Premier Christian Radio
City | London |
---|---|
Format | Christian radio, Contemporary Christian music |
Audience share | 1.2% (July 2014, RAJAR [1]) |
Owner | Premier Christian Media Trust |
Website | www.premierchristianradio.com |
Premier Christian Radio is a British Christian radio station, part of Premier (a Christian communications organisation) which is in turn wholly owned by the charity Premier Christian Media Trust.
Premier Christian Radio broadcasts Christian programming including news, debate, teachings and Christian music across the United Kingdom.
History
Premier Christian Radio was founded in 1994, broadcasting exclusively on medium wave to a Greater London audience when it also began its telephone counselling service, Lifeline. It took the air at a launch party in Battersea Park, London on 10 June 1995.[2]
A series of magazine titles then joined. The charity currently produces Premier Christianity, Premier Youthwork, Premier Childrenswork and Christian Marketplace.
In 2001, Premier Christian Radio received an official warning from the Radio Authority (the regulatory body for radio at the time) for broadcasting "items that were offensive to people of other, non-Christian beliefs". A "yellow card" warning was issued, recognising that Premier had acknowledged its errors and put in place significant new compliance measures to ensure such breaches would not be repeated.[3]
In the months of April to July 2014 Premier Christian Radio reached its biggest-ever audience in its near twenty years history. RAJAR figures showed a weekly reach for the period of 240,700 people in London and the South East of England, and also showed that each listener tuned in for an average of 10.1 hours each week.[4] This boost followed on from a rebranding exercise in the beginning of 2014, and a new website which included listen-again features and breaking news.
Availability
Medium wave AM
It operates on four frequencies on medium wave across six transmitters:[5]
- 1332 (London)
- 1305 (Stevenage, Bishops Stortford, Harlow and Hertford; Crawley, Guildford, Reigate and Woking)
- 1413 (Maidenhead, Camberley, Staines, Harrow, Watford; and Chelmsford, Brentwood, Dartford, Maidstone & Sevenoaks)
- 1566 (Guildford)
It also broadcasts on the Digital One national DAB multiplex,[6] nationally on Freeview (channel 725), via its website, and via its mobile app.
Digital DAB, Freeview and internet
Premier Christian Radio was at first only available on medium wave in London. It later added broadcasts on the internet, Freeview channel 725 (UK and Ireland), Sky Digital (channel 0123, terminated 14 December 2012), Virgin Media (channel 968, terminated 6 May 2009) and London DAB - a national DAB broadcast was added later.[7] In 2006, the media group launched Premier.tv, one of the first Christian IPTV channels in the UK.
Its 2007 application for a national DAB licence, as part of the National Grid Wireless consortium, was refused; Premier Radio said "almost 72,000 Premier listeners stepped up and made their voices heard in supporting the bid".[8] In August 2009, Premier achieved its target of meeting the £650,000 yearly fee to broadcast on the national Digital One DAB multiplex and launched on the multiplex on 21 September 2009.[6]
Premier Gospel
Premier Gospel was launched as a DAB spin-off station in 2010, taking the London DAB slot vacated by the parent service's move to D1.[9]
Premier Praise
A second sister station, Premier Praise!, playing contemporary Christian pop and rock, launched on 27 March 2016 as part of the Sound Digital national DAB multiplex. It will be available on SDL alongside the core Premier service, which completes its migration over from Digital 1 to SDL in April.
Listenership
Premier Christian Radio's supporters come from many different Christian denominations, including those from the Anglican, Baptist, Catholic, Evangelical, Methodist and Pentecostal churches.[10]
In 2004 The Times placed Premier Christian Radio at number one in a chart of the "most upmarket stations" based upon the percentage of its audience (81%) that is ABC1.[11] In the quarter ending June 2010 the station was receivable by 10,983,000 people; 143,000 listened, for an average of 12 hours each, 0.80% of all listening hours.[12]
Presenters
Presenters [13] include:
- Anna Cookson
- Andy Peck
- Ben Vane
- Cindy Kent, former singer with the 1960s folk group The Settlers
- Dave Rose (Station Director)
- Jeff Lucas
- John Pantry, 1970s singer and music producer
- Justin Brierley
- Lady T
- Lisa Mainwaring
- Loretta Andrews
- Marcus Jones (News Editor)
- Maria Rodrigues
- Micha Jazz
- Michael Cleere
- Michael Fanstone
- Muyiwa
- Nage
- Nick Battle
- Nicky Gilchrist
- Pam Rhodes
- Rick Easter
- Rosie Wright
- Ruth Dearnley (CEO Stop the Traffik)
- Steve Fanstone
- Tony Miles
References
- ↑ :: Rajar
- ↑ , The Tablet, On The Air, 17 June 1995
- ↑ Notes of Radio Authority Meeting, Radio Authority, 4 October 2001.
- ↑ , RAJAR, Q2 2014 Figures.
- ↑ Aircheck: Kent
- 1 2 Plunkett, John (2009-08-19). "Premier Christian Radio set for national digital launch". The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-08-19.
- ↑ http://www.premierradio.org.uk/listen.aspx
- ↑ "Disappointing news", Premier website. Retrieved 8 January 2008. Archived at the Internet Archive
- ↑ Clarkson, Stuart (2012-01-10). "Premier Gospel Radio signs MOBO winner". Radio Today. Archived from the original on 2012-02-22.
Premier Gospel Radio is a DAB spin-off station from Premier Christian Radio.
- ↑ "Premier announces new website to target whole of church". Christian Today. 17 January 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
Premier Christian Media Trust, the Christian media group that serves all denominations of the Christian faith, has redesigned its core website, premier.org.uk, in a bid to reach new parts of the church. "It is well known that Premier have a strong Evangelical audience, but it is often forgotten that many of our supporters are from Anglican, Baptist, Catholic or other Christian backgrounds," premier.org.uk's Web Editor, Naomi Thatcher commented.
- ↑ "Radio Waves: Paul Donovan: Top of the toffs". The Sunday Times. 3 October 2004. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011.
- ↑ RAJAR listening figures
- ↑ http://www.premierchristianradio.com/Presenters