- Jam 1575
Infobox_Radio_station | name = Jam Radio
town =
area =Kingston upon Hull
branding =
slogan = "Spread it on your bread, stick it in your ears!"
airdate = 1983 as "URH"
frequency = formerly 1575 AMKHz ,now online
format =Student Radio
power = N/A
owner =University of Hull
website = [http://ilovejamradio.co.uk ilovejamradio.co.uk]Jam Radio (formerly Jam 1575) is
Hull University Union 's student radio station broadcasting all year round. It previously broadcasted on 1575Medium Wave . It is a subcommittee of Hull University Union's Media and Marketing Committee. All presenters,DJ s and executive committee are students. Jam Radio is a member of theStudent Radio Association .History
The station was set up in 1999 broadcasting on an induction loop system around halls of residence and through speakers situated within Hull University Union. In 1997, it became the first student radio station in the UK to broadcast on AM using a newly formulated Low Powered AM license (
LPAM ). Three other stations were awarded LPAMs by the Radio Authority (nowOfcom ) at the same time (two hospital radio stations and one other student station) though Jam was the first. Bruce Davidson was the very first station manager. The station is licensed to broadcast to thecampus , although the signal can "drift" further. The transmitter runs at a 1 Watt and is located in the loft area of the students union building, the mast is clearly visible on the roof.Originally, a loop induction system was installed in the Lawns (a hall of residence at Hull University) as part of a third year project by a number of engineering students. By 1983 the loop induction system was operational. To cut costs, the students cut corners. To insulate the wire, instead of paying for expensive insulation they used
Coca-Cola bottles. As a result of this, by 1993 the loop induction system was no longer functional. In 1994 the engineering team carried out a comprehensive survey of the underground induction loop system and were able to partially restore it to several of the Lawns halls as well as fitting a new transmitter to Ferens hall. This system was finally turned off in 1997 after the award of the LPAM licence.The station has broadcast events around the university such as "Student Question Time", a student version of the BBC series, as well as club nights from the union. The station's programming consists of mainstream music by day, tailored to the students listening in the union building, and specialist programming by night.
Until 1997, Jam 1575 was known as "URH" which stood for "University Radio Hull".
Since Autumn 2007 Jam became an internet only radio station broadcasting from its website ilovejamradio.co.uk.
The Studios
Jam 1575's home is situated towards the North of Hull, off Cottingham Road at the Students Union building on Salmon Grove. These premises were originally used as printing press, which is why such a large ventilation system was installed. This meant that on a night-time loud music from the bars below could be clearly heard whilst presenters were on air!
The station currently has two
studio s, one for production and the other being the main broadcast studio, these are separated by an office. When Jam was founded (as URH) there were just 2 large rooms - the first (front) was a large office, and the second (rear) was used as the single studio.In the early 1990s the studio was split into two studios by Dave Walters and Scott Doak. Originally the pair planned to install a garden shed as a "booth", but changed their minds at the last minute resulting in the just a single partition being installed. Studio 1 was then switched with the office during the summer of 1996 as this was only room large enough to house a large piece of studio woodwork and an
mixing console which was donated by theUKRD Group . For the first 6 months this new studio had nothing to separate it from the noise in the (then) main Union Reception area.During Easter 1997 Peter Jarrett and Liam Burke constructed the studio/hallway wall creating the now infamous Jam Corridor. Ian Hennam glazed the window (which had remained unglazed due to a glass cutting incident) thereby finishing the job.
In the summer of 1997 Paula Giles successfully applied for the Low Power AM (LPAM) license from the Radio Authority and P Squared installed the extra audio equipment and transmission infrastructure required prior to the on-air launch in September.
Jam's two studios were finally refitted in January 2005, installing a �2000
Soundcraft broadcasting desk and a �150Behringer production desk. Jam had previously been unable to broadcast since4 October 2004 due to severe technical difficulties. The station resumed broadcast on31 January 2005 .Jam was the first station in the world to use the
Myriad playout software. Liam Burke and Peter Jarrett now head the company P Squared, but began writing Myriad whilst at Jam because Hull University Union would not provide funding for a playout system. The very first version of Myriad was in fact called "URH". Peter and Liam were sat around a bottle oftequila late one night when the idea was floated, and Peter began coding it there and then. Dave Walters (at the time withClassic FM and now Technology Manager for Global Radio) was also instrumental in helping design the first versions. Jam also makes use of P Squared's Powerlog system to log all broadcast material for a period of at least 42 days in accordance withOfcom guidelines. Myriad is now widely used across the globe by many commercial andindependent local radio stations.After Jam's relaunch as an internet only radio station in October 2007, the frequency of 1575 is no longer used and the transmitter was silenced.
Jingles
Many of the
jingle s used on-air were produced by Sean Bell at NYPD, however between 1999 and 2001 all theident s were produced in-house using Mark Somers fromViking FM as the mainvoiceover . The station's current idents have been recorded by independent voice artist by Mark Gale, one of the sweepers says "Blasting out one watt of pure jam power from the roof of your union to the radio in your room!", these idents have again been edited in-house. Others, such as "Broadcasting to the city of Hull" were produced by an external company.logans
* "Spread it all over"
* "The New Student Mix"
* "More Than Just Music"
* "Spread it on your bread, stick it in your ears!"
* "Student Radio Hull"The Student Night (A.K.A The Tower Night)
Jam 1575 was asked to provide the DJ's for "Hulls Busiest Student Night" by the University of Hull Athletic Union. "The Tower" night club was the original venue for this and used to open every Wednesday night for students. Various beverages including
Lager &Cider would be sold for as little as 20 pence!! The Tower was a typical run down town centre club, the carpet would stick to your shoes and the sound system would often cut-out, yet it was packed every single week!A selection of Jam 1575 presenters kept everyone entertained every week playing everything from Indie to House, although cheesy pop was the main crowd pleaser. Some of the
DJ 's on the weekly rota were: Ant Rouette a.k.a "The Man From Friday", Aaron Phillips, Mike Brown and Andy Brown a.k.a "DJ Ferby". However, in 2000Hull City Council took the decision to close the Tower, rumour has it that a huge amount of Pigeon dung was found in the roof."The Tower Night" as it had now become known, moved across town to the "Po Na Na"
Nightclub on Anne Street, and the Athletic Union went with them. The new night was called "Bubblegum" and lasted for 2 years again with Jam 1575 DJ's at the helm. Unfortuanatly, Po Na Na was not popular with the students as they only sold cheap bottledalcopops rather thanDraught beer .After a £3.6 million make over the
Students' union opened its own club called "The Asylum", and the AU were desperate to be part of it. DJ Ferby, who had recently ditched Jam, taking with him the deals and publicity, agreed to DJ. Efforts were made in 2003 and 2004 by presenters Jon Gibbins and Dave Pallett (former programme controller) to get Jam involved in a student night again at the Fez Club. Unfortunately, it was impossible to compete against the formidable Asylum at the University. It seems the temptation of "Snakey B" at 99p a pint probably had something to do with it! [http://www.hullstudent.com/content/index.php?page=11130] .To this day both The Tower & Po Na Na Nightclubs remain closed.
But the tradition of the AU Tower student night still lives on. Every Wednesday night The Tower is organised in the Union. It usually starts with students getting together in Sanctuary for a few drinks, then it moves on to Johny Mac and takes a full night blow in Asylum. Many AU teams organise club socials on a Wednesday Tower. Cheap draught beer is still an attraction with a special offer on Snakebite.
Notable Previous Members
Former Jam
volunteer s who have moved on to work in themedia industry professionally include:{| border=0 width="100%" valign=top
align=left valign=top width="50%"
* Gillian Kelly (ITV News Reporter).
* Bruce Davidson (Technical Director, Chrysalis).
*Clare Frisby (BBC Radio Leeds ,Look North ).
* Mike Morris (BBC Radio Humberside ).
* Harriet Scott (Heart 106.2 ).
* Pam Bailey (Galaxy Radio ).
* Matt Oakes (Rock FM ).
* Orna Merchant (Signal 2 ,Trafficlink andBBC Radio Five Live ).
align=left valign=top width="50%"
* Ian Hennam (Chief Engineer,Century FM ).
* Simon Curtis (Breakfast Show Producer,Galaxy Radio )
* Dave Walters (Chief Engineer,LBC ).
* Dave McMullan (News Editor,100.7 Heart fm &Galaxy Birmingham ).
* Colin Hazelden (East Midlands Today ).
* David Jackson (BBC Radio Nottingham FootballCommentator ).
* Phil McCann (BBC Radio Stoke ).
* Charli Hill(BBC Radio Humberside ) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Radio_Humberside]External links
* [http://www.ilovejamradio.co.uk Jam radio Website]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20010302134142/http://www.jam1575.co.uk/ Archive of previous website] .
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