THIS,
FOR THE VERY FIRST TIME, IS CAPITAL RADIO
Mike Childs
This article was originally published on the web
site http://www.vintagebroadcasting.org.uk
“This, for the very
first time, is Capital Radio”. Phew, my alarm clock had gone off and I was able
to hear these words live
on the radio station I’d been working at for the last six days. I’d been worried
that I might miss the momentous moment
because I’d only had a few hours much needed sleep after the most hectic and
exciting few days of my life.
It was October 1973, and commercial radio was about to become a reality in the
United Kingdom.
LBC had already gone on air providing news and talk for London, but I’d landed
a ‘temporary’ job at Capital, the music and entertainment station due to start
broadcasting at 5am on Tuesday 16th October. “It won’t be glam, and it’ll be
hard work”
I was told as I pitched up for duties at Euston Tower early on Wednesday morning,
the 10th. My first job, take a taxi to
Capital’s temporary headquarters in Piccadilly to collect some office supplies,
a box of records and various other things.
Back at Euston Tower the carpet tiles for the as yet unfurnished studios and
offices were arriving at the back door by truck.
My job, count the boxes as they were unloaded. So far no ‘glam’, but wait, I’d
just spotted Dave Cash in a corner area surrounded by heaps of 539 t-shirts!
Dave was and still is a radio legend and at that time was also a big telly star
with his weekly Tuesday afternoon show.
By now it was lunchtime and someone had asked me to supervise the distribution
of lunchboxes to the staff. Sandwiches, chocolate biscuits, crisps and apples
were the order of the day to keep everyone going, but the two coffee machines
struggled valiantly to keep up with the much-needed caffeine breaks for the
various engineers, producers, workmen, directors, secretaries and presenters
who demanded sustenance. Not that I knew exactly who was who that day, but as
everyone from Chairman Richard Attenborough, Managing Director John Whitney
through to Programme Controller Michael Bukht was on first name terms it wasn’t
long before I felt I’d joined the Capital ‘family’. Anyway, as my next task
was to stick two-line biographies onto the back of all the presenters’ 10 x
8 inch black and white photos to go into hundreds of press packs I was soon
familiar with the likenesses of Tommy Vance, Joan Shenton, Dave Symonds, Roger
Scott, Nicky Horne,
Tony Myatt and other more well-known names and faces such as Kenny Everett,
Tim Rice, Marsha Hunt,
Peggy Mount and Dirk Bogarde.
All around me there were people making phone calls, listening to records, and
unspooling miles and miles of wires for the obviously nowhere near ready on-air
studios. Carpenters were hammering away erecting cupboards and shelving, and
then another consignment of desks arrived to be temporarily set up before the
aforementioned carpet tiles were laid down.
One office belonging to press and publicity lady Edna Tromans was stacked to
the ceiling with cases of champagne,
and in an area away from the offices and studios were several camp beds and
a stack of sleeping bags for people who
were too tired to go home and needed some sleep! Evening quickly came on that
first day of mine and again people needed feeding. My task was to order up a
couple of dozen kebabs from a local Greek restaurant and ferry them back to
the Tower in, you guessed it, a taxi. Subsequent evenings saw me bringing huge
buckets of curry and rice from the local Indian,
hamburgers and chips from another nearby café, heaps and heaps of Chinese food
(very popular!) and so on until all the neighbourhood options had been exhausted.
(Luckily, Ricky, the owner of the Rambler Café on Euston Road soon came on board
to provide round-the-clock refreshment so my nightly excursions swiftly came
to an end). And so a pattern was established. As the 16th grew closer the pace
inside the tower increased and the excitement levels rose.
I got to know some of the guys and girls who would soon become part of the on-air
output and I also made some lasting friendships in that week with behind-the-scenes
guys like Clive Smith who first shared a cab with me from Piccadilly to Euston
Tower that week in 1973 and has remained one of my closest pals ever since.
Everyone pitched in as the days and hours ticked away, and although the main
foyer area on the ground floor still had an unfinished sweeping staircase up
to the first floor,
the offices and studios upstairs were beginning to take shape. The carpet was
laid, people were in place, typewriters clattered
and music came from every corner. Every hour brought another delivery of promotional
items like little cube radios with the Capital logo on all four sides, and even
some ‘stereo’ radios with detachable speakers lest anyone forget that Capital
Radio ‘Broadcasting on 539m. Medium Wave’ was also available on ’95.8 VHF Stereo’.
The magic day soon arrived. As I mentioned I wasn’t at the station at 5am but
made it into the building soon after 9am.
Dave Symonds’ show had passed without a hitch and Tommy and Joan were on air.
Someone needed help in the phone room and I was soon up to speed on answering
listeners incoming calls, passing on their ‘Swop Shop’ details to the programme
producer, and contributing to a real live radio show. I still had to sort out
the lunchboxes, but when I paused for a breather
I discovered a rather lovely note on my desk next to a small bottle of champagne.
It reads:
“This is just to wish us all good luck and to thank you for everything that
you have contributed in making today possible.
We have a slightly more permanent little gift which we would like you to have
at a party that we are planning for
Sunday, October 28th when we hope that you and your family will join us for
luncheon. We will be sending you an invitation within the next few days. With
every good wish,
(Signed) John Whitney & Richard Attenborough.”
And of course the party was wonderful, and I ended up spending the next twenty-five
years as part of the Capital Radio family.