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The Rise & Sudden Fall of London Irish Community Radio in 1988
The late Jimmy Smith made his name in Irish radio and made his pirate
radio station TTTR (Tallaght, Templeogue, Ternure Radio) the number one country
and Irish music station having helped the careers of many of the rising stars
of Irish country music. In 1988, Jimmy, with the impending arrival of new
legislation that would silence his beloved station, making way for a new legal
independent commercial landscape, he decided to spread his wings but had those
wings firmly clipped by the authorities.
With a staff of seven and broadcasting twenty four hours a day on 89.6mhz
FM, Jimmy set up London Irish Community Radio, a pirate station dedicated to
one of the largest ethnic groups in the UK's capital. The station was located
on Hope Lane in Acton and followed the same successful formula as TTTR back in
Dublin.
There had been an explosion
of pirate radio stations in London from 1988. According to the Dazed website
‘Needless to say, it (pirate radio) wasn’t going anywhere,
and between 1988 and 89, pirate radio stations rapidly started to appear to
serve a youth hungry for new sounds that weren’t being catered to by mainstream
radio. By 1989, there were over 60 pirate radio stations operating in London
alone.’
According to
the fanzine ‘Anoraks UK’ from July 1st – 5th there were ‘40
pirate radio stations, 11 in stereo’ operating in London. There was numerous
ethnic based stations including London Greek Community Radio, London Asian Community
Radio and London Turkish Community Radio.
From The House of Commons Hansard page on written MP answers
Just weeks after going on air at noon March 10th 1988, their powerful 500w transmitter blanking out smaller low powered pirates that broadcast on the 89-90mhz FM frequency. This included the ‘obliteration’ according to Anoraks UK’s London correspondent of long running pirate station ‘London Rock’ also on 89.5. Prior to the arrival of LICR, the Irish in the capital could tune on a Sunday lunchtime on the Brent based pirate station JBC on 104.3mhz. By mid April, LICR’s overnight programming of recorded shows was being relayed on another London pirate station ICE FM on 90.5mhz.
Whether it was his reputation
preceding him or a suspicion of any Irish content on the radio as the troubles
continued in Northern Ireland, in the first week in May the station was raided
by the DTI and the police, closed after just five weeks of broadcasting. Jimmy
managed to get the station back on the air within a fortnight on low power but
he was quickly raided once again putting an end to LICR.
In August backers were fined £400 plus £295 costs.
Alan Whelan and ex-pat and a councillor with the Social Liberal democrats
said,
"I am against pirating but his radio station proved there is a need
to be met".
Local Ealing North MP Harry Greenway made representations to the Home
Secretary but to no avail as there would be no legal community license given to
a station serving the large Irish diaspora at that time. For any Irish living
in London today, to keep in touch with all things Irish tune in to https://www.irishradio.org/
Hansard, the House of Commons Archive
Anoraks UK
The British Newspaper Archives
The Irish Post, London
The DX Archive
Radiowaves.fm
Dazed
AMFM.org
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