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Home » How did Manchester’s Piccadilly change the UK’s radio landscape? | UK News
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How did Manchester’s Piccadilly change the UK’s radio landscape? | UK News

By britishbulletin.com29 November 20255 Mins Read
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Piccadilly Radio Philip Birch stands outside Piccadilly Radio's studios. He's wearing a suit including waistcoat. The Piccadilly Radio 261 text and logo adorns the outside window behind him.Piccadilly Radio

Philip Birch founded Piccadilly Radio in Manchester after managing pirate station Radio London

One morning in April 1974, Good Vibrations by The Beach Boys was faded up and, with it, Greater Manchester’s newest radio station was born.

Piccadilly Radio 261 went on to become a Mancunian institution and one of the most popular news, music and entertainment radio stations in the UK.

The city’s first independent radio station, which joined the airwaves four years after Radio Manchester, helped launch the careers of broadcasters Andy Peebles, Chris Evans and Radio Manchester’s Becky Want and Mike Sweeney.

After 14 years of news, sport, phone-ins and competitions, Piccadilly Radio split in 1988 into Key 103 – later becoming Hits and Greatest Hits Radio, both based in the city’s Castefield area.

Several Piccadilly Radio former presenters recently reunited to unveil a commemorative plaque at the site of the original studios, recalling stories of how the station became a “bright light” during a “pretty grim time” for the city.

Pete Baker Pete Baker sits behind the mixing desk wearing a white shirt. He has headphones around his neck.Pete Baker

Pete Baker, whose son Richard wrote this story, presenting Piccadilly Radio’s breakfast show

When Piccadilly Radio came on air, the country was in the midst of political strife, the three-day working week and energy shortages.

Factories and schools closed, families ate by candlelight and television channels went dark at 22:30 GMT.

“We’re talking about 1974, which was pretty grim frankly, it almost meant we didn’t even get on air”, Piccadilly Radio’s first employee Jim Hancock remembered.

“Piccadilly came as this bright light on the scene.”

Tony Ingham, who helped set up the station, said only “one-and-a-half” of their four studios were ready for launch day on 2 April 1974.

“There wasn’t any heating, the presenters had maybe two weeks to rehearse,” he explained.

“Everything was held together with Sellotape and string initially.”

Piccadilly Radio Screenshot of Mike Shaft's presenter card at Piccadilly. He's looking into the camera and is wearing a white v-neck jumper.Piccadilly Radio

Mike Shaft’s presenter card from Piccadilly Radio

While his future colleagues were helping to build the remaining studios, across the city a young Mike Shaft was listening to Andy Peebles’ soul show.

“All I wanted to do was the soul show,” he said.

“I said to my missus ‘I’ll never work at Piccadilly whilst Andy’s there because his soul show was just excellent'”.

Shaft, who eventually took the reins of the ‘Taking Care of Business’ soul show until 1986, remembered the day he realised a window may be open.

“I opened up the Daily Mail, it read ‘Andy Peebles Goes To Radio 1’ – I was down there within 30 minutes!”

The aspiring presenter soon received a letter, inviting him in for a chat.

“Me and my missus were both jumping around in our flat, it was great times,” he remembered.

After Piccadilly, Shaft worked at Radio Manchester for 20 years, presenting his final Sunday Breakfast show in 2022.

Piccadilly Radio Tony sits with his leg up on the table wearing a bright red shirt and pinstripe navy suit trousers. There are lots of telephones and typewriters around him.Piccadilly Radio

Tony Ingham later became programme controller at Piccadilly Radio

Piccadilly Radio also reported on Manchester’s vibrant and varied sporting scene – under its “First with News; First with Sport” tagline.

When the station covered Manchester City versus Liverpool in the 1981 League Cup semi-final, Ingham was asked to think of an idea to show off Piccadilly’s sponsorship of the tie.

“Two nights before the game, we went to assess whether we could send fireworks off above the stands in the event of a City goal,” he said.

“On the way back to the studios, we were arrested by armed police who thought we’d set a bomb off.

“I spent two hours in Moss Side police station under the Prevention of Terrorism Act!”

Pete Johnson Jim Hancock stands in front of the camera and smiles. He's wearing glasses and a brown suit behind a backdrop of Piccadilly Radio's logo.Pete Johnson

Piccadilly Radio’s first employee Jim Hancock at the station’s 50th anniversary reunion last year

Shaft said: “I loved Piccadilly – anytime Tony [Ingham] or Liz [Bracken] phones up – I’m there because I know what the radio station stood for.

“There’s other places I worked where I wouldn’t give them tuppence.

For Hancock, the offering of “shock jocks” and the studios’ prime Piccadilly Gardens location were vitally important.

“We were seen to be out and about,” he said. “It’s more commonplace now but in those days we had a big van that would go out with the DJs to the Manchester shows and local community events.

“Twenty-four hours a day [Piccadilly Radio] was coming from the heart of Manchester and that’s what people identified with.

“Looking back now, I didn’t realise what impact it would have on the people of Manchester.”

Shaft agreed: “Piccadilly and the other commercial stations came on air and blew the locals out the water.”

Carl Sukonik The former Piccadilly presenters stand in front of the unveiled plaque to commemorate their station at City Tower.Carl Sukonik

Piccadilly’s presenters reunited: Pete Baker, Phil Wood, Becky Want, Mike Shaft, Andy Crane, Mike Sweeney and Jim Hancock

Ingham highlighted the camaraderie between staff – several of whom had gained their big break in the radio industry at Piccadilly.

“That made Piccadilly so successful and thought of so fondly even after all these years,” he explained.

“For a period of time, a group of people came together and they implicitly understood how that radio station should behave.

“It’s the best job in the world, working for a radio station, it doesn’t get any better.”

Piccadilly Radio’s plaque is available to view at City Tower, aptly enough in Piccadilly Gardens.

The station’s archived tapes have also recently been digitised and are publicly available at Manchester’s Central Library.

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