Timeline of BBC Radio 2

A timeline of notable events relating to BBC Radio 2, a British national radio station which began broadcasting in September 1967.

1960s

1967

1968

1969

1970s

1970

1971

1972

  • 3 April – Terry Wogan joins the station, to present The Radio 2 Breakfast Show. He replaces John Dunn, who moves to afternoons. Breakfast Special disappears from the airwaves and a new early morning show is introduced, resulting in BBC Radio 2 starting the day on weekdays and Saturdays 30 minutes earlier, at 5 am – Sunday broadcasting still commenced at just before 7 am.
  • 1 October – Sam Costa replaces Kenneth Alwyn as host of Melodies for You. Kenneth had hosted the show since the start of the year as Kenneth himself leaves the station.

1973

1974

1975

  • 6 January – Broadcasting hours are reduced due to budget cuts at the BBC. The former 5 am  2 am schedule is reduced to a 6 am start up Mondays to Saturdays, 6:55 am on Sundays, and an earlier closedown time of around 12:33 am each day. The cuts also see the weekday afternoon show, presented by David Hamilton, broadcast on both BBC Radio 1 and BBC Radio 2, as David himself rejoins the station.
  • 29 September –
    • The station closes slightly earlier, concluding its day at around 12:10 am Mondays to Fridays, and at 12:33 am on Saturdays and Sundays.
    • BBC Radio 2 stops being available on VHF/FM for an hour on weeknights when it lends its VHF/FM frequencies to BBC Radio 1 between 11pm and midnight. Previously, it had been available on Long Wave only (apart from some VHF simulcasts on BBC Local Radio stations) between 10pm and midnight between October 1971 and December 1974, when various progressive rock shows on BBC Radio 1 were given the higher-quality waveband.

1976

1977

  • 4 April – From tonight, BBC Radio 1 'borrows' BBC Radio 2's VHF/FM frequencies for two hours each weeknight – between 10pm and midnight.
  • 28 November – David Hamilton afternoon show is now heard on BBC Radio 2 only following the withdrawal of the 1975 economy measures which seen his show being simulcast on both Radios 1 and 2.
  • Sheila Tracy joins, and David Gell leaves.

1978

  • Bill Rennells joins.
  • Brian Matthew takes BBC Radio 2's Round Midnight for the first time.
  • 1 April – Broadcasting hours are extended to a 5 am  2 am schedule when the budget restrictions were eased, and the pre 1975 broadcasting hours are reintroduced.
  • 23 November –
    • Radio 2 moves from 1500m (200 kHz) long wave to 433 & 330m (693 & 909 kHz) medium wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception, and to conform with the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975.[5]
    • The shipping forecast transfers from BBC Radio 2 to BBC Radio 4 so that the forecast can continue to be broadcast on long wave.
  • 22 December – Industrial action at the BBC by the ABS union, which started the previous day, extends to radio when the radio unions join their television counterparts by going on strike, forcing the BBC to merge its four national radio networks into one national radio station from 4pm and called it the BBC All Network Radio Service. The strike is settled shortly before 10pm on Friday 22 December 1978, with the unions and BBC management reaching an agreement at the British government's industrial disputes arbitration service ACAS.[6][7][8][9]

1979

  • Steve Jones joins.
  • 27 January – BBC Radio 2 closes down for the final time, and at 5 am Radio 2 begins continuous broadcasting 24-hours with You and the Night and the Music filling the overnight hours.
  • September – Big Band Special broadcasts for the first time.

1980s

1980

1981

1982

1983

1984

  • 20 January – Ahead of changes to the schedule, following the decision not to renew the contract of long standing presenter Ed Stewart,[10] the year-long revival of Music While You Work ends and Gloria Hunniford takes over Ed's slot the following week. Steve Jones replaces Hunniford on the lunchtime show. Other changes see a new overnight programme, Nightride, replacing You and the Night and the Music. Pete Murray leaves and is replaced on his Saturday late show by Ken Bruce, who joins the station and gains his first regular slot, and Sounds of Jazz moves to BBC Radio 2 from BBC Radio 1.
  • 29 April – BBC Radio 2 launches a summer sports and entertainment programme. Called Summer Sounds, the programme mixes sports coverage with music, guests and entertainment. The programme is broadcast MW only with the usual Sunday afternoon schedule continuing on VHF/FM.[11]
  • 28 December – Terry Wogan ends his first run as presenter of The Radio 2 Breakfast Show, as he leaves the station for a while.[12]
  • Tom Edwards leaves, and Martin Kelner and Canon Roger Royle join.

1985

1986

  • Alan Dedicoat and Paul Jones join.
  • 7 April –
  • 13 April – Richard Baker replaces Robin Boyle as host of Melodies for You, as Richard himself joins the station.
  • May – BBC Radio 2's summer Sunday afternoon sports and entertainment programme Summer Sounds is renamed Sunday Sport. The show now has a greater emphasis on sports coverage although music remains part of the mix.
  • December – David Hamilton leaves. He says that his reason for going is because the music policy had become “geriatric” following a repositioning of the station, under the influence of new Head of Music Frances Line, to appeal to over 50s with a playlist of nostalgia, easy listening and light music.

1987

1988

  • January – Sport bulletins are broadcast at breakfast for the first time. Previously, apart from a racing bulletin, sports news did not commence until lunchtime.
  • Chris Stuart replaces Ray Moore as presenter of the early show when the latter becomes ill suffering from cancer, as Ray himself leaves the station before his death next year. Moore had presented the show since 1980; Stuart, previously a breakfast show presenter on BBC Radio Wales, has often covered for Moore since 1985. Graham Knight joins the station to present the weekend early shows.
  • 29 September – BBC Radio 1 'borrows' BBC Radio 2's FM frequencies on a weeknight for the final time following the start of a programme of switching on transmitters to allow BBC Radio 1 to broadcast full-time on FM which, at this time, was available to 2/3 of the UK.
  • Simon Dee, Anne Robinson, and Billy Butler join, and Stuart Hall leaves.

1989

1990s

1990

  • 6 January – BBC Radio 2 becomes available on FM on Saturday afternoons for the first time; a new music schedule is created, with Katie Boyle presenting a two-hour programme, while sport continues on MW.
  • 24 March – Martin Kelner leaves for a while.
  • 25 March – At 7pm BBC Radio 2 becomes available on FM 24/7 for the first time after the final ever ‘borrow’ of its FM frequencies by BBC Radio 1.
  • 30 March – Ahead of major changes to the station's output, Brian Matthew goes Round Midnight for the final time.
  • 31 March – As part of the changes, the Radio 2 Arts Programme and Sounds of the 50s, presented by Ronnie Hilton, are launched with Brian Matthew taking over as host of Sounds of the 60s.
  • 2 April – The changes to weekday programming begin today. Ken Bruce launches a new late night programme with Judith Chalmers joining the station to replacing Ken at mid-mornings, a weeknight late night jazz show called Jazz Parade is launched as a replacement for Sounds of Jazz and a weekday guest afternoon slot is introduced featuring a different personality choosing their favourite music each week.[15]
  • 8 July – Wimbledon is broadcast on BBC Radio 2 for the final time. From next year, the event will be broadcast on BBC Radio 5.
  • 15 August – BBC Radio 2 begins to wind down its transmissions on MW ahead of the launch of BBC Radio 5, which will occupy BBC Radio 2's MW frequencies, by broadcasting a daytime information service providing advice about how to listen to Radio 2 on FM.
  • 26 August – Sport on 2 is broadcast on BBC Radio 2 for the final time.
  • 27 August – BBC Radio 2 becomes the first national radio station in the UK to broadcast only on FM.
  • 16 September – The Sunday Hour is revamped. Instead of coming from a different church each week, the show becomes a studio-based programme with Roger Royle as presenter.
  • Don Maclean and Fran Godfrey join, and Simon Dee, and Billy Butler leave.

1991

1992

  • 6 January – In a major shake-up of the daytime schedule, Brian Hayes takes over as host of The Radio 2 Breakfast Show from Derek Jameson who moves to a new late evening slot to launch a new show, co-presented by his wife Ellen who joins the station. Ken Bruce returns to the mid-morning show following Judith Chalmers’ departure and Ed Stewart, who rejoined the station the previous year, takes over as the mid-afternoon presenter.[18] Weekend changes see Melodies for You move to early evenings and Barbara Sturgeon replaces Graham Knight as presenter of the weekend early shows, as Barbara herself joins the station. The weekday music policy is slightly adjusted; Sunday afternoon output is branded Vintage Years, while John Sachs presents a Sunday morning show with a comparatively modern playlist compared to most of the station's other output at the time.
  • April – Alex Lester becomes the permanent early morning presenter (a slot previously hosted on rotation by the station's announcers and newsreaders) and in July Steve Madden becomes the permanent overnight presenter, a slot which had similarly been hosted by the presentation team on rotation since the late 1970s.
  • 28 June – BBC Radio 2 provides fifteen hours of coverage of the first annual National Music Day, presented by Ken Bruce.[19]
  • 23 December – Brian Hayes presents The Radio 2 Breakfast Show for the final time.
  • Keith Fordyce and Teddy Johnson leave, and Nick Barraclough joins.

1993

1994

  • Adrian Love leaves.
  • 1 October – Martin Kelner rejoins after four years away to present a Saturday afternoon programme and to stand in for other presenters. This show, along with documentaries and concerts broadcast after it, represents a tentative attempt to appeal more to the "Beatles generation", which the station is encouraged to appeal to in the 'People and Programmes' report published in February 1995.[21]

1995

1996

  • Pam Ayres and Michael Parkinson join, including the launch of Parkinson's Sunday Supplement.
  • March – Jim Moir replaces Frances Line as controller and begins repositioning the station to attract a wider audience of over 35s, many of whom have moved to commercial radio following the repositioning of BBC Radio 1 three years earlier. He introduces a daytime playlist consisting of AOR/contemporary music with specialist programmes airing during the evening and at the weekend. Nostalgic/easy listening music is restricted to Sundays only. The move is successful and people flock to the station and shortly after BBC Radio 2 replaces BBC Radio 1 as the most listened to station in the UK.
  • 30 March – Steve Wright joins the station, to present weekend mid-morning shows. including the launch of Sunday Love Songs.
  • July – Hugh Scully takes over as presenter of Melodies for You.
  • 6 October – The first edition of The David Jacobs Collection is broadcast on Sunday evenings.
  • 29 November – Martin Kelner, Chris Stuart, Wally Whyton, and Katie Boyle leave.

1997

  • 29 March – Bob Harris joins, to present a Saturday late night programme “for the discerning music fan”.[27]
  • 3 April – Derek and Ellen Jameson present their late night programme for the final time, as they leave the station.[28] Richard Allinson joins the station, and takes over the late show from the following Monday.
  • 5 April – Pick of the Pops returns to the BBC. The programme is aired on Saturday afternoons with Alan Freeman returning and joining the station as the host. The programme had last been on BBC Radio 1 at the end of 1992 and throughout most of the intervening period it had been broadcast on Capital London.
  • 31 August – Regular programming on the BBC's radio and television stations is abandoned to provide ongoing news coverage of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales. BBC Radio 2 airs a special programme from BBC Radio News, which is also carried on BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 5 Live.[29] BBC Radio 2 broadcasts live coverage of the funeral six days later.
  • Angela Rippon leaves, and Mike Harding joins.
  • Robbie Vincent joins, but later leaves.
  • the final edition of Folk on 2 is broadcast as Jim Lloyd himself leaves the station.

1998

1999

2000s

2000

2001

  • 10 May – For the first time, BBC Radio 2 becomes the UK's most listened to radio station, overtaking BBC Radio 1.[36] It has held that position ever since.
  • 1 October – BBC Radio 2 starts broadcasting a weekly album chart show. The one-hour programme was broadcast on Monday evenings and was presented by Simon Mayo who joins the station.[37]
  • Jack Docherty and Cliff Adams leave.

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

  • Steve Harley leaves the station, after hosting his final Sounds of the 70s show.
  • Michael Ball joins, for the launch of Michael Ball's Sunday Brunch, who replaces Michael Parkinson.
  • 17 March – Humphrey Lyttelton retires from radio broadcasting. He had presented Best of Jazz for the last 40 years.[50]
  • 9 April – Trevor Nelson joins, and brings his Rhythm Nation show to the station.
  • 16 October – An episode of the Russell Brand Show, co-hosted by fellow BBC Radio 2 presenter Jonathan Ross is recorded for transmission at a later date. The show includes Brand and Ross leaving four prank messages on actor Andrew Sachs's answerphone including offensive remarks about his granddaughter and use of foul language. The programme is subsequently broadcast on Saturday 18 October, partially censored, having passed the various pre-transmission checks from the programme's editors. Initially the programme only receives a negligible number of complaints regarding Jonathan Ross' bad language; however, after the incident is reported a week later by The Mail on Sunday a public outcry soon ensues. The case is referred to both Ofcom and the BBC Trust and in the interim Ross and Brand are both suspended for 12 weeks from all BBC programmes pending investigation. Soon after these announcements Russell Brand announces his resignation, as Russell himself leaves the station. shortly followed by BBC Radio 2 controller Lesley Douglas. Jonathan Ross was suspended from the BBC without pay for 12 weeks.[51][52]
  • 30 October – Controller Lesley Douglas's resignation is announced, as she leaves the station.
  • Matthew Wright leaves, and Suzi Quatro and Claudia Winkleman join.

2009

  • 24 January – Jonathan Ross returns to the station and the BBC after being suspended.
  • 27 January – Bob Shennan is appointed as Controller following the resignation of Lesley Douglas.[53] He will take up the position in February.
  • February – Bob Shennan replaces Lesley Douglas as Controller, as he joins the station.
  • 13 March – The station confirms plans to overhaul its weekend schedule from April. This will include Paul O'Grady, Alan Carr and Emma Forbes joining the network to present shows, while the Saturday afternoon comedy hour will move to Thursday evenings. The changes will also see Johnnie Walker present Sounds of the 70s on Sunday afternoon.[54]
  • 5 April –
    • Sounds of the 70s returns to the airwaves on a regular and permanent basis with Johnnie Walker as presenter. The programme and been on air on an ad-hoc basis since 2000.[55]
    • Paul O'Grady presents his first Sunday teatime show as part of the weekend schedule changes, as Paul himself joins the station.[56]
  • 25 April - The first edition of the Saturday evening show Going Out With Alan Carr is broadcast.
  • 22 May – The BBC says that Jonathan Ross's show will no longer be broadcast live following complaints about a joke he made on an edition of the programme which some listeners interpreted as being anti-gay.[57]
  • 30 May – Mo Dutta leaves the station after 14 years of broadcasting.[58]
  • 31 May – Pete Mitchell leaves the station to join Radio X and later Absolute Radio and Virgin Radio UK.
  • 6 and 7 June – Zoë Ball and Emma Forbes both join the station to present the Saturday and Sunday weekend breakfast shows respectively.[59]
  • 26 July – Malcolm Laycock presents his final edition of Sunday Night at 10, as he leaves the station.[60]
  • 2 August – Clare Teal took over from Malcolm Laycock on Sunday Night at 10.
  • 15 August – Malcolm Laycock criticises the network's management for abandoning its older listeners and claims he was constructively dismissed by the station, although BBC Radio 2 denies this to be the case. Laycock resigned from his position following a long-running dispute with his producer over the content of his show, and because of issues regarding his salary.[61]
  • 7 September – Sir Terry Wogan announces that he will step down as host of The Radio 2 Breakfast Show on 18 December, as Sir Terry himself moves to weekends on 14 February 2010 next year.
  • 18 December – After 28 years, in 2 separate stints, Sir Terry Wogan presents his final breakfast show.[62]
  • 24 December – The final edition of Chris Evans Drivetime is broadcast ahead of Chris' move to The Radio 2 Breakfast Show.[63]
  • Bob Dylan leaves.

2010s

2010

2011

  • Dave Pearce joins the station to host a weekly dance music show. Dave Pearce's Dance Years will air on Saturday evenings.
  • 17 January – Vanessa Feltz joins, and takes over Sarah Kennedy's early morning show.[75]
  • 31 January – BBC Radio 2 announces the cancellation of its annual Electric Proms season after five years, citing financial considerations.[76]
  • 2 April – Huey Morgan joins.
  • 4 April – Jo Whiley joins the station on a permanent basis to present a new evening show, She replaces Mark Radcliffe and Stuart Maconie.[77]
  • 22 June – BBC Radio 2 hosts 2DAY, a day of 12 hour-long programmes to promote some of the station's specialist output normally reserved for evenings and weekends.[78][79]
  • 28 August – Alan Titchmarsh presents the final edition of Melodies for You, as he leaves the station. The programme, dedicated to popular classic and light music, and part of the station's Sunday schedule since it launched in 1967, was scrapped as the station wanted to change its format for representing the genres.[80][81]
  • 11 September – The first Radio 2 Live in Hyde Park music festival is held in London's Hyde Park, with Gary Barlow as headline act.[82]

2012

2013

2014

2015

  • 5–8 March – BBC Radio 2 launches its second pop-up station – BBC Radio 2 Country to cover the annual C2C: Country to Country festival. The station returned to cover the 2016 and 2017 event.
  • 27 March – Newsreader and continuity announcer Alan Dedicoat presents his final bulletins for the network after 28 years of broadcasting, as he retires from the station.[97]
  • 8 November – Sir Terry Wogan hosts his last ever and final Weekend Wogan show, and leaves the station due to ill health and before his death next year.
  • 17 December – Rebecca Pike leaves.
  • 25 December – Ed Stewart hosts his last ever and final Christmas Junior Choice programme and leaves the station before his death next year.

2016

2017

2018

2019

  • 14 January & 19 January –
    • Zoë Ball takes over as presenter of The Radio 2 Breakfast Show, as Richie Anderson and Tina Daheley both join the station.[113]
    • Other major changes to the schedule take place. Sara Cox replaces Simon Mayo as presenter of the drivetime show. The programme returns to its two-hour format from 5pm to 7pm.[114] Jo Whiley follows with the return of her evening show, the specialist music programmes move to 9pm and Trevor Nelson replaces Sara Cox as presenter of the Rhythm Nation Monday to Thursday late show. Weekend changes see Rylan Clark-Neal replacing Zoë Ball as host of the Saturday afternoon show, as Rylan himself joins the station. and the Saturday evening slot being filled by some of the displaced weeknight specialist shows.[115]
  • 25 January – BBC Radio 2 confirms that Johnnie Walker will take a break from his radio broadcasting for a while to receive treatment for a heart condition.[116]
  • 13 February – Mark Radcliffe returns.
  • 16 March – Johnnie Walker returns.
  • 30 May – Bob Harris takes a break from his radio broadcasting for a while due to an aortic dissection illness.
  • 19 September – Bob Harris returns.

2020s

2020

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