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Heart Cheshire and North East Wales

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also:Capital North West and Wales

Radio station in Wrexham
Heart Cheshire and North East Wales
  • Wrexham
Broadcast areaCheshire and North East Wales
Frequency103.4 MHz
Programming
FormatAdult Contemporary
History
First air date
5 September 1983
Last air date
1 July 2010
Technical information
Power1.2 kW

Heart Cheshire and North East Wales (formerlyMarcher Sound and previouslyMFM 103.4) was anIndependent Local Radio station broadcasting to north eastWales andCheshire from its Mold Road studios inGwersyllt,Wrexham, also shared withGold andHeart Wirral.[1]

The station was last owned and operated byGlobal Radio who purchased the previous owner,GCap Media, the group formed by the merger ofGWR Group andCapital Radio Group. GWR purchasedMarcher Radio Group in October 2000, although the latter remains as the official licensee of the station, which now forms part ofCapital North West and Wales.

The station was broadcast from theWrexham-Rhos Relay, situated just aboveThe Moss near Wrexham, and although it officially broadcast to the Wrexham and Chester areas, it could also be heard in parts ofMerseyside andShropshire.

History

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Early years

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Marcher Sound's final logo

Originally the flagship station for what became theMarcher Radio Group,Marcher Sound (Sain-Y-Gororau in Welsh), licensed by theIndependent Broadcasting Authority, began broadcasting at 6.30 am on Monday 5 September 1983 on 95.4FM and 238 metres (1260 kHz medium wave). The first voice heard on air was the station's chairman,Lord Evans of Claughton and the first track played wasCliff Richard'sWired for Sound. Using the straplineYour station, your sound, Marcher broadcast in both English and Welsh to a potential audience of 660,000 listeners.

Marcher Sound was initially founded by a group of five redundant workers from the formerShotton steelworks, which closed in 1980. The six-strong consortium won the franchise in March 1981, seeing off two rival bids from 'Radio Offa' and 'Border Sound'.[citation needed] The group attracted funding from local businessmen and theWelsh Development Agency and shareholdings from neighbouring stationRadio City. Within two years of its launch, Radio City pulled out, the original management had left and the station was in severe financial difficulties. Further investment was sought and Marcher Sound came close to a buyout byChiltern Radio. Crown Communications, the UK subsidiary of theToowoomba-basedDarling Downs Television, later bought shares in the station.

Marcher initially broadcast for around 12.5 hours a day from 6am-6.30 pm (6am-6pm at weekends), with a daily Welsh language news programme on weekdays and a bilingual magazine show on Sunday. Radio City programming was relayed during downtime. Local programming later increased to 10 pm and soon, until midnight, before a full 24-hour service began in 1987. Around the same time, the station's main FM frequency changed from 95.4 to 103.4 FM on theWrexham-Rhos transmitter, following a spectrum audit. A relay was added on 97.1 FM from theMoel-y-Parc transmitter, initially aimed at coastal areas of North East Wales.

Split frequencies

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In 1989, Marcher Sound split its FM and AM frequencies into two separate services. MFM 103.4 featured chart-led music while Marcher Sound continued on 1260 kHz before being relaunched asMarcher Gold, carrying a classic hits playlist. The station continues to broadcast today asSmooth Wales, part of theSmooth Radio network.

A further split on MFM's service came when it refocused the target area of its relay frequency to theWirral. A separate breakfast show for the area, produced from Wrexham was introduced, followed in 1993 by further local programming from a studio inBirkenhead. The move of the transmitter toStoreton led to the Wirral service being relaunched as a separate entity,Wirral's Buzz on 14 February 1999.

Marcher Sound's logo from 2006 to 2007, after it was rebranded from MFM

GWR ownership

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In 2001, theMarcher Radio Group – now consisting of five stations in North Wales, the Wirral and Cheshire – was bought out byGWR. Four years later, the owners attempted to sell off the stations, although despite several offers, the sale was called off five months later.[2]

On Monday 25 September 2006, the station was renamed103.4 Marcher Sound, reviving their initial branding in keeping with GCap's decision to gradually erode the FM term from its FM services. FollowingGlobal Radio's takeover of GCap in 2008, the station became part of theHeart network in June 2009, relaunching asHeart Cheshire and North East Wales.

Station merger

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On 21 June 2010, Global Radio announced plans to merge the station withHeart North Wales Coast andHeart Wirral as part of plans to reduce the Heart network of stations from 33 to 15, leading to the end of separate local programming for the Wrexham and Chester area.[3]

Heart North West and Wales began broadcasting from Wrexham on Friday 2 July 2010.[4] On Tuesday 6 May 2014, the station became part of the sisterCapital FM network and relaunched again asCapital North West and Wales, with enhanced Heart output moving to a newregional station for North and Mid Wales, owned byCommunicorp. Both stations continue to broadcast regional programming at peak times from the former Marcher studios at Gwersyllt in Wrexham.

References

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  1. ^Names and addresses of GCap's Welsh, Northern and Scottish radio stationsArchived 18 May 2006 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^GCap & Global RadioArchived 27 September 2007 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^Global Radio to halve number of local Heart stations,The Guardian, 21 June 2010
  4. ^Heart slims but strengthens, RadioToday, 21 June 2010Archived 26 June 2010 at theWayback Machine

External links

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Radio inWales
BBC Cymru Wales national stations
Regional commercial stations
Local commercial stations
Community, charity & non-profit stations
Student stations
Defunct local stations
Welsh DAB multiplexes
UK national BBC services
UK national commercial services
UK national DAB multiplexes
Company officials
Radio stations
Related articles
Global Awards ceremonies
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