If
you were to link to my 'tributes' page you would
see the name Julian Allitt very close to the top,
but that is only because it begins with the letter
A. If it was not an alphabetical list, his name
would still be very close to the top.
I
first met Julian when we were putting together the
Sunset application and he suggested that Trans World
Communications would like to be a part of it. That
did not happen as we at Sunset, wished to have no
link with any other station broadcasting in Manchester
at the time. After
winning the licence, BBC GMR, where I was working
at the time, immediately refused to let me present
any more shows. This was a pretty big story in the
Manchester area and within a couple of days, I was
approached by the programme controller of Piccadilly,
Mike Briscoe who suggested that I might like to
present some shows on their newly launched KEY 103fm
service. The Managing Director at Piccadilly at
the time was Julian Allitt.
Fast
forward 3 years. Julian
wins the IR licence for the Lancaster and Morecambe
area and is about to launch The BAY. As a man who
always has an eye on the main chance, he is also
applying for the Manchester licence, which is advertised
after the demise of Sunset Radio. He contacts me
to see if I would be interested in being a part
of the FIRE group to try and win the Manchester
licence. I agree and also suggest that I was the
man to get him a decent mid morning audience on
The BAY. After a couple of days, we have a meeting,
agree terms and I am now working at The BAY.
My
first visit to The BAY was enough to put anyone
off. The station is situated on the quay side in
Lancaster and prior to my arrival there, it had
been raining almost constantly. The road outside
was flooded and only suitably placed sandbags were
preventing the water from actually entering The
BAY. Chief engineer Rod Whelan had all the floorboards
up and there was building work going on everywhere.
I had experienced the launch of a new station with
Sunset so I was not totally surprised. This
was my first meeting with Programme Controller Kenni
James, whom I had known for a few years previously.
Kenni, back in the old days, was very into soul
and had presented the soul show on BBC Radio Merseyside
while I was doing the same in Manchester. We had
bumped into each other on a number of occasions
at the regular gigs that we attended through out
the NorthWest and also regularly at the various
record shops in Manchester and Warrington. The
discussions about the job were very quick and I
was made mid morning presenter and Head of Promotion.
The Head of Sales was Rosemary Beale and along with
Kenni and Julian this would be the Management team.
In truth there was only one member of the Management
team and that was Julian but we all understood that. The
BAY was launched at 8am on 1st March 1993 by Commander
Jim Boyd of the Royal Navy Submarine HMS Vanguard.
The launch morning of The BAY was a truly glorious
affair with all the great and the good in the broadcast
area and friends in the broadcasting industry getting
together for the launch breakfast. Local TV cameras
were in attendance and an in-house video was produced.
The first presenter on air was the excellent Carl
Greenwood. The full weekday line-up was Carl Greenwood
on breakfast (6 - 10), Mike Shaft on mid morning
(10-2), Kenni James on drive (2-6). The drive time
show was followed by 1 hour of non stop classic
hits and then the evening show. (7-12). Because
of the vast experience of all the presenters, this
was not at all like the launch of a new station;
it was as if we had always been there.
There were
very few cock-ups and by the end of that first day,
all the staff and management were very pleased and
we were very, very relieved. The
BAY arrived on the airwaves of the Morecambe Bay
area like a breath of fresh air. The audience, who
were accustomed to BBC local radio, had not known
anything like it.
The music was sensational, Kenni,
who also looked after the music made sure that all
the big songs were there under the tag line of 'Classic
Hits on The BAY'. Local information was provided
by the Bay Bugle, a what's on guide which featured
as much information as we could about happenings
in the local community.
As someone who has always
believed in local radio, it was a truly wonderful
time for me, and the launch party which the public
were invited to, took place at the Empire in Morecambe.
To this day, it still remains one of the biggest
things the station has ever been involved in.
In
its first appearance in national research, The BAY
achieved a reach of 37% and a market share of 22%
which made it the clear market leader in the area.
This was well ahead of the nearest competitors BBC
Radio2 with 14.4% and Red Rose with 7.9%. The
Bay was the station of the Morecambe Bay area and
in a very short time we had persuaded the listeners
that we were THE station to listen to. From Lancaster
to Barrow and everywhere inbetween there was now
an exciting professional station to listen to.
The
BAY had arrived.