SWR 99.9 FM

Last updated

SWR 99.9 FM
SWR Triple 9 Logo.png
Broadcast area Greater Western Sydney
Frequency 99.9 MHz
Programming
Format Adult Contemporary, Top 40, Community Radio
Ownership
OwnerSWRFM Community Media Association Inc.
History
First air date
27 September 2003
Call sign meaning
2 = New South Wales
Sydney
West
Radio
Technical information
Power 200 Watts
HAAT 175m
Links
Webcast
Website Official website

SWR 99.9 FM (ACMA callsign: 2SWR) is a community radio station based in Blacktown in Sydney. The station broadcasts to parts of Greater Western Sydney, but can be received in most of the Sydney metropolitan area.

Contents

The mission of SWR 99.9 FM is to offer the community a voice and an opportunity for anyone to access the airwaves regardless of age, gender, nationality or experience. SWR 99.9 FM is a mostly volunteer run organisation and is funded through listener support, grants and sponsorship.

History

What is now SWR 99.9 FM grew out of a group of people who had initially started in the 1980s as aspirant broadcaster WOW FM. Eventually forming as SWR FM, in 1992 the station started conducting regular test transmissions on 88.3 FM and later on 100.3 FM. These were fully operational and programmed broadcasts, but were usually limited to one or two weeks at a time. [1] In 1994 the then Australian Broadcasting Authority agreed that SWR FM could use its 90 days per year of temporary transmission time by broadcasting every weekend, rather than using up all the time in one or two blocks. This enabled the station to have a continuous presence within the community.

In 1999 the station was able to broadcast full-time under new Temporary Community Broadcasting Licences. However it spent much of 2001 and 2002 off the air due to problems encountered in sharing the frequency with another temporary broadcaster. [2] In 2003 a licence was issued to SWR 99.9 FM and they commenced full-time broadcasting on Saturday 27 September 2003. [3]

Current

SWR 99.9 FM is now home to Busco for Brekky (5:30am-9am) and Drive with Linden (4pm-6pm). [4] The shows both provide local news, weather and traffic and play adult contemporary hits. SWR 99.9 FM now has consistent 70's to Now music formatting with Nine's Radio News bulletins every hour from 6am-6pm every weekday, so listeners can tune into regular programming as they drive to work, while they're at work and on their way home.

Volunteers also produce their own local shows on the station, where you'll find a diverse range of programming and music genres. [5]

A view from the inside of the SWR 99.9 FM OB Van in action at a local community event SWR OB Van.jpg
A view from the inside of the SWR 99.9 FM OB Van in action at a local community event

Using its own outside broadcast unit, SWR 99.9 FM regularly broadcasts from local shows and festivals including the Blacktown and Holroyd festivals, Rooty Hill Australia Day celebrations and other local events. The station has a long history of giving air time to local bands. The Musos Show on Saturdays from 2pm-4pm features local and musicians and bands. SWRtember was initially launched to promote local upcoming talent. In 2011 New Zealand rock band Dragon headlined SWRtember and played a 45-minute set live to air. [6] [ non-primary source needed ][ non-primary source needed ] SWRtember has since been replaced with SWR 99.9 FM's Annual Live Radio Gig (see below), usually occurring in September every year.

Programming

The station's overall format is adult contemporary, branded "The 70's to Now" but also covers a wide range of music styles through local access shows. [7] SWR 99.9 FM also broadcasts programs that are presented by special interest groups or in languages other than English. [8] [9]

Live Radio Gig

Vacant Shade Performing at the 2016 Live Radio Gig Vacant Shade.jpg
Vacant Shade Performing at the 2016 Live Radio Gig

SWR 99.9 FM hosts a 'Live Radio Gig' Annually to promote local acts and bands. Every year, the radio station invites local bands to perform live on air, hosted at local music venues in recent years. Hence the name, Live Radio Gig. In 2016, the broadcaster also live-streamed [10] [ non-primary source needed ][ non-primary source needed ] the whole event to Facebook to further reach an ever-expanding online audience.

The annual Live Radio Gig has been a great success over the years, and there is no sign of this well-coordinated community event halting in the near future.

Bands that perform at a Live Radio Gig also receive multitrack recordings and mastered recordings of heir set. This is a great initiative, as it gives local bands and artists access to professional recordings who otherwise may not be able to afford such services.

Any local bands that may be interested in performing at a Live Radio Gig, should contact the radio station via their website.

SWR Rebrand

SWR 99.9 FM's breakfast announcer, Busco, holding the new logo SWR Triple 9 Rebrand.jpg
SWR 99.9 FM's breakfast announcer, Busco, holding the new logo

On 1 May 2017, SWR FM rebranded as "SWR Triple 9". [11] The station has since shifted its on-air name to SWR 99.9 FM.

Since the early days of the stations test broadcasts in 1991, the name, sound and feel has only slightly changed along the way. But 1 May marked the start of a new adventure with the stations new look, sound and logo.

"SWR will still have your favourite tunes from the 70's to Now, we've just got a bit of a facelift!"

See also

Related Research Articles

Broadcast Operations Group is an Australian media company, operating radio stations across various centres across regional New South Wales and Queensland, Australia. Branded as the Super Radio Network, stations carry one of two formats – a news talk and classic hits format based at 2SM Sydney; and a hot adult contemporary format based at New FM Newcastle.

Australian radio audiences have had virtually no exposure to pirate radio. There were no broadcasts as part of the World War II propaganda campaigns and commercial as well as community stations alongside the taxpayer funded Australian Broadcasting Corporation were available during the mid to late 1980s and early 1990s - a period when the UK was experiencing a surge in illegal broadcasts during the early days of acid house and the Second Summer of Love. The absence of pirate radio in Australia is primarily attributed to the relatively large number of commercial licences that were issued, particularly after World War 2, as well as the existence of public non-commercial broadcasting licences supported mainly by listener subscription. Additionally, the lack of availability of imported broadcasting equipment and the likely application of severe, legislated penalties including jail for offenders, would also have been a factor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">TUNE! FM</span> Radio station

TuneFM is the University of New England's (UNE) campus radio station, a high power open narrowcasting service operated by UNELife. Founded in 1970, the station is Australia’s oldest university broadcaster, serving UNE’s students, staff, and the broader Armidale community.

Radio Adelaide is Australia's first community radio station. The signal reaches across the Adelaide metropolitan area to the Mid North, the Yorke Peninsula and Fleurieu Peninsula, the southern Barossa, Kangaroo Island, Riverland and parts of the Eyre Peninsula broadcasting at 13 kilowatts on 101.5 MHz FM. The transmitter power was only 7 kW until an upgrade on 2 November 2006.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Casey Radio</span> Radio station in Cranbourne East, Victoria

Casey Radio 3SER is a non-commercial community radio station which caters to the greater south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Groove 101.7FM</span> Radio station

Groove 101.7FM was a Western Australian community radio station broadcasting from studios located in Carlisle, owned and operated by the Youth Media Society of Western Australia Incorporated. First broadcast in March 2003, the station was closed in March 2008.

4MBS Classic FM is an Australian community radio station which broadcasts classical music from Brisbane at a frequency of 103.7 MHz, as well as on digital radio and online.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">89.9 TheLight</span> Radio station in Melbourne, Victoria

89.9 TheLight is a Christian community radio station in Melbourne, Australia attracting more than a million listeners per month. It broadcasts on the FM band with the frequency of 89.9, on DAB+ digital radio and streams online via website and mobile app. Studios are located at 333 Mitcham Road, in Mitcham with FM transmitter on Mount Dandenong

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hawkesbury Radio</span> Radio station

Hawkesbury Radio, is an Internet radio station situated in the Hawkesbury Area.

Kiss FM is a narrowcast dance music station based in Melbourne. Broadcasting on various frequencies between 87.6 and 88.0 FM in Melbourne. The station's programs are also networked to Orbit FM, a local narrowcaster in Cairns, Queensland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alive 90.5</span> Radio station in Baulkham Hills, Sydney, Australia

Alive 90.5FM is a community radio station based in Baulkham Hills in Sydney. The station broadcasts to the Hills District and parts of Greater Western Sydney. This includes the City of Parramatta, Cumberland City Council and The Hills Shire. The traditional custodians of this land are the Bidjigal people, a clan of the Darug nation.

Koori Radio, is a community radio station based in Redfern broadcasting to Sydney on a citywide licence. Since the early 1990s it has been part of the Gadigal Information Service (GIS), and is the only radio station in Sydney providing full-time broadcasting to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community.

Bankstown-Auburn Community Radio Inc is a community radio station broadcasting on 100.9 FM from Padstow, New South Wales. The licensed broadcast area covers Silverwater to Picnic Point, Villawood to Mount Lewis in Sydney, New South Wales. Programs are produced for the local community and include sports, music, talk back and local news.

i98FM is a commercial radio station broadcasting on the FM band to the Illawarra region of New South Wales, Australia. It is owned by WIN Corporation, the parent company of WIN Television.

6AR was a community radio station based in Perth, Western Australia. It was operated by the Western Australian Aboriginal Media Association and was on air between 1994 and 2006.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melbourne Jewish Radio</span> Radio station in Werribee South, Australia

Melbourne Jewish Radio was a timeshared radio station formerly broadcast on 1674 kHz in the AM narrowband from Werribee South in Melbourne's west. The station aired between 12noon Sundays and 12noon Fridays, with Surf City Sound broadcasting on the same frequency during the Shabbat period. During 2010 and 2011, Lion FM held a Temporary Community Broadcasting Licence, and broadcast from the Melbourne CBD.

Sheffield Live! is a community radio and local TV station originally established in 2003 as an independent company by the Community Media Association and is based in the city centre of Sheffield, England.

Bendigo's Fresh FM 101.5, also known as Bendigo's Best Sport, is a community radio station broadcast in Bendigo, Australia. It began in 1983 as 3CCC based in Harcourt using the frequency 103.9 FM.

<i>Planet Country with Big Stu & MJ</i>

Planet Country is a country music radio and video program based in Sydney, Australia and presented by Big Stu and MJ. The program airs a country music format focusing on modern, crossover country. The radio show aired live on SWR Triple 9, broadcasting on 99.9 FM to the Sydney metropolitan every Monday night from 6 pm to 8 pm local time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">WOW FM 100.5</span> Radio station in Semaphore, South Australia

WOWfm 100.5 is a community radio station based in Semaphore, South Australia, named in reference to its location in Adelaide's Western suburbs.

References

  1. "Allocation of Temporary Community Radio Licences" (PDF). ACMA. October 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 July 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
  2. Andree Wright (24 September 2001). "Investigation Summary" (PDF). Australian Broadcasting Authority. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  3. "The history of SWR FM". www.swrfm.org. SWR FM. 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2008.[ dead link ]
  4. "Programs". SWR Triple 9 FM - Sydney's West. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  5. "Program Guide". SWR 99.9 FM. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  6. "Dragon – Come to Blacktown". 22 September 2011. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  7. "Planet Country on SWR Triple 9". SWR Triple 9. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  8. John McKenna (10 July 2005). "Linwood House on SWR FM". linnwood.holroyd.nsw.gov.au. Friends of Linnwood. Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  9. "Voice of Bangladesh on SWR FM". VoB. 2008. Archived from the original on 8 March 2006. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  10. "SWR Triple 9". facebook.com. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  11. "SWR Triple 9 launch!". SWR Triple 9. Retrieved 2 May 2017.