Germany joined NDR as the fourth state in the organisation, where it replaced Fernsehen der DDR and Rundfunk der DDR. The area receives the main NDR radio and television stations, plus the regional NDR 1 Radio mV, which has subregions based in Schwerin, Rostock, Neubrandenburg and Greifswald. In October of the same year, SFB in Berlin stopped relaying the Nord 3 television service in favour of its own Berlin 1 TV channel.

On 4 April 1994, NDR introduced N-Joy Radio (known simply as N-Joy since 2001), a radio station aimed at 14 to 29-year-old listeners.

On 3 October 1997, NDR3 was relaunched as Radio 3, produced in co-operation with Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg. At the end of 2000, SFB joined Radio 3. This arrangement lasted until ORB and SFB merged on 1 January 2003 and started its own classical and cultural network. NDR3 became NDR Kultur on 1 January 2003.

On 1 November 2001, NDR and Radio Bremen launched a joint radio station, Nordwestradio, to serve Bremen and northwestern Lower Saxony. This service replaced Radio Bremen 2 and control of the service remains with Radio Bremen.

As the organization responsible within the ARD consortium of German public-service broadcasters for overseeing the country's participation in the Eurovision Song Contest, NDR staged the 56th annual contest which was held in Düsseldorf on 10–14 May 2011, outside their broadcasting area.

Studios edit

 
NDR television buildings in Hamburg (2023)

NDR's studios in Hamburg are in two locations, both within the borough of Eimsbüttel: the television studios are in the quarter of Lokstedt while the radio studios are in the quarter of Harvestehude (though they are called "Funkhaus am Rothenbaum"), a little closer to the city centre. There are also regional studios, having both radio and television production facilities, in the state capitals Hanover, Kiel and Schwerin. The facility in Hanover is now called the Landesfunkhaus Niedersachsen. In addition, NDR maintains facilities at ARD's national studios in Berlin.

Organization and finances edit

Chairmen of the Norddeutscher Rundfunk edit

  • 1955–1961: Walter Hilpert
  • 1961–1974: Gerhard Schröder
  • 1974–1980: Martin Neuffer
  • 1980–1987: Friedrich-Wilhelm Räuker
  • 1987–1991: Peter Schiwy
  • 1991–2008: Jobst Plog
  • 2008–2020: Lutz Marmor
  • 2020–present: Joachim Knuth

Funding edit

NDR is in part funded by the limited sale of on-air commercial advertising time; however, its principal source of income is the revenue derived from viewer and listener licence fees. As of August 2021, the monthly fee due from each household for radio and television reception was €18.36.[3] These fees are collected not directly by NDR but by a joint agency of ARD (and its member institutions), ZDF, and Deutschlandradio.

Services edit

 
Map of the ARD broadcasting regions in Germany

NDR currently provides a number of services on its own or in co-operation with other broadcasters:

Television edit

  • Das Erste – joint national channel
  • NDR Fernsehen (formerly N3 and Norddeutsches Fernsehen) – third public service channel for the NDR area and Bremen, in co-operation with Radio Bremen.
  • Phoenix – events channel produced by ARD and ZDF
  • KI.KA – children's channel produced by ARD and ZDF
  • Arte – Franco-German culture channel
  • 3sat – cultural channel, co-produced by ARD, ZDF, ORF, and SRG
  • tagesschau24 – news channel

Radio edit

  • NDR 1 [de] network consists of four independent radio stations:
    • NDR 90,3 [de] – Local station for Hamburg, playing music for older listeners.
    • NDR 1 Niedersachsen [de] – Local station for Lower Saxony, run from Hanover with some regional opt-outs. Plays music for older listeners.
    • NDR 1 Welle Nord [de] – Local station for Schleswig-Holstein, run from Kiel with some regional opt-outs. Plays music for older listeners.
    • NDR 1 Radio MV [de] – Local station for Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, run from Schwerin with some regional opt-outs. Plays music for older listeners.
  • NDR 2 [de] – Popular music station for middle-aged listeners. This is a commercial public service station.
  • NDR Kultur [de] – Arts and culture station (formerly NDR 3). Plays classical music.
  • NDR Info [de] – News and information station (formerly NDR 4 or NDR 4 Info).
  • NDR Info Spezial [de] - Same programming as NDR Info with opt-outs for sports, parliament sittings, maritime forecast, multicultural broadcasts and the ARD Infonacht.
  • N-Joy – youth station.
  • NDR Blue [de] – Music "away from the charts".
  • NDR Schlager [de] – a music station with the programming format schlager music and easy listening

Broadcasts edit

Musical organizations edit

NDR has four musical organizations, including two orchestras, a chorus and a "big band":

  • NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester – the North German Radio Elbphilharmonie Orchestra; created in 1945 as the Symphony Orchestra of the NWDR and continued by NDR under the name NDR Sinfonieorchester between 1955 – 2016. It was renamed in 2016 to its current name. Principal conductors have included Günter Wand and John Eliot Gardiner. Currently it is Alan Gilbert.
  • NDR Radiophilharmonie – the NDR Radio Philharmonic; created in 1950 as the Hanover Radio Orchestra of the NWDR and continued by NDR under its current name since 1955. Principal conductors have included Willy Steiner, Bernhard Klee, and Eiji Oue. The orchestra plays light classical or "concert hall" music.
  • NDR Chor or Chor des Norddeutschen Rundfunks—created in 1946 by the NWDR and continued under its current name NDR since 1955. The choir specializes in "Alte Musik", but a broad repertory also includes contemporary music.
  • NDR Bigband; created by the NWDR and continued by NDR in 1955 as the NDR Studioband. Renamed NDR Bigband in 1971.

Transmitters edit

FM, MW and TV edit

FM and TV edit

Mecklenburg-Vorpommern edit

In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, in former East Germany, NDR programmes are broadcast from facilities owned by Media Broadcast GmbH, a former subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom AG.

Other facilities edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Staff (14 December 2008). (in German). Freunde der Welte-Funkorgel Hamburg e.V. Archived from the original on 1 January 2009. Retrieved 1 February 2009.
  2. ^ (in German). TV wunschliste. Archived from the original on 15 April 2009. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
  3. ^ "Der Rundfunkbeitrag - Beitragsservice beginnt mit Erhebung des Rundfunkbeitrags in neuer Höhe".

External links edit

  • Official website (in German)

norddeutscher, rundfunk, pronounced, ˈnɔʁtˌdɔʏtʃɐ, ˈʁʊntfʊŋk, northern, german, broadcasting, commonly, shortened, pronounced, ˌɛndeːˈʔɛʁ, public, radio, television, broadcaster, based, hamburg, addition, city, state, hamburg, broadcasts, german, states, lower. Norddeutscher Rundfunk pronounced ˈnɔʁtˌdɔʏtʃɐ ˈʁʊntfʊŋk Northern German Broadcasting commonly shortened to NDR pronounced ˌɛndeːˈʔɛʁ is a public radio and television broadcaster based in Hamburg In addition to the city state of Hamburg NDR broadcasts for the German states of Lower Saxony Mecklenburg Vorpommern and Schleswig Holstein NDR is a member of the ARD organisation Norddeutscher RundfunkLogo used since 2001TypeBroadcast radio television and onlineCountryGermanyAvailabilityRegionalNationalInternationalHeadquartersHamburg GermanyLaunch date2 May 1924 as NORAG1 January 1956 68 years ago 1956 01 01 as NDRFormer namesNordische Rundfunk AG 1924 1933 Norddeutsche Rundfunk GmbH 1933 1934 Reichssender Hamburg 1934 1945 Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk 1945 1955 WebcastNDR HD TVNDR1 RadioNDR 90 3 FMNDR 2 RadioNDR InfoNDR KulturNDR Info SpezialNDRPlusNDR BlueNDR SchlagerOfficial websitewww wbr ndr wbr de Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre war 1 2 Post war 1 3 Lander control 1 4 NWDR split 1 5 NDR history 2 Studios 3 Organization and finances 3 1 Chairmen of the Norddeutscher Rundfunk 3 2 Funding 4 Services 4 1 Television 4 2 Radio 5 Broadcasts 6 Musical organizations 7 Transmitters 7 1 FM MW and TV 7 2 FM and TV 7 3 Mecklenburg Vorpommern 8 Other facilities 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editSee also Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk Pre war edit In 1924 broadcasting began in Hamburg when Norddeutsche Rundfunk AG NORAG was created In 1934 it was incorporated into the Grossdeutscher Rundfunk the national broadcaster controlled by Joseph Goebbels s Propagandaministerium as Reichssender Hamburg In 1930 NORAG commissioned the Welte Funkorgel a large theatre organ custom built by the firm of M Welte amp Sons to meet the specific acoustic requirements of radio broadcasting and installed it in their radio studio today the world s oldest such facility still in use on Rothenbaumchaussee 132 Hamburg where it continues to be played now maintained by volunteers 1 Post war edit In the British Zone of occupied Germany the military authorities quickly established Radio Hamburg to provide information to the population of the area The British Control Commission appointed Hugh Greene to manage the creation of public service broadcasting in their Zone On 22 September 1945 Radio Hamburg became Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk North Western German Broadcasting the single broadcasting organisation of the British Zone The state of Bremen while laying wholly within British Zone was part of the American Zone and thus a separate broadcaster was established for this state Radio Bremen However Radio Bremen and NDR cooperate in certain programmes and stations Lander control edit In 1948 the Control Commission transferred the Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk NWDR to the control of the constituent Lander Hamburg Lower Saxony North Rhine Westphalia and Schleswig Holstein At first NWDR had just one radio station later known as NWDR1 In 1950 it introduced a regional station for the north NWDR Nord later to become NDR2 and a regional station for the west NWDR West later WDR2 That same year NWDR became a founding member of ARD a joint organisation of all German regional broadcasters The NWDR also played a founding role in launching 625 line television in Germany starting broadcasts on 25 December 1952 NWDR split edit In February 1955 North Rhine Westphalia decided to establish its broadcaster whilst Hamburg Lower Saxony and Schleswig Holstein continued with the existing joint system To this end the NWDR was split into two broadcasters Norddeutscher Rundfunk NDR in the north and Westdeutscher Rundfunk WDR in North Rhine Westphalia NDR continued to operate out of Hamburg The split was effective from 1 January 1956 although the radio station NWDR1 remained a joint operation with regional opt outs The NWDR television service also remained a joint operation from 1 April 1956 under the name Nord und Westdeutsche Rundfunkverband North and West German Broadcasting Federation NWRV NDR and WDR launched separate television services for their respective areas in 1961 NDR history edit nbsp NDR s first logo used from 1956 to 1980 nbsp NDR s previous corporate logo was used from 1980 to 2001 Its old corporate logo featured Antje the Walrus the mascot of the broadcaster for the north 2 On 1 December 1956 NDR started its third radio channel NDR3 from 1962 to 1973 it was operated jointly with Sender Freies Berlin In 1958 Han Koller became the musical director of Hamburg s NDR Jazz Workshop which became a popular radio broadcast Numerous names in Jazz performed on these broadcasts including Dave Brubeck Kenny Clarke Lucky Thompson Wes Montgomery Johnny Griffin Oscar Peterson Ben Webster Sahib Shihab Carmell Jones Lee Konitz Cecil Payne Slide Hampton Phil Woods Jazz Composers Orchestra Howard Riley Barry Guy John Surman the Kuhn Brothers and Barney Wilen Some of these have been released since 1987 while the older ones only exist as rare bootlegs sought after by many Jazz aficionados On 4 January 1965 NDR Radio Bremen and Sender Freies Berlin SFB began a joint third channel television service Norddeutsches Fernsehen later Nord 3 and N3 Since December 2001 this service is called NDR Fernsehen SFB started a separate TV channel for Berlin in 1992 called B1 later SFB1 now RBB Fernsehen In 1977 Gerhard Stoltenberg the minister president of Schleswig Holstein unilaterally cancelled the NDR Staatsvertrag the governing contract of NDR This caused a discussion on how to organise broadcasting in the North German region In 1980 NDR signed a new contract with the three Lander changing the pattern of broadcasting and creating new regional services NDR1 was divided into three independent radio stations from 2 January 1981 NDR 1 Radio Niedersachsen from 2002 NDR 1 Niedersachsen for Lower Saxony NDR 1 Welle Nord for Schleswig Holstein NDR Hamburg Welle 90 3 from 2 December 2001 NDR 90 3 for HamburgNDR2 and NDR3 now NDR Kultur continued as regional stations These regional services were further subdivided with opt outs for specific areas NDR 1 Niedersachsen established regions based around Oldenburg Ostfriesland Bremen Cuxhaven Osnabruck Emsland greater Hanover Braunschweig southern Lower Saxony and northern Lower Saxony NDR 1 Welle Nord was subdivided with studio centres in Flensburg Heide Norderstedt Lubeck and Kiel On 30 September 1988 NDR introduced a Teletext service on its N3 television channel Originally called Nordtext it became NDR Text on 2 December 2001 The Teletext service also offers information for viewers in the Radio Bremen area under the title Radio Bremen Text On 1 April 1989 NDR introduced its fourth radio service NDR4 This service was later renamed NDR4 Info and since 2 June 2002 has been known as NDR Info The station is a news and information service for the whole NDR region On 1 January 1992 Mecklenburg Vorpommern in former East Germany joined NDR as the fourth state in the organisation where it replaced Fernsehen der DDR and Rundfunk der DDR The area receives the main NDR radio and television stations plus the regional NDR 1 Radio mV which has subregions based in Schwerin Rostock Neubrandenburg and Greifswald In October of the same year SFB in Berlin stopped relaying the Nord 3 television service in favour of its own Berlin 1 TV channel On 4 April 1994 NDR introduced N Joy Radio known simply as N Joy since 2001 a radio station aimed at 14 to 29 year old listeners On 3 October 1997 NDR3 was relaunched as Radio 3 produced in co operation with Ostdeutscher Rundfunk Brandenburg At the end of 2000 SFB joined Radio 3 This arrangement lasted until ORB and SFB merged on 1 January 2003 and started its own classical and cultural network NDR3 became NDR Kultur on 1 January 2003 On 1 November 2001 NDR and Radio Bremen launched a joint radio station Nordwestradio to serve Bremen and northwestern Lower Saxony This service replaced Radio Bremen 2 and control of the service remains with Radio Bremen As the organization responsible within the ARD consortium of German public service broadcasters for overseeing the country s participation in the Eurovision Song Contest NDR staged the 56th annual contest which was held in Dusseldorf on 10 14 May 2011 outside their broadcasting area Studios edit nbsp NDR television buildings in Hamburg 2023 NDR s studios in Hamburg are in two locations both within the borough of Eimsbuttel the television studios are in the quarter of Lokstedt while the radio studios are in the quarter of Harvestehude though they are called Funkhaus am Rothenbaum a little closer to the city centre There are also regional studios having both radio and television production facilities in the state capitals Hanover Kiel and Schwerin The facility in Hanover is now called the Landesfunkhaus Niedersachsen In addition NDR maintains facilities at ARD s national studios in Berlin Organization and finances editChairmen of the Norddeutscher Rundfunk edit 1955 1961 Walter Hilpert 1961 1974 Gerhard Schroder 1974 1980 Martin Neuffer 1980 1987 Friedrich Wilhelm Rauker 1987 1991 Peter Schiwy 1991 2008 Jobst Plog 2008 2020 Lutz Marmor 2020 present Joachim Knuth Funding edit NDR is in part funded by the limited sale of on air commercial advertising time however its principal source of income is the revenue derived from viewer and listener licence fees As of August 2021 the monthly fee due from each household for radio and television reception was 18 36 3 These fees are collected not directly by NDR but by a joint agency of ARD and its member institutions ZDF and Deutschlandradio Services edit nbsp Map of the ARD broadcasting regions in GermanyNDR currently provides a number of services on its own or in co operation with other broadcasters Television edit Das Erste joint national channel NDR Fernsehen formerly N3 and Norddeutsches Fernsehen third public service channel for the NDR area and Bremen in co operation with Radio Bremen Phoenix events channel produced by ARD and ZDF KI KA children s channel produced by ARD and ZDF Arte Franco German culture channel 3sat cultural channel co produced by ARD ZDF ORF and SRG tagesschau24 news channelRadio edit NDR 1 de network consists of four independent radio stations NDR 90 3 de Local station for Hamburg playing music for older listeners NDR 1 Niedersachsen de Local station for Lower Saxony run from Hanover with some regional opt outs Plays music for older listeners NDR 1 Welle Nord de Local station for Schleswig Holstein run from Kiel with some regional opt outs Plays music for older listeners NDR 1 Radio MV de Local station for Mecklenburg Vorpommern run from Schwerin with some regional opt outs Plays music for older listeners NDR 2 de Popular music station for middle aged listeners This is a commercial public service station NDR Kultur de Arts and culture station formerly NDR 3 Plays classical music NDR Info de News and information station formerly NDR 4 or NDR 4 Info NDR Info Spezial de Same programming as NDR Info with opt outs for sports parliament sittings maritime forecast multicultural broadcasts and the ARD Infonacht N Joy youth station NDR Blue de Music away from the charts NDR Schlager de a music station with the programming format schlager music and easy listeningBroadcasts editBerichte von heute news programMusical organizations editNDR has four musical organizations including two orchestras a chorus and a big band NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchester the North German Radio Elbphilharmonie Orchestra created in 1945 as the Symphony Orchestra of the NWDR and continued by NDR under the name NDR Sinfonieorchester between 1955 2016 It was renamed in 2016 to its current name Principal conductors have included Gunter Wand and John Eliot Gardiner Currently it is Alan Gilbert NDR Radiophilharmonie the NDR Radio Philharmonic created in 1950 as the Hanover Radio Orchestra of the NWDR and continued by NDR under its current name since 1955 Principal conductors have included Willy Steiner Bernhard Klee and Eiji Oue The orchestra plays light classical or concert hall music NDR Chor or Chor des Norddeutschen Rundfunks created in 1946 by the NWDR and continued under its current name NDR since 1955 The choir specializes in Alte Musik but a broad repertory also includes contemporary music NDR Bigband created by the NWDR and continued by NDR in 1955 as the NDR Studioband Renamed NDR Bigband in 1971 Transmitters editFM MW and TV edit Hamburg Billwerder Hemmingen for Hannover Flensburg Kronshagen for Kiel no AM broadcasts currently Lingen FM and TV edit Steinkimmen Torfhaus Sender Harz West de Zernien Osnabruck Aurich Popens Gottingen Lauenburg Bungsberg Welmbuttel Heide Holstein Sylt Visselhovede Cuxhaven Kronshagen near Kiel Mecklenburg Vorpommern edit In Mecklenburg Vorpommern in former East Germany NDR programmes are broadcast from facilities owned by Media Broadcast GmbH a former subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom AG Other facilities editWittmoor Measurement and Reception StationSee also edit nbsp Hamburg portalReferences edit Staff 14 December 2008 www weltefreunde de in German Freunde der Welte Funkorgel Hamburg e V Archived from the original on 1 January 2009 Retrieved 1 February 2009 Antje 1976 2003 Nachruf auf ein Walross in German TV wunschliste Archived from the original on 15 April 2009 Retrieved 23 January 2010 Der Rundfunkbeitrag Beitragsservice beginnt mit Erhebung des Rundfunkbeitrags in neuer Hohe External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Norddeutscher Rundfunk Official website in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Norddeutscher Rundfunk amp oldid 1173852480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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