Yesterday's news of the sudden death of Dave Cash silences a voice that has been an integral part of British radio for the last half
century. His passing further reduces the number of DJs that have worked across
the board: offshore radio, national radio, Luxembourg, local radio, both
commercial and BBC, as well as ITV and BBC television.
The Cashman was born in Hertfordshire in 1942 but his family
moved to Vancouver, Canada - hence that mid-Atlantic twang that was long
evident in Dave's voice - when he was a
young lad. He got his break into broadcasting at station CFUN in Vancouver where
he'd started making the coffee but eventually ended up hosting the overnight
show from midnight until 6 am. It was whilst working as a holiday relief at CJAV
in Port Alberni in 1964 that a mate of his mentioned that he should "get
to England now" and join one of the new pirate radio stations that had
just started up.
Dave landed a job at the recently launched Radio London.
There he broadcast under the name of Dave Cash, rather than his given name of
Dave Wish, in honour of his one of his favourite singers Johnny Cash. He soon
forged an on air partnership with fellow DJ Kenny Everett - the Kenny and Cash Shows became required listening.
Dave jumped ship long before the Marine Offences etc. Act
came into force, though it was quite by chance; an operation to remove kidney
stones in early 1967 meant that he couldn't immediately return to the MV Galaxy,
so his agent Chris Peers managed to get him some relief work at Radio
Luxembourg and on the BBC Light Programme as one of the presenters of Swingalong. This led to further work introducing
the Ray McVay Sound and guests on Monday,
Monday and meant he was in prime position to join the new swinging Radio 1
when it launched in September.
As part of the launch team at Radio 1 - Dave's pictured in
the famous All Soul's photo between David Rider and Pete Brady - he continued
to host Monday, Monday as well as
taking turns on What's New and then Midday Spin before gaining a regular
weekday afternoon slot in July 1968 presenting "a swinging selection of
studio sounds and the best of the rest on records", i.e. in BBC-speak for a
show with minimal needletime. Dave's ever-so sixties catchphrase of
"Groovy Baby" led to the unlikely hit (though it only reached number
29 in the hit parade) of the same title under the name of Microbe - the young
voice provided by the 3-year old Ian Doody, son of Radio 1 and 2 newsreader Pat
Doody.
In September 1969 Dave's show was shifted to a teatime slot
to make way for the incoming Terry Wogan and then from April 1970 he was back
to occasional duties on What's New
and Radio 1 Club as well as Sunday
afternoon chat show with musical guests Cash
at Four. Dave left the Beeb in 1971 but continued to appear on both radio, working
with his old ex-pirate chums Tommy Vance and Kenny Everett at Radio Monte Carlo
International, and on ITV in the HTV produced The Dave Cash Radio Programme.
Early 1973 saw Dave briefly back at the BBC presenting Radio
2's Up Country. Later that year he
was hired by Michael Bukht as part of the launch team at Capital Radio. At the
station he was able to rekindle his pirate radio days on The Kenny and Cash Show at breakfast before moving onto lunchtime with the hugely popular Cash on Delivery.
During the 1980s and 90s Dave worked on numerous commercial
stations. He helped launch Radio West as Programme Director in 1980-82, was Deputy
MD and presenter of the weekend breakfast show (1987-89) at Invicta Radio in
Kent, again working for Michael Bukht. It was back to Capital on their Gold
service 1989-1994 and brief stints at RTL Country 1035, Liberty Radio and Manchester's
Fortune 1458 and its later incarnation
Lite Radio. He also presented a weekly country music show on Primetime
Radio. Dave's experiences in radio fed into his early 1990s novels The Rating Game and All NIght Long.
Dave returned to the BBC in 1999 working for Radio Kent on
shows that were eventually heard on a number of stations in the south-east.
Most recently he continued to pursue his love for country music on Dave Cash Country and the retro chart
show The Dave Cash Countdown. What
were to be his final shows only aired last weekend.
In 2014 Dave celebrated 50 years on the radio in this BBC Radio Kent special linked by Adam Dowling. This was broadcast on Monday 25 August 2014 and gets a repeat on a number of BBC local stations in the south-east this evening.
Asked to choose your favourite British radio DJs the chances
are one of them will be on this list: David Jacobs, Alan Freeman, John Peel,
Tommy Vance and Roger Scott. All now sadly no longer with us. But all are the
subject of this latest book, Pop Pickers
and Music Vendors by John Van der Kiste.
John has traced the careers of these eminent DJs (and Eminent DJs was the working title for
the book) because he rightly regards the five "as among the greatest in
their field", observing that not only did they end their careers as radio
presenters "but also that four of them were still broadcasting within
weeks of their passing away." Old DJs never die, they just fade.....
Aside from Peel - who must surely be the most written about
DJ, with Kenny Everett running a close second - the rest of John's cast of
players have not received the same level of attention, at least not in printed
form. There is much here to satisfy the casual reader as there is the ardent
radio enthusiast.
Pop Pickers and Music
Vendors is published by Fonthill Media and is available from them and all
the usual places. One for the Christmas book list I think.
Earlier this month I hit 1 million views on my YouTube
channel. Now I'm not suggesting those stats are 100% reliable or that every
minute of every upload has been viewed assiduously, but I thought it worth
reflecting on what people have been watching and listening to.
I started the YouTube channel to accommodate any
radio-related TV material and the One Day in the Life of Television clips for my Random Gubbins blog. I then began
to upload radio programmes for two reasons: one to give them a wider audience
than they might otherwise have got via this blog and secondly I found some folk were copying
my audio and uploading it wholesale without any credit. So, if you can't beat
'em, join 'em.
So what's been grabbing your attention over the last five
years. Here's my Top 10 of most viewed uploads in reverse order.
10: Gulf War - BBC
Breakfast 17 January 1991 (16k+ views)
It was all kicking off in the Gulf in 1990 and 1991 and I
filled a couple of tapes with the ongoing news coverage. This recording includes
the full opening sequence for BBC Breakfast News and the first quarter of an
hour or so on the day Operation Desert Storm started.
9: News at Ten - 27
November 1990 (16k+ views)
At the time I was in the habit of filling up the end of my
E180s with a bit of news or some continuity. This is News at Ten with Alistair Burnett and Julia Somerville on the day
John Major became PM.
8: DJ Heaven - Jimmy
Saville (20k+ views)
DJ Heaven was a
1993 BBC2 series that was essentially archive clips from Top of the Pops all linked by the same DJ. Each programme had a
mini biog at the start and it's these I uploaded in 2011 for Tony Blackburn,
Simon Bates, John Peel, Mike Read, DLT and Saville. Little did I know that a
few months later Saville would die and about a year later the full scale of his
sexual abuse came to light. I've had comments clamouring for this, and the 20 Years of Jim'll Fix It programme, to
be taken down but I've resisted wiping out this part of our popular cultural
history no matter how distasteful it is in retrospect.
7: Tim Gudgin on
Grandstand (21k+ views)
I posted this clip of Tim Gudgin from an October 1998 edition
of Grandstand about the time Tim
retired from reading the classified football results. Consequently it got
embedded in a few sports and news sites so bumping up the number of views. Type
'Tim Gudgin' into Google and it comes up as the second item.
6: Classic Trucks -
Ticket to Ride (24k views)
It may surprise you to see this 1995 Channel 4 documentary
about post-war buses until you realise its narrated by John Peel. Consequently
its had interest from transport websites and the John Peel wiki site
5: David Coleman on
Grandstand (25k+ views)
More from Grandstand's
40th anniversary programme as David Coleman talks to Sue Barker. My viewings
figures spiked in 21 December 2013 (nearly 9,000 views for this video) the day
David passed away.
4: BBC Coverage of
the Grand National 1997 (25k+ views)
A chunk of Grandstand's
coverage of the Grand National that had to be postponed and Des Lynam ends up
been shunted into the Aintree car park. Fortunately I had a tape rolling.
3: Sunday Dinner -
Radio Memories (51k views)
A heady dose of nostalgia here. This was an interesting
piece to put together. It's taken from BBC2 and Radio 4's Arena Radio Night in December 1992. At this point in the evening the
two soundtracks differed: on TV just the sounds of people preparing Sunday
lunch (or is that dinner?) over some black and white film whilst Radio 4
listeners heard a selection of clips from radio programmes and reminisces from
listeners about their Sunday memories. I put the two together to form this
12-minute sequence.
2: University
Challenge - Pro-Celebrity Edition 1992 (77k+ views)
This is the programme that eventually saw the return of the
venerable TV quiz to BBC2 in 1994. Here it's the original question master
Bamber Gascoigne that returns for this one-off edition as part of a BBC2 Granadaland theme night. A team from
Keble College Oxford, winners of the last ITV version of the show, take on a
celebrity team of former winners: Alistair Little, John Simpson, Stephen Fry
and Charles Moore.
1: Radio 4 Shipping
Forecast (85k+ views)
Storming in at number one is the shipping forecast! To my
knowledge this is the only time it's been read on both radio and TV. In this case the
honours fell to Laurie MacMillan (who also does a bit of joint TV and radio
continuity at the end). Again this is an excerpt from Arena Radio Night, with BBC2 viewers been treated to shots of crashing
waves and fishing boats. It's amazing how evocative the forecast is, as
evidenced by the many comments.
Scotland's fifth commercial radio station, West Sound, launched
35 years ago today. Based in Ayr the original team included Bryce Curdy, Lou
Grant, Sandy Webster, Kenneth Roy, Evelyn Elliot, Tom Jones, John McCauley,
Allan Andrews, Tommy Truesdale and John Carmichael.
Now part of the Bauer 2 network little, aside from daytime
news bulletins, is locally produced - the majority originates from Key 2 and
Clyde 2.
These DJ photo cards must date from the mid 80s and I'm
grateful to Joseph McTaggart for sending them to me earlier this year.
The photos of some of the studio equipment at West Sound
were taken in 1987.
Woman's Hour
"aims to stimulate woman's mind at a time of day when their hands are
likely to be occupied with knitting, sewing, ironing, or the more routine
household chores." So said the BBC Handbook of 1960 without a hint of condescension.
Now it is more succinctly described as "programme that
offers a female perspective on the world". And if the household chores are
proving too onerous you can always catch it on the Radioplayer or a podcast.
Woman's Hour was
first heard on the BBC Light Programme at 2 pm on Monday 7 October 1946, so
today it celebrates its 70th anniversary.
Famously the first presenter was a man, Alan Ivimey, a
London-born journalist and ex-RAF intelligence officer who "specialised in
writing and talking to women". BBC bosses at the time were adamant that
this was the right approach. "You are right, I feel, in putting a man in
'talking' charge. Woman can't bear being talked at by other women. What they
will take from a man - I speak purely radiographically - they will resent from
a woman." This was despite the original suggestion, from female listener
J.M. Schofield of Rochdale, suggesting a show presented by a woman for women.
"In view of the fact that the BBC pays large sums to dance bands and
crooners, I think they might engage the woman with the right personality to
host a woman's hour ... I assume the right type of person would make a big
success of it."
The features on that first day included Mother's Mid-Day Meal by Mary Marton, Putting Your Best Foot Forward by Kay Beattie, Housewife's Choice of gramophone records and Part 1 of the serial
reading, Under the Red Robe. The
15-minute reading (now a short drama) is the one items that has remained
throughout.
At first listener reaction was not overwhelmingly glowing:
"Surely it’s not too much to ask that we may have our minds removed from
the monotony of housekeeping by a programme which gives us a glimpse of a wider
existence.”
By way of contrast this week's editions have included items
on the Columbian peace process, the Conservative Party conference, group texts
etiquette, workplace rights, Zimbabwean music, columnist Julie Burchill and
businesswomen Jo Malone.
In those austerity years Woman's
Hour wasn't all cookery and thrift and would regularly deal with the
serious issues of the day. Light Programme controller Norman Collins was clear
that it should appeal to "intelligent women" and that the programme
would be provide "a popular medium for talking about serious
matters", even if that meant breaking the so-called 13 and a half minute
rule on the minimum time you could devote to more challenging topics. Here's
Collins talking to Marjorie Anderson on Woman's
Hour on 2 October 1967.
As was the case with many daily shows at that time each
edition of Woman's Hour was heavily
scripted; indeed the 2 pm start time allowed for a full morning rehearsal and a
lunch break before returning to the studio. This is the opening script for an
early 1946 edition:
Ivimey: Good afternoon. I have three ladies round the table
to keep me in order today- Edith Saunders who has been to a fascinating
exhibition of Second Empire Styles at a big West End store.
Saunders: Good afternoon.
Ivimey: Marion Cutler, who's been looking into the working
of that splendid service to housewives and mothers begun during the war, the
Home Help service.
Cutler: Good afternoon.
Ivimey: And Marguerite Patten, who wants to save some of
those tea-time tragedies when the lovely cake you've baked comes out of the
oven with a hole in the middle instead of a nice brown bulge...
When Sue McGregor took over in 1972 she'd been working in
the high pressure environment of The
World at One: " I think up to the point I joined, the presenter of Woman's Hour always read the questions
as they were written down for her by a producer. And this was anathema to
anyone who'd come from news. It used to be heavily rehearsed - and that meant
that the editor listened to the rehearsal in her office at 11.00 am and then
sent down, probably on flimsy memo sheets, her instructions."
Editors Janet Quigley & Joanna Scott-Moncrieff
Under the editorial control of Janet Quigley (1950-56), Joanna
Scott-Moncrieff (1956-64) and then Monica Sims (1964-1971) the programme
broadened out and didn't shy away from tackling difficult subjects. On the
occasion of its 30th anniversary the
Radio Times listed "the firsts of Woman's
Hour" under four categories:
Listener
participation. In 1959 the Reading
Your Letters slot (which began in 1951) discovered agoraphobia and helped
found The Open Door self-help group for sufferers. The programme began to stage
confrontations between listeners and experts (e.g. Margret Thatcher being asked
about the school-leaving age). The Points
from the Postbag slot where people discussed their personal problems was a
forerunner of such programmes as If you
think You've got Problems!
Breaking taboos.
Many subjects particularly those to do with sex, were simply not discussed on
the radio until Woman's Hour talked
about them. Homosexuality was first discussed in 1958; the Pill in 1962;
frigidity and impotence in 1965, transsexuality in 1970; and so on.
Consumerism. From
the beginning the programme took up listeners' complaints and answered queries
in Answer and Comment. Watchdog began in 1969; Checkout in 1971.
World events.
Even before the CND marches Woman's Hour
discussed the dangers of nuclear fall-out with Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd
and a panel of experts. Under the title Press
Conference women journalists grilled prime ministers and other leading
politicians. From the early 60s Gladys Yang recorded talks from Peking. Special
editions have come from all over the world including Moscow, Ghana and Mexico.
According to Sally Feldman (at the time acting editor in
1991) "not all listeners were thrilled by the programme's frank and
fearless approach. One lady was puzzled by the mention of the word 'lesbian',
with which she was unfamiliar. When she looked it up in the dictionary, she
turned the radio off immediately in disgust. She did not listen again for 20
years, but then she finally did decide to switch it on again, the first word
she heard was 'lesbian'. She switched off once more and wrote a bitter letter
of complaint".
Womans' Hour
continues to push the boundaries and make the news with, in just the last
twelve months, the introduction of Late
Night Woman's Hour with Lauren Laverne and an adaptation of Erica Jong's Fear of Flying complete with references
to the "zipless f**k".
Olive Shapley & Joan Griffiths
For such a long-running programme there has only been a
small band of regular presenters. Taking over from Alan Ivimey (dropped because
he was considered "somewhat patronising") was Joan Griffiths
(1946-49) and then Olive Shapley (1949-51). Here's Olive talking to June
Knox-Mawer on the programme on 18 June 1976.
In the early 50s Jean Metcalfe and Mary Hill introduced the
programme and a regular Friday regional edition was heard - a feature that
remained until April 1998. There was also a chance to hear selected items again
in a Sunday Woman's Hour Digest and
then the much-longer running Sunday supplement (later moving to Saturday)
called Home for the Day (1952-68,
heard on the Home Service then Radio 4) which, from April 1968, became Weekend Woman's Hour.
Marjorie Anderson (above) joined Jean in 1952, eventually becoming
the main presenter when Jean left in 1957. Other presenters in the 60s and 70s
included Teresa McGonagle, Pamela Creighton and Judith Chalmers.
One of the long-forgotten elements of Woman's Hour is the signature tune. My research on this is far from
conclusive but when the programme first started it was using the Light
Programme's Oranges and Lemons sig
tune. By 1948 it was the Overture to The
Merry Wives of Windsor by Otto Nicolai. In the 1950s the Masque et Bergamasque Overture by
Gabriel Faure was used. In the late 50s Smetana's piano piece Ze Studentskeho zivota was played. From August 1960 Natasha's Waltz from War and Peace by Nino Rota was selected. In 1962 it changed to William Walton's Facade and then went jazzy in 1963 with the MJQ's version of Vendome. and in 1965 Charlie Byrd's Jordu. By the time I made this recording on 8 April 1980 a sig
tune was still in use - anyone know the title/composer?
In 1973 there was a major shake-up: firstly after two
decades Marjorie Anderson retired through ill-health and was replaced by Sue
McGregor, who'd already joined the team the previous year, and then from 2 July
the programme bade farewell to Radio 2 and moved over to its new Radio 4 home. But
not all the team welcomed the station change. Editor Wyn Knowles in a memo to
the network controller: "Whilst recognising the case for transfer, we feel
that there is much to be said for our remaining on Radio 2. First of all, we
know that our present audience is predominantly working class and that while many
of these may switch over to Radio 4 in order to hear Woman's Hour, a sizeable number may not be in the habit of
switching channels and will lose us..."
Sue McGregor photographed for the Radio Times
in 1976 (Credit: Tony Evans)
Perhaps more significant was the difficult task of Sue
McGregor taking over: "Difficult , because Marjorie had been doing it for
a very long time and was an entrenched favourite. But the Woman's Hour team was jolly nice to me and, if there were any nasty
letters from listeners, I was never allowed to see them". Coming from a
news background "meant that I had to slow down quite a lot in pace as well
as in treatment, but I did it in the way I felt happiest and they left me alone
to get on with it. I always did my own research for the interviews, in
consultation with the producers, and the questions are very much mine, not fed
to me, as was the case in the past."
From the 1970s the Woman's
Hour production team started to extend the brand, leading to the weekly
phone-in Tuesday Call (1973-86), for
the large part presented by Sue McGregor along with Judith Chalmers, Jill
Burridge and Barbara Myers. There was also It's
Your World (1984-87) a co-production with World Service that allowed
listeners to question world leaders and royalty such as Margaret Thatcher, King
Hussein of Jordan, Kenneth Kaunda, Pik Botha, the Duke of Edinburgh and
Princess Anne.
Reflecting the fact that 42% of listeners to Woman's Hour are men there were
occasional Man's Hour specials in
1978, 1986 with Terry Jones, 1988 with Willy Russell and 2004 with Jon Snow.
Eventually the blokes got their own series of Men's Hour with Tim Samuels on Radio 5 Live between July 2010 and
January 2016.
In late 1986 Jenni Murray shared the presenting role with
Sue McGregor (she'd already been on the regional editions from Bristol since
1979) before becoming the main presenter in September 1987 when Sue joined Today.
Interviewed for The
Guardian in 2008 Jenni Murray once again addressed the issue of the
seemingly perennial question as to what class of listeners was tuning in to Woman's Hour. "I tell you what I
really get cross about - it's this middle class idea. To me, the only
qualification you need to be a Radio 4 listener is an enquiring mind. An
inquiring mind exists in the working class - and I know because I came from it
- in the middle class and in the upper class. It's absolutely nothing to do
with class at all. There's nowhere else where you find a programme that has the
breadth of subjects that Woman's Hour
has - and treats it with rigour."
1990 saw a potential threat to the programme as Radio 4
controller Michael Green wanted to shake-up the schedule and address the
mid-morning dip in audiences. From September 1991, he announced, the programme
would be in a new time slot and, perhaps, with a new title. Radio 4 listeners,
ever resistant to any tinkering with the listening habits, were not happy.
Actress Anna Massey, a guest on many occasions summed it up: "To lose the
2 pm slot could be counted as a misfortune, but to lose the title as well must
be counted as carelessness".
But Green was insistent: "Twice as many women are
available to listen to the radio at 10.30 in the morning as at two in the
afternoon - five million as against two-and-a-half million - so a programme
directed at women in the mornings could win double the present audience. I'm
not going to change the nature of Woman's
Hour dramatically: the female perspective will continue to dominate. But
the idea that middle-aged women stay at home to listen to the programme is
outdated; partly because far more go out to work; but also because research
shows that the age profile of the Radio 4 audience is getting younger."
The shift from 2 pm to 10.30 am occurred in September 1991
and the move to the current 10.00 start in April 1998.
Jane Garvey & Dame Jenni Murray
Alongside Jenni Murray the other regular hosts have been
Martha Kearney (1998-2007) and Jane Garvey (2007 to date)
On the Boxing Day 2013 edition Jenni Murray was joined by
Sue McGregor to launch the online archive of Woman's Hour audio clips, the oldest dating back to September 1957.
At the start of this 70th anniversary year Jenni Murray and
guests reviewed the history and considerable impact of the programme. This
aired on 1 January 2016.
Woman's Hour celebrates its 70th anniversary on Monday with a live programme from the BBC Radio Theatre. Jenni Murray, Jane Garvey and a guest panel "discuss the results of a poll specially commissioned to find out about UK women's lives in 2016. How has life changed for women at home and at work from 1946 to the present day?"
References:
Life on Air: A History
of Radio Four by David Hendy (OUP 2007)
And now on Radio 4
by Simon Elmes (Random House 2007)
The responsible woman:
the BBC and women's radio 1945-1955 by Kristin Skoog (University of
Westminster PHD thesis 2010)
Woman's Hour: three
decades of pioneering radio by Wilfred D'Ath, Radio Times 2 October 1976
Move us if you must
by Angela Lambert, The Independent 23
January 1991
Ideas above their
station? by Russell Miller, Sunday Times
Magazine 15 September 1991
National institution -
I think not by Vicky Frost, The
Guardian 14 April 2008