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In
February 1989 the
Birmingham Evening Mail announced, with the eye-grabbing headline -
Of course this was really a bit of great publicity preceding the
launch of a new radio station in the Midlands. Les Ross
had worked for Birmingham's commercial radio station, BRMB, since 1976
and had become somewhat of a household name in the Midlands.
Recent Government legislation stipulated that commercial radio
stations, such as BRMB, that currently broadcast on both Medium Wave
(AM) and VHF (FM), would now have to either relinquish one of the
wavebands for use by other radio operators, or provide separate radio
services via their AM and FM outlets. This move, to prevent
'simulcasting', as it was called, was a measure to make much more
efficient use of the
limited radio spectrum (space) available for broadcasting, especially
as the demand for new stations was now being recognised by the
authorities.
BRMB along with all other ILR stations had a difficult choice - either
close down one of their transmitters and hand the frequency to a
competitor, or set up their own new service. Nearly all ILR
stations opted to hold on to all their frequencies and set up their own
separate radio service. One exception to this general rule
was
Leicester Sound who eventually lost their AM licence on 238
meters (1260
kHz) to Sabras Sound which provided a distinctive Asian radio service
rather than the more usual 'golden oldies' format - not such a bad
thing
for distinctive alternative radio.
Surrey based radio station County
Sound
had already made the split in
1988 by separating their station in to two services: "County Sound The
Premier FM" on 96.4 and "County Sound Gold" (later named "First Gold
Radio") on 1476 AM (203 meters);
Capital Radio
split into "95.8 Capital FM" and "Capital Gold 1548 AM".
Other
stations were to follow such as Radio Trent FM / GEM AM (Great East
Midlands); GWR FM / Brunel Radio in the Avon and Wiltshire
areas. Radio City in Liverpool made the brave move of setting
up
a talk station on their 1548 AM frequency, but this was a costly move
and Radio City had to change format to the more widely adopted format
of an oldies station after a period of time.
Soon after Les Ross quit BRMB, the Birmingham Evening Mail ran this
headline as a new station for the Midlands prepared for launch:

"XTRA,
XTRA: hear all about it"
On - Air April 1989 . . . . .
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Pre-launch:
The
XTRA AM team
Left to
right:
Boss - Phil Riley, Annie Othen, Les Ross, Dave Hickman and Adrian
Stewart
BRMB Radio was part of Midlands Radio Ltd at this time, and was linked
to Mercia Sound in
Coventry. BRMB
and Mercia Sound would hand
over their AM frequencies to a new sister station to be called "XTRA
AM". XTRA AM would use 1152 kHz (261 meters) previously used
BRMB, and also 1359 KHz (220 meters) previously used by Mercia Sound in
Coventry and Warwickshire. Mercia Sound became
"Mercia FM"
and were given permission to add a new FM relay transmitter for
Leamington and Warwick on 102.9, to supplement their main 2 kilowatt
transmitter on 97.0 from Shilton which was weak in some parts of these
towns, now that reception via 1359 had gone. BRMB became
"BRMB FM
Music Power" on 96.4 continuing with 9.8 kilowatts from Sutton
Coldfield.
For XTRA AM the same programmes would be broadcast on both 1152 and
1359, although separate news were to be produced for each area along
with separate local commercials for each transmitter. The
1152
service was from the 0.8 kW transmitter, providing 3 kW e.m.r.p.
directional, from Langley Mill, north east of Birmingham, while the
1359 transmitter was 0.27 kW e.m.r.p. from Shilton, north
east of
Coventry.
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Phil Riley was
to be the new
station's Programme Controller. The cost of setting up a new
radio station from scratch was said to be in the region of
£500,000, including new building work and
engineering.
However Midlands Radio Holdings, which made a profit of
£440,000
in the year ending 1987, were able to set up the new AM service on a
lower budget . The new station would be located at the
existing
premisies used by BRMB at 'Radio House' in Aston, Birmingham.
Additional room was available in the building since a photographic
company that had previously taken space had recently moved out - rather
fortuitous for the station.
This meant that the launch costs would be reduced to around
£250,000 running costs for the start up, £150,000
for
promotion and £100,000 for a new computer system that would
handle everything from accounts to travel reports. The new
XTRA
AM studio
was to be built on the fifth floor of Radio House and had a light and
airy feel compared to the somewhat more 'worn-in' feel that
the
BRMB area had.
Since the new station would be providing Midlands listeners with extra
choice on the AM band, the name XTRA AM was settled on. The
station had an ace up its sleeve for attracting listeners to its
schedules - Les Ross. In fact it was Les who had
suggested the name 'XTRA AM'. Les, The household name from
BRMB,
would switch sides and launch the XTRA AM Breakfast show.
Also See : Hitting The Target at XTRA AM > > >
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Les's breakfast show would start
at 8am on
the big launch day, but it
would normally run from 6am to 9.30 am. Les bought three new
pair
of
glasses - I guess to put him in the right 'frame of mind' for the
launch of the bright new radio station.
After leaving BRMB Les explained that he took a week off to re-read a
book called 'Personality Radio' which he read from cover to cover again
"just to remind myself of what you are supposed to do on the radio." "
I have treated XTRA AM like I am starting again. I think it
is
the right way to approach it." "I am really excited, and a
bit
nervous and apprehensive - I haven't changed radio stations for 13
years! I will be so glad when the first day is gone."
Les' popular
slots such as
'Yesterday Never Comes' would go, to be replaced by a new 'Mr and Mrs'
feature , the weekly prize was to be a free night of entertainment at
the Strathallan Hotel.
XTRA AM was
to be aimed at
the 35 to 50 year old audience and as well as playing Classic Hits
(oldies) the station would have a mini-playlist of 12 songs from the
current top 40 so long as they were of good enough quality to fit in
with the station's motto of "Non Stop Classic Hits". Although
XTRA AM was essentially a classic hits or 'oldies' station, the fact
that the station always included some of the best new music in its
output was a real plus and did make it sound fresher than some of the
other gold stations that were born opf this era and no doubt this
helped its overwhelming popularity.
It took Phil Riley and his team six months to prepare XTRA AM for
launch, and the station would go on air for the first time at 8am on
4th April 1989.
BRMB stopped broadcasting on 1152 and Mercia Sound stopped broadcasting
on 1359 shortly before XTRA AM was due to go on air, during this these
last few minutes a mixture of records and announcements were played
during the build up to the launch of the new station XTRA AM.
Les Ross kicked it all off with a rather odd interview with Elvis
Presley and then went straight into playing the Non Stop Classic Hits
along with Les's trade mark jolly banter. Local news was on
the
half hour and was split by frequency; 1152 in Birmingham area (read by John Hawkins) and a separate bulletin for
Coventry and
Warwickshire on 1359. National and international news came
from
IRN on the hour. You can download this audio from the link
below:
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XTRA
am - The Audio
Files |
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TEAM XTRA |

The
Xtra AM presentation team, left to right:
Adrian
Stewart, Dave Jamieson, Les Ross, Ted Elliott, Annie Othen, Phil
Brice, Noddy Holder and Dave Hickman.
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As it happened Xtra AM turned out to be a massive hit with the audience
- key to this immediate success was no doubt helped the appointment of
Les Ross to the breakfast show slot and the station's bright, slick and
professional sound. The presentation
team was a very strong line-up. Annie Othen was well known
and
respected for work on Mercia Sound and presented a very interesting
norning show. Dave Jamieson was also well known in the area,
again for work on Mercia Sound in the early 1980's before he went off
to launch Viking Radio in Humberside in 1984 as programme
controller. Ted Elliott was also another Mercia Sound regular
and
presented the XTRA AM late show from 10pm. Noddy Holder, of
course, was well known for being the front man of the hit making band
of the 1970's - Slade. Noddy presented the Sunday request
show on
XTRA AM. Adrian Stewart presented the afternoon show on
weekdays
from 2pm followed by Dave Hickman at 6pm.
BRMB's famous and well respected sports coverage moved over from FM to
the new XTRA AM station, where Tom Ross continued to do an excellent
job of local sports coverage with commentaries and his famous and
unmissable post match phone-ins.

Les Ross
with his Sony
award
After just
three weeks on
the air on XTRA AM, Les Ross had champagne for breakfast for a second
time, this time Les was celebrating winning The Best Beakfast Show Sony
Award - the radio industry's 'Oscars'.
Mike Owen, the
controller of
BRMB, had entered Les' BRMB breakfast show, and Les received his award
from fellow D.J. Alan Freeman. The Sony Award ceremony of
1989
was hosted by Michael Aspel in the presence of The Duchess of
York. That year BRMB also won Local Station Of The
Year.
Les said "You don't get many people who receive an award who
then
say they don't work there anymore."
Over On
FM....
XTRA AM was, in fact, such a success that it competed stongly for the
audience for
its FM counterparts, BRMB FM
and MERCIA FM.
With the loss of Les
Ross, the BRMB
breakfast show required fresh new talent and BRMB's programme
controller,
Mike Owen, signed the relative youngsters Simon Davies from Marcher
Sound in
Wrexham, and Deborah Kinch, formerly of Steve Wright's Radio One show
where she was affectionately know as "Delightful Deborah". Mr
Owen's choice of the bright new 'double-header' on BRMB would provide
the station with the new
younger audience that the newly rejuvenated 'BRMB FM Music Power' was
aiming for. Simon and Deborah were compared with the
partnership
of
Simon Mayo and Sybil Ruscoe on BBC Radio One.
The recruitment of Simon and Deborah to the BRMB Breakfast Show proved
a good match for the station and BRMB competed very well with the BBC
and its new rival sibling XTRA AM. Although Les Ross took
many of
his listeners from BRMB across to XTRA AM, BRMB did in fact
retain the greater proportion of the audiance according to JICRAR in
its part of the overall TSA (Total Survey Area). It was a
surprise, therefore, that approximately a year later BRMB decided to
move Simon Davies to a different programme slot and brought back
Brendan Kearney to take over the breakfast show. That is to
take
nothing away from Brendan, who was certainly welcomed back to the
station as a very popular
former broadcaster on BRMB from the 1980's. Unfortunately
Deborah
left the station at this point, but Simon remained with BRMB until 1995.
XTRA AM
was a run
away success for several years, it was amazing to
find so many people tuned to music radio on the AM band. The
listening figures released by JICRAR (the Joint Industry Committee for
Radio Audience Research) in 1990 showed that the audience reach
was 500,000 listeners, an amazing total for new AM only radio
station. The overnight
programme (usually 1am to 5am) was shared across the Midlands Radio
group of stations; BRMB FM, XTRA AM, Mercia FM and Leicester Sound - (Trent FM, GEM AM in Nottingham
& Derby
were also part of Midlands Radio but I am not sure if they carried this shared programme
output).
Radio Wyvern in Hereford and
Worcester did carry this overnight programme, but Wyvern was not part
of the Midlands Radio group.

The map
above shows
the official coverage area for XTRA AM, though in
reality the station could be heard over a much wider area including a
good part of Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, North Oxfordshire, North
Gloucestershire and East Worcestershire. 1152 kHz covered the
west, while 1359 kHz covered the east.
GOOD
THINGS NEVER LAST
It was in 1993 that Capital Radio plc took
control of the Midlands Radio group, which now included Radio Trent in
Nottingham and Derby, and Leicester Sound in its portfolio.
Capital,
however, only wanted the Birmingham station BRMB for its Capital Cities
branding, within a year it disposed of the rest to the GWR group. GWR
also bought Beacon Radio in Wolverhampton and Shropshire in
1993.
GWR and
Capital could no longer jointly run XTRA AM as it was split across the
two
ILR areas - Birmingham run by Capital and the Coventry/Warwickshire
area run by
GWR. GWR would have to make their own arrangements since XTRA
AM
originated from Birmingham. XTRA AM 1359 would be closed and
Coventry and Warwickshire would lose their sevice.
Things were looking a bit grim for XTRA AM.
A new national AM music radio station was to arrive on 30th April 1993
in the form of the Radio Authority's 'INR2' licence. Richard
Branson's Independent Music Radio consortium won this licence and
launched as 'VIRGIN
1215'. No
doubt some
of XTRA
AM's listeners were tempted away by this new radio station.
In
a bid to
rejuvinate BRMB, in August 1993 the new owners, Capital Radio, decided
to
move Les Ross from XTRA AM and back to breakfast on BRMB to give a
boost to the ratings on
their flagship FM station. Tony Prince was drafted in for the
XTRA AM breakfast show, and later the legendary Tony Bulter moved back
from BBC Radio WM to fulfill the breakfast show role on XTRA in an
attempt to enhance the flagging ratings at XTRA.
In April 1994 GWR switched off Xtra AM programmes from the 1359
transmitter. While
still
on
the air on 1359 the XTRA AM presenters urged listeners to re-tune to
1152 if they still wanted to hear the station. Unfortunately
the
1152
signal came from the highly directional transmitter that beamed
south-wast across Birmingham and did not allow for much overspill into
Coventry and north Warwickshire - but with careful tuning and
siting of the radio it was possible, however I wonder how many
listeners
could be bothered with this technical frustration. In any
event
GWR quickly cut
off XTRA
AM from their 1359 transmitter when they realised that the presenters
in Birmingham were trying to hijack
listeners from their 1359 transmitter!
When tuning to 1359 from then on listeners could
hear a repeated announcement effectively saying that 'This frequency
has
been reclaimed for a new radio service for Coventry and
Warwickshire.' The tape loop also proclaimed that the new
station will "not be from Birmingham and not from London" - an obvious
reference to those horrid XTRA AM people in Birmingham and those
dreadful national stations from London.
What the tape did not tell listeners was that the new station coming to
1359 kHz would be mostly from Swindon (or Dunstable or somewhere!) -
what a cheek - XTRA AM had been produced wholly from the
Midlands! GWR was to pipe in their Classic Gold network over
the
1359 transmitter which included only 4 hours per day of local
programming.
XTRA AM continued on 1152 kHz of course, but to
add to XTRA AM's worries another new competitor was on the way: A new
concept for commercial radio was set to arrive, in
the form of regional
commercial radio for the whole of the West Midlands, in September 1994,
the new station was "100.7 HEART FM" playing cool, laid back hits
across
The West Midlands and Warwickshire and in FM stereo.
THE END
IS IN NIGH
Listeners were by this time finding the choice of high quality sound on
the FM stations more of a lure. The ratings for XTRA AM were
gradually falling away. Perhaps it is my cynical nature, but
I do
wonder if XTRA AM could have been sustained given proper management and
marketing support, or did the station's owners simply allow the station
to run
down
so that a network of Capital Gold could be put in its place at minimal
cost as a
relay from London with minimal local production?
Whatever happened in those last few years, the end for XTRA AM came in
April 1998. Apart from the Enduring Tom Ross, everyone else
was
sacked. Tony Butler presented his last breakfast show for
XTRA
and then
moved back to the BBC at Pebble Mill to work for BBC Radio
WM.
XTRA AM never made it to its 10th birthday.
Non-Stop Classic Hits - XTRA
AM ....
Stopped.
From then on 1152 kHz was inhabited by "1152 Capital Gold".
With the exception of sport at the weekend and match nights, and only 4
hours of local programmes each week-day, presented by
local favourite Tom Ross, everything else came from Capital's studios
in London.
The comprehensive sports coverage, including Tom Ross' legendary
post match phone-ins, was retained on Capital Gold
1152. In 2004, while Tom Ross' post match phone and Friday night
phone-in programmes continued, live match commentaries were quietly
dropped from Capital Gold 1152 and virtually all local sports coverage
and commentaries were then carried
exclusively on BBC Radio WM.
By the 2005/2006 season Capital Gold 1152 and BRMB made
a return to sports coverage and again covered local matches
with excellent live 'kick by kick' commentaries. Tom Ross' unique and
locally unmissable Friday night and post match phone-in debates remain
on the Capital Gold 1152 AM schedule.
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