- Triple M Network
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This article is about the Australian radio station network. For the American radio station, see WMMM-FM. For other uses, see MMM (disambiguation).
Triple M Network Type Broadcast radio Country Australia Availability Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane, Perth Owner Austereo Launch date 1980 Official website http://www.triplem.com.au The Triple M Network is an active rock radio network in Australia owned by media company Austereo, who also own the Today Network.
Contents
History
The first Triple M station was 2MMM Sydney which commenced broadcasting on 2 August 1980. Together with then rival station 2DAY (now also owned by Austereo), it was the first commercial FM radio station in Sydney. The station has always been primarily a rock music station, but with a more blue collar/hard rock (Jimmy Barnes, Aerosmith, Guns N' Roses, AC/DC as some examples) emphasis than other stations in Melbourne in particular. Throughout the 1980s, Triple M was one of the highest-rating radio stations in Sydney, spearheaded by its morning show presented by Doug Mulray and featuring the writing of and occasional appearances by Andrew Denton. For all of this period and into the 1990s, Triple M's promotional campaign featured the character "Dr Dan", a guitar-playing satyr with wings, inspired by artwork by legendary Australian cartoonist Peter Ledger, and a theme song that was an extended reworking of the Mike Batt track "Introduction (The Journey of a Fool)", from his 1979 album Tarot Suite.
In 1988, Melbourne radio station EON FM (3EON), 92.3 was taken over by 2MMM and changed its callsign to 3MMM and moved to 105.1 MHz in November 1988. EON FM was Australia's first commercial FM radio station, commencing broadcasting on 11 July 1980.
Brisbane radio station FM104 was launched in 1980 and took on the Triple M identity in early 1990. It now has the callsign 4MMM. FM104 Brisbane started broadcasting on 104.1FM, then late in the 80's they changed frequency to 104.5-FM, where they still are now.
Adelaide radio station 5KA converted from 1197 kHz to 104.7 MHz on 1 January 1990 and was renamed KAFM (5KKA). The station was taken over by Village Roadshow, who then owned Triple M, and they successfully negotiated the purchase of the 5MMM callsign from a community radio station of the same name in 1993. That station is now known as Three D Radio (5DDD).
Perth radio station 96FM (6NOW) also carried the Triple M identity and 6MMM callsign in the early 1990s but was then sold to Southern Cross Broadcasting who changed the station's identity back to its original name. Mix 94.5 is now "considered"[1] to be part of the Triple M network in Perth utilising local programming (as opposed to airing networked Triple M programmes) and MIX 94.5 does not carry the Triple M brand, logo or call letters.
In Auckland, New Zealand, a Triple M station existed between 1984 and 1988 when 89 Stereo FM became part of Triple M. The station previously used the call sign 1ROQ and changed to 1MMM when becoming part of Triple M. New Zealand no longer uses radio station call signs. This station later reverted back to 89FM in 1988 and eventually closed down in 1994.[2]
While many of the comedy and talk programs are networked, large sections of music programming originate from the local market of each Triple M.
On Friday 17 November 2006, Triple M (including MIX 94.5 in Perth) referred to itself as U2FM for the day, as part of a promotion relating to the band U2 and their 2006 Australian Tour and CD release.
Essential Countdown
In 2004 the national network counted down the Triple M Essential 2005 Songs from Boxing Day to Australia Day. The number one song was Violent Femmes' "Blister in the Sun".
Triple M have held an Essential Countdown based on listener votes since 2006, beginning in October of each year, counting the same number of songs as the year (e.g., 2006 songs in 2006). The countdown has received some criticism for being overly similar to the Triple J Hottest 100 countdown.
Programming
Former Announcers
Doug Mulray, Andrew Denton, Lee Simon, Rob Elliot, Peter Idol, Kent Forbes, Ed Phillips, Richard Stubbs, Kevin Hillier, Amanda Keller ,Brendan"Jonesy"Jones, Tom Gleisner, Santo Cilauro, Rob Sitch, Jane Kennedy, Mobbs and Fletch (Peter Mobbs and Chris Fletcher), Michael Tunn, Lisa Millard, Club Veg (Malcolm Lees and Vic Davies), Crud (Tony Moclair, Julian Schiller), Mikey Robins, Steve Bedwell, Danger: Low Brow, Tim Smith, Mick Molloy, Robyn Butler, Alan Brough, Stuart Cranney, Ian 'Dano' Rogerson, Wazza The Rock Dog, Ronni Swintek, Alison Drower, David Rymer, Mike Fitzpatrick (broadcaster), Jason 'The Reclining Rocker' Bowman, Jon Doe aka Byron Webb, the late Jon Kennedy of The Rubber Room, Tony Martin, Ed Kavalee, Richard Marsland, Brigitte Duclos, Matt Parkinson, Rob Kidd, Rob Duckworth, Anthony Maroon, Marty Sheargold, Fifi Box, Wil Anderson, Anthony "Lehmo" Lehmann, Brian Taylor Marvin (Mark) Bemand and Ugly Phil.
AFL coverage
Since the early-1990s Triple M has made sport a major part of their line up, with sports-based shows such as The Grill Team, Dougy and Dunstall, and more recently, Friday Night M Sport, The Gospel and The Dead Set Legends.
Triple M Melbourne initially secured Australian Football League broadcast rights in 1997. In 1999 Triple M expanded its coverage to Triple M Adelaide followed by Triple M Sydney and Brisbane in 2005 and includes the following local teams:
- Melbourne: James Brayshaw, Garry Lyon, Rex Hunt, Danny Frawley, Jason Dunstall, Bill Brownless, Dr Peter Larkins, Ashley Chua, Mike McLean, Damian Barratt, Mark Stevens, Hamish McLachlan, Shane Crawford, Michael Roberts, Michael Christian and Andrew Thompson
- Sydney: Troy Luff, Brad Seymour, John Kehoe
- Brisbane: Michael "Pricey" Price, Richard Champion, Craig Starcevich, Mark Kennedy & Belinda Mellen
- Adelaide: Warren Tredrea, Kym Dillon, Brenton Yates, Mark Ricciuto, Dale Lewis, Sean Tasker, Darryl Wakelin, Rhett Biglands, Ben Hook
Triple M is one of only two FM broadcasters of the AFL in Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane and Sydney (although only the local teams - the Brisbane Lions and Sydney Swans respectively - are covered in the latter two cities.) The only other one is the National Indigenous Radio Service (NIRS). Triple M is best known for offering a less formal coverage than AM Radio. Not only is the coverage considered informative and accurate, but the team works together providing a sense of comedy to the call. Another aspect that differs from AM coverage of football is the bumper music used to and from breaks, which is instrumental versions of modern rock songs (such as Franz Ferdinand's "Take Me Out", Hard-Fi's "Hard to Beat", The Living End's "Tabloid Magazine", and The Darkness' "I Believe in a Thing Called Love", which were predominantly used during 2004–present).
In October 2006, Triple M was granted AFL broadcast rights for a further three years.
NRL coverage
In October 2006, the National Rugby League announced that beginning in 2007, Triple M Sydney would be the exclusive commercial broadcaster of Monday Night Rugby League matches. The coverage began on 19 March with the Round 1 match between the Sydney Roosters and South Sydney Rabbitohs. The commentary team includes Andrew Johns, Peter Sterling and Dan Ginnane.
Cricket coverage
In 2009, Triple M broadcast twenty20 cricket live between the Australian Cricket Team, South African Cricket Team and the New Zealand Cricket Team. Commentators included Damien Fleming, Stuart MacGill, Greg Blewett, and Brendan Julian.
Motoring
A motoring and motorsport show was added during 2009, The Stick Shift, anchored by Neil Crompton and Mark Skaife, broadcasting on Saturday afternoons.
Digital radio
Triple M simulcasts each station in the network on Digital Radio in their local markets.
Triple M launched High Voltage Radio, a "pop up" Digital Radio station that exclusively plays AC/DC for the duration of the band's 2010 tour of Australia.[3]
M-One Rock festival
In September 2002, Triple M and Fronteir Touring held four rock concerts in Brisbane, Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney as part of the touring M-One festival, which featured Goo Goo Dolls, Nickelback, Garbage, Lifehouse, Default and Midnight Oil. The festival lost money and didn't return for a second year.
Stations
Name City Frequency Triple M Sydney (2MMM) Sydney 104.9 FM Triple M Melbourne (3MMM) Melbourne 105.1 FM Triple M Brisbane (4MMM) Brisbane 104.5 FM Triple M Adelaide (5MMM) Adelaide 104.7 FM Mix 94.5 (6MIX) Perth 94.5 FM References
- ^ Austereo Corporate Website - Online
- ^ http://www.theradiovault.net/auckland.htm
- ^ Austereo Adds Fourth Digital Radio Band - Perth Now, 10 February 2010
External links
- Triple M website
- Triple M Sydney
- Triple M Melbourne
- Triple M Brisbane
- Triple M Adelaide
- MIX 94.5 Perth
Non-Austereo pages
Southern Cross Austereo Radio Stations Queensland Stations 105.3 B105 Brisbane · 97.9 Hot FM Atherton · 103.5 Hot FM Cairns · 94.7 Hot FM Emerald · 100.3 Hot FM Mackay · 102.5 Hot FM Mount Isa · 107.9 Hot FM Rockhampton · 95.1 Hot FM Roma · 103.1 Hot FM Townsville · 93.1 Sea FM Bundaberg · 90.9 Sea FM Gold Coast · 89.1 C FM Kingaroy · 101.9 Sea FM Maryborough · 100.7 C FM Toowoomba · 91.9 Sea FM Sunshine CoastTriple M Local Works104.5 Triple M Brisbane · 92.5 Gold FM Gold Coast · 103.5 Mix FM Maryborough · 864 4GR Toowoomba · 102.3 4TO Townsville · 99.5 Sea FM Cairns · 98.7 Sea FM Mackay · 101.5 Sea FM Rockhampton · 92.7 Mix FM Sunshine CoastNew South Wales Stations 104.1 2Day Sydney · 106.9 NXFM Newcastle · 101.3 Sea FM Gosford (Central Coast) · 104.9 Star FM Albury · 105.5 Star FM Coffs Harbour · 93.5 Star FM Dubbo · 99.7 Star FM Griffith · 105.1 Star FM Kempsey · 105.1 Star FM Orange · 93.1 Star FM Wagga WaggaTriple M Local Works104.9 Triple M Sydney · 102.9 KOFM Newcastle · 105.7 The River Albury · 106.3 2CS Coffs Harbour · 107.7 2GO Gosford (Central Coast) · 2RG 963 Griffith · 106.7 2MC Kempsey · 105.9 2GZ Orange · 1152 2WG Wagga WaggaVictorian Stations Triple M Local WorksWest Australian Stations Triple M Local WorksOther Stations Tasmanian Stations100.9 Sea FM Hobart · Heart 107.3 HobartSouth Australian StationsJoint Venture StationsRadar Radio (National) · Barry (National) · The Main Stage (National)Previous Digital Radio StationsChoose The Hits (National) · High Voltage Radio (National) · Radio Gaga (National) · Caravan Radio (National) · I See Red (National) · U20 (National)Radio in Australia ABC Radio ABC Classic FM · ABC NewsRadio · ABC Radio National · Triple J · ABC Local Radio · ABC Dig Music · ABC Jazz · ABC Country · ABC Grandstand · ABC Extra · Radio Australia · Triple J UnearthedSBS Radio (various feeds)Southern Cross Austereo Today Network (Includes Hot FM, Sea FM, C FM, Star FM) · Triple M Network · Local Works · Radar Radio · Choose The Hits Jelli · Kids FMARN Mix Network (Mix 106.5, Mix 101.1, 97.3, Mix 102.3, Mix 106.3) · Classic Hits (WSFM 101.7, Gold 104.3, 4KQ) · The Edge · Cruise 1323 · Pure Country · KseraRadio.comDMG Fairfax Media Racing networks Other Vision Radio Network · RPH Australia · Fine Music Network · CRN · NIRS · 2SM Supernetwork (2 networks) · Grant Broadcasters · Capital Radio Network · Coast FM Tasmania · Ace Radio (2 networks) · Pacific Star Network · Macquarie Radio Network · Coastal Broadcasters · Prime Radio Network · Redwave Media (3 networks) · North East Broadcasters · WIN Corporation · Raw FM · Radio Outback · Flow FM · Rebel Media (2 networks)Australia Radio Markets: Adelaide • Brisbane • Canberra • Darwin • Hobart • Melbourne • Newcastle • Perth • Sydney
See also: List of radio stations in AustraliaCategories:- Australian radio networks
- Active rock radio stations in Australia
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