Heart (Radio network)

The Heart Network
City of license London
Broadcast area London, West Midlands, East Anglia, South East England, West of England, Devon, North Wales, Cheshire, Wirral Peninsula
Branding 'More music variety', 'This is Heart', 'Give it some Heart'
Slogan 'More Music Variety'
Frequency 96MHz–107MHz
RDS: HEART_xx or HEART___
First air date 1994 (Heart West Midlands)
Format Hot AC
Language English
Audience share 5.90% (Sept 2010, [1])
Owner Global Radio
Sister stations Capital FM, XFM, Classic FM, LBC, Choice FM, The Arrow, Chill
Website Heart

Heart is a radio network of 17 adult contemporary independent local radio stations in central & southern England and north Wales. Each station broadcasts local breakfast and drive time shows and simulcasts network programming at all other times. Sixteen of the Heart stations are owned and operated by Global Radio with one station owned independently as a franchise, (Heart Hertfordshire).

Contents

History

Heart was launched in the West Midlands in 1994, with a London station following in 1995. Century 106 in the East Midlands became the third station of the Heart network in 2005, when GCap Media sold Century 106 to Heart's then-owner Chrysalis Group. Chrysalis' radio holdings were sold to Global Radio in 2007.

There are two theories of how the original Heart station was given its name. One is that it got its name from being based in the heart of Birmingham. The more commonly held theory is that it is taken from the phrase Heart of England which Birmingham and often the wider West Midlands region is often referred to as.

When GCap Media was taken over by Global Radio in 2008, it announced plans to dissolve the 41 station One Network, with one station (Power FM) becoming part of the Galaxy Network, four stations (BRMB, Beacon Radio, Mercia FM and Wyvern FM) forming a West Midlands regional network (which was latterly sold to Orion Media along with Heart 106), seven stations joining Capital FM to form The Hit Music Network and the remaining 29 stations forming the Heart Network. Heart East Midlands was sold to Orion Media due to the same competition concerns that had forced its earlier sale to Chrysalis, and as a result this was operated by Orion Media using the Heart name and content under licence, until 1 January 2011 when it split from the Heart network, becoming Gem 106. (As a result of this and other changes, including the creation of Capital FM East Midlands, Global Radio placed a relay of Heart 106.2 in place of Galaxy Digital on DAB in Leicester and Nottingham, such that listeners could continue to receive Heart network content in these areas.)

Between June and September 2010, Global Radio merged a vast majority of the Heart stations to create a smaller network of local & regional stations, in line with new OFCOM guidelines on local output requirements.[1]

List of Heart stations

As of January 2011, the Heart network comprises 17 stations:[2]

Programming

Margherita Taylor is to join Capital sister station Heart in 2012.[3]

Monday–Friday

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0100–0400 All 80s, All Night (automated) Leicester Square, London
0400–0600 Nicola Bonn
0600–1000 Heart Breakfast (Local) Various
1000–1300 Toby Anstis Leicester Square, London
1300–1600 Nick Snaith
1600–1900 Heart Drivetime (Local) Various
1900–2200 Simon Dale Leicester Square, London
2200–0100 The Late Show with Simon Beale

Friday variation

Time Main presenter(s) Location
1900–0000 Club Classics with Simon Dale Leicester Square, London

Saturday

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0000–0200 Club Classics (automated) Leicester Square, London
0200–0600 Vanessa Elms
0600–0800 Matt Wilkinson
0800–1200 Heart Breakfast (Local) Various
1200–1600 Nick Snaith Leicester Square, London
1600–1900 Emma Bunton
1900–0000 Club Classics with Steve Denyer

Sunday

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
0000–0200 Club Classics (automated) Leicester Square, London
0200–0600 Vanessa Elms
0600–0800 Matt Wilkinson
0800–1200 Heart Breakfast (Local) Various
1200–1600 Jason Donovan Leicester Square, London
1600–1900 Rich Clarke & Kat Shoob: The Vodafone Freebees Big Top 40
1900–2200 Chris Skinner
2200–0100 The Late Show with Simon Beale

Network relief presenters

  • Matt Wilkinson
  • Steve Denyer (Heart West Midlands)
  • Chris Skinner (Heart Cambridgeshire)
  • Dan Mills (Heart South Coast)
  • Matt Jarvis (Heart Four Counties)
  • Chris Marston (Heart East Anglia)
  • Ben Jones
  • Harriet Scott (Heart London)

Network opt-outs

Heart Cymru opts out of the network schedule for additional Welsh language programming – the station runs a five-hour drivetime show on weekdays from 2-7pm, following an automated hour of non-stop music and airs an extra local programme on Saturday and Sunday afternoons (12-4pm). Heart North West and Wales on 96.3 FM (North Wales Coast) also opts out for an extra hour-long programme in Welsh at 5am on weekday mornings and 7am on Sundays.

Network presentation

The Heart Network uses a jingle package, composed by the Seattle-based music production company IQ Beats, who also supply packages for Global Radio's Capital FM Network, LBC and Gold Network. The network's imaging voiceovers are Alex Hall and Martin Bruce while the sponsorship and promotion voiceovers are Dave Kelly and Anna Butterfield.

Network restructuring

On 21 June 2010, Global Radio announced plans to restructure the Heart Network. By the end of the restructuing process, the number of stations had been reduced from 33 to 18.[4] Two Hit Music Network stations were also closed and merged with Heart stations.

Stations in Gloucestershire, Kent, London, the West Midlands, the East Midlands and Wiltshire were unaffected by the changes. Heart Cymru, serving Gwynedd and Anglesey, moved its studios from Bangor to Wrexham but retained its extended local output of 10 hours on weekdays and 8 hours on Saturdays and Sundays. Heart North West and Wales retained an opt-out on 96.3FM (the North Wales Coast) for Welsh language programming.

On 1 January 2011, Orion Media, the owners of Heart East Midlands (one of the original three Heart stations) renamed and relaunched the station as 'Gem 106', ending a franchise agreement with Global Radio formed when Global purchased GCap and which allowed it to use the Heart identity and carry networked programming from London.[5] The move saw networked programming largely replaced by local shows.

Criticisms

In August 2010, listeners in Bedfordshire and Crawley, West Sussex complained about the merger of Heart stations and called for a boycott of the station.[6]

External links

References

  1. ^ Heart slims but strenghens
  2. ^ Official website featuring map showing Heart stations
  3. ^ Margherita Taylor swaps Capital for Heart Radio Today, 22 December 2011
  4. ^ Global Radio to halve number of local Heart stations, mediaguardian.co.uk, 21 June 2010
  5. ^ Gem to replace Heart East Mids
  6. ^ Global Radio faces Heart cuts protest, MediaGuardian.co.uk