In the 70s and 80s I was obsessed with Short Wave radio and getting as many 'world services' as possible. It was the height of the Cold War and there were a lot of propaganda stations: Radio Moscow, Voice of Vietnam and best of all Radio Tirana where the newsreader was a chap with a Cockney accent denouncing 'US imperialism', 'Soviet social imperialism', 'Chinese hegemonism', etc. I had a radio with about 10 SW bands I think. These days Short Wave is largely silent except for religious fundamentalist stations from the US and the Middle East and I can get radio from around the world on my smartphone. But I can't help thinking some of the romance has gone out of it all. ... Do any of you have Short Wave nostalgia?
Ad_Forums-Top
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Short Wave Radio
Collapse
X
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
One I listened to was Voice of America
I wonder if they are still broadcastingsigpic
Do you really believe the other side without provocation would launch so many ICBM's, subs and ships knowing that we would have no option to launch as well? It would break our MAD Treaty (Mutually Assured Destruction) not to mention the end of the world as we know it.
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
I had a short wave radio in the 1990s - I definitely recall Voice of America, along with some Iranian propaganda station which went on about 'The Great Satan' and all that old nonsense. There was a TON of religious programming out there, most of which was distinctly weird. One odd station which sticks in my mind seemed to play nothing but chiming music overlayed by what sounded like people stomping loudly round a large hall. No idea what that was all about. I did occasionally catch the odd broadcast from a number station, and sometimes caught the heavily distorted voices of radio hams broadcasting via SSB.
My lingering memory of SW radio was that there sure was a lot of strange stuff out there. And then along came the internet...
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
I remember in the 70s that there used to be adverts in papers for SW "worldband" radios, that made it sound like you could pick up stations from all over the world. I think the advert stated, or possibly implied, that the radios were Russian or possibly from another East European country. I wondered at the time if they were genuinely from that area or actually from a bit further east than that.
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
In 1981 I did a school project on left-wing groups and was able to read a lot of their newspapers and magazines. ‘The Morning Star’, the Communist daily, advertised Eastern bloc radio broadcasts in English instead of having TV listings. I realised that their readers were getting all or most of their news from there and planning their evenings around these broadcasts. I had already listened to most of not all on SW. The bands varied: they all had Africa and Latin America services.
From that project I also recall that the Workers Revolutionary Party (of which Vanessa and Corin Redgrave were leading lights) had a 6-page newspaper called News Line. Two of those pages were sport and that section was remarkably professional.
Radio Tirana called us the ‘British imperialists’ on the night of Zimbabwe’s independence in April 1980!
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
This is cynical but more than one person has said that the reason why mass market stereos and Hi-Fi tuners did not have SW on them was to vastly reduce the number of people who could receive communist and other propaganda broadcasts. It's probably safe to say that SW broadcasters were preaching to the converted, who had bought SW receivers to listen to them, rather than reaching out to the general public. There was something suspicious about the ownership of a SW or "worldband" radio as ordinary folk were assumed not to own such things. Was its owner a closet communist?
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by Arran View PostThis is cynical but more than one person has said that the reason why mass market stereos and Hi-Fi tuners did not have SW on them was to vastly reduce the number of people who could receive communist and other propaganda broadcasts. It's probably safe to say that SW broadcasters were preaching to the converted, who had bought SW receivers to listen to them, rather than reaching out to the general public. There was something suspicious about the ownership of a SW or "worldband" radio as ordinary folk were assumed not to own such things. Was its owner a closet communist?
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
It seemed to work both ways, as lot of people behind the Iron Curtain used to secretly listen to Radio Free Europe & the BBC World Service to get a propaganda free view of the world.
Sometimes these were jammed, but the Canadian world service was one that was in the clear. I remember reading about a Czech who used to find it was the best neutral station, & when he fled to South Africa in 1968 the first thing he bought when he saved up enough was a short wave radio to continue listening to it.The Trickster On The Roof
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Not SW but MW you could listen to cordless phones within range on 1600khz
They have since gone DTMFsigpic
Do you really believe the other side without provocation would launch so many ICBM's, subs and ships knowing that we would have no option to launch as well? It would break our MAD Treaty (Mutually Assured Destruction) not to mention the end of the world as we know it.
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by Richard1978 View PostIt seemed to work both ways, as lot of people behind the Iron Curtain used to secretly listen to Radio Free Europe & the BBC World Service to get a propaganda free view of the world.
Sometimes these were jammed, but the Canadian world service was one that was in the clear. I remember reading about a Czech who used to find it was the best neutral station, & when he fled to South Africa in 1968 the first thing he bought when he saved up enough was a short wave radio to continue listening to it.
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by Twocky61 View PostNot SW but MW you could listen to cordless phones within range on 1600khz
They have since gone DTMF
secer minutes to light up. I could get stations as far away as India on medium wave late at night.
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by Silver Bear View PostMedium wave: I used to listen to LBC on 261 metres when it was a decent radio station. In the 70s I had a very powerful old style wood-framed ‘wireless’ which took
secer minutes to light up. I could get stations as far away as India on medium wave late at night.
80sChav
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by staffslad View PostI remember in the 70s that there used to be adverts in papers for SW "worldband" radios, that made it sound like you could pick up stations from all over the world. I think the advert stated, or possibly implied, that the radios were Russian or possibly from another East European country. I wondered at the time if they were genuinely from that area or actually from a bit further east than that.Last edited by CrystalBall; 04-11-2017, 01:06.
Comment
-
Re: Short Wave Radio
Originally posted by CrystalBall View PostProbably the Vega Selena. They were genuine USSR-made radios and of excellent quality, certainly better than Roberts radios of the time which cost more new. I have two of these, one bought from a local electrical shop in 1987 and a NOS one from the early 1990s which I bought in 2011. The later one is made in Belarus as by this time the USSR had been dissolved. Built like a tank and as powerful as a ghetto blaster.
Comment
Comment