Historical recordings of interval signals from former international broadcasters. Back in the days the shortwave bands were the only window to the rest of the world.
I'll tell you what, listening to a radio station over the air from a long way away will never, ever lose its thrill and fascination. Now days you can hear everything over the internet, it loses is uniqueness.
Remember sitting in London as a kid tuning into weird and wonderful sounds - especially from the Soviet States - same time as Star Wars came out. Sounded as exotic and exciting as anything if it had come in from outer space.
Thanks, mate. In fact I'm 17 years old, not an old man. But I wanted to create this sound collage for the generations to come. :) Shortwave is still a fascinating hobby, by the way. :)
When I was 8 (1992) I took a radio from my grandfather. I remember I was fascinated by the multitude of languages out there. That is how I became a polyglot and a translator ))).
There's no way to explain what it was like to build an old radio from a kit and then spend hours in the dark searching for far away stations. I remember almost all of the stations in the video. If I tried to get a 12 year old to spend the time and effort I spent putting together a relatively complicated kit for the reward of listening to a scratchy voice go in and out of a tiny speaker they would think we were all crazy. Our kids and our grandkids have the entire world at the tip of their fingers without the satisfaction that came from turning on the power for the first time and seeing a radio that you built by yourself come to life. Great times....
I'm a former engineer at Radio Deutsche Welle, retired about 20 years ago and are living in an old peoples home now. That Clip pushed me years back. I was also a radio ham and an enthusiastic shortwave listener. I did spent time on realais kigali/Ruanda. I'm still listening via SDR receivers via internet such as Twente and Kiwi SDRs all over the world. So thank you for the memory!
@@pressureworks You'r surtain that*s from DW? I worked at BFBS before and there we had a guy called Terry James who used that expression. I have it in my ear, but I can't put no other name to it, I'm afraid.
As a teenager in the 70’s, one of the coolest yet simplistic things was to manually tune through the radio bands at night. Living in New England, picking up a radio station from Baltimore or Detroit, if only for a few moments, was fascinating . Scanning on my shortwave set was better still. The world was much bigger then, more mysterious and full of things to discover. My son always asks me why I still use a tuner on my hifi setup and not stream. My answer is always the same, there’s just something romantic about hearing an over the air broadcast❤️
Same here, John. I too was a New England teenager in the 70s when I discovered SW. I fell in love with Radio Nederland, especially its dungeon-like interval signal. It also had a great show called “What’s New” that I used to listen to on Saturday nights.
I loved the interval signals of Radio Sofia Bulgaria, Radio Budapest Hungary,Radio Canada Interntional, Radio Sweden, and the Swiss broadcasting.I sure do miss those days of shortwave radio.
Oh wow - UK memories of tuning in to Radio Albania in the 1970s and hearing how awful life was in the west and how great it was in Albania. Tractor production seemed to be the measure of success back in those days. Thanks for posting.
Fond memories of mid 70's warm nights when my dad used to put his comfy chair in the middle of the yard beneath the sparkling stars and would then tune in his favorite SW stations... those tunes and voices fading out and back in, especially if someone moved near the antenna, theremin-like... that was in a small town in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. Life was so good then.
So many memories! Can I ever forget the Christmas morning of 1978 when I heard Radio Nepal from Seattle, WA or Radio Somalia from Durham NH which put my homesick somalian friend to tears. Visiting WYFR in Guam, Radio Budapest, BBC Turkish Service, VOA... I am so glad I am old enough to have lived those wonderful years.
Tuning the analog dial on my Sony AM-FM radio, on the top of every hour, I used to hear a looooong frequency schedule of R.Bulgaria - the external service of my country, which also used to broadcast on AM, where I listened to it in my native language and some other languages. By the time, I wondered what shortwave means, but after a friend of my father explained to me, he gave me a shortwave receiver Sony ICF-SW11 and I started listening. Then I discovered this wonderful world! 73
Man, you brought tears to my eyes...and a deep melancholy. I was a kid and teenager during the 70s and 80s...i used to tune to Radio Free Europe, Voice of America, Deutsche Welle, BBC and many others from Romania under Communism. We had to listen in secret because you would go to the Gulag if caught. I had this old tranzistor Grundig radio conected with a wire to the steam radiator that acted as a huge antena and reception was almost perfect. Under Communism SW was our ear to freedom. Even then people were kinder, more humane, really the Short Wave Golden Age. I escaped communism in '87 and made a new life in US. If i was asked to choose a time period to be reborn into...i"d choose the same period i lived through. It was a blast. And yes...siting for hours by the window listening to the fading signal for hours was indeed magic.
I also have tears of nostalgia in my eyes right now but I was in the west (Sweden) listening to Radio Moscow, Praha, DDR, South Africa, and Bucharesti.
CORNELIU ZELEA CODREANU: "The first and fiercest punishment ought to fall first on the traitor, second on the enemy. If I had but one bullet and I were faced by both an enemy and a traitor, I would let the traitor have it." Hugo Miller says, "My father was an ethnic German from Romania. For his national service he had the choice of joining the Romanian army or Hitler's SS (Hitler was running short of troops by then, so offered a posting in the elite SS as a sort of bribe). My father had a nephew who came home on leave from the Romanian army wearing two left boots, as they had no right ones. So my father understandably joined the SS. Then Romania changed sides and Stalin took control of the country. He had joined up to do his national service, and all of a sudden he found himself labelled a traitor. Those Romanian ethnic Germans - and there were many - who had fought in the SS or Wermacht, were unable to go home after the war. The ones that did go back tended to disappear in the middle of the night. The communists seized the family farm, so my father lost everything, through no fault of his own. He served as a cook in the SS, with a unit that was chasing the Serb Partisans around Italy if I remember correctly."
this is so bittersweet for me and im sure so many other shortwave listeners. im 57 and i remember my start in 1968. it started out on an old wooden radio where i heard radio rsa for the first time. i had stars in my eyes. radio fascinated me to the max. i learned many things over the decades and logged so many stations and had heard things that left me in wonder. ive had many radios over the years and rebuilt several. im in the process of rebuilding another hammarlund hq129x. over the last 10 years, ive heard less and less stations. the 31 meter band was so crowded with stations that you could hardly separate them. progress has taken the romance of shortwave radio and the smell of old electronics, the fading in and out of the signal, the turning of knobs, antennas, wire etc. and high power stations and now can be accessed by the click of a mouse. so sad for us. how i miss the good old days of radio :(
stormchsr 101 so beautifully expressed! You brought a tear to my eye. The RCI interval signal made me cry, too. I miss the 70’s and 80’s when the bands were jammed with signals from all the international powerhouses.
Remember sitting in London as a kid tuning into weird and wonderful sounds coming in on shortwave- especially from the Soviet States - same time as Star Wars came out. Sounded as exotic and exciting as anything if it had come in from outer space.
It is sad so many have stopped shortwave and gone to the internet. I remember listening back in the 50s and 60s to my Hallicrafters S-38 shortwave radio.
I've spent plenty of time on this SDR, and what is cool from my standpoint here in the US is the AM broadcast portion, both LW and MW, many countries coming in on bands that we here associate with only one metro area at a time. 'Local' meaning France or Germany or Netherlands etc. rather than just Cleveland or Phoenix. That plus hearing hams in areas that we in the US may not hear as readily, QSOs happening on 20 meters with far flung areas, and even US hams being the distant sounding ones. The Internet has made many fantastic things possible in communications, but there's still nothing like throwing up a wire, painstakingly tuning in a station trying to beat the atmosphere, and plucking one out of the ether. That is still a thrill.
Lyle, you are like a lot of us . I had a Knight Star Roamer and still do. Doesn’t work though! But still remember the old days . Long cold nights when I could listen to the world! Wouldn’t trade it for anything
I have been listening to shortwave since 1976, the internet is fine but there is something romantic about just having a radio and a piece of wire and using the earth as the ( internet ) .............Please put up some more videos
Not many broadcasting stations left on short wave these days,such a shame.I used to love trawling the bands for the english speaking schedules when i was a youngster. Happy Days,they all come to an end......
Young people today have no idea how much fun shortwave listening used to be - especially in the 1950's. There were dozens of English language broadcasts from all over the world to choose from every evening. One of my favorites was the English language service of Radio Denmark with their very famous female announcer "Mary Ann". She had the most appealing voice in the known world. Guys would purchase tapes of her speaking - just reading the news or whatever; it didn't matter what she said. It was just the sound of her voice. Of course those old all tube radios sounded infinitely better than the solid state shortwave receivers of today.
+Bob A I wish I could have experienced shortwave broadcasts back in the day, it would have been Heaven for me. There is nothing I love more than relaxing at night listening to my shortwave radio, usually listening to Radio Havana Cuba. I got into this hobby when I was 16, now I'm only 18! Still a great hobby! And I agree with the tube radio part. I have a Zenith Trans-Oceanic H500, and it has an incredible sound for a receiver of it's age. The antenna on it is also fantastic, I can pick up stations as far as Saudi Arabia with just the telescopic antenna!
Like so many others here I become a SW fan as a teenager in the 70s. The Motorola multiband radio was by my bedside. After the day was over, lying in bed in my dark room, I traveled halfway around the world courtesy of the broadcasters who packed the SW band so tightly it was hard to separate them. Every evening was an adventure. The comfort of hearing familiar friends, the excitement of something never heard before. The internet has been useful in many ways -- it enables us to share memories ike this -- and yet there was a romance in SW listening that seemed a little like magic. I was lucky to grow up in a time when voices and music from the shortwave band were often the last thing I heard before I drifted off to sleep.
It's essential to know that in "the good ole days" of shortwave radio not only was there no internet, but there were NO PC's. And not just that......there were basically no wireless devices. In those days the home environment was almost RF free, except for a few very low level local oscillator signals from your analog TV or AM radio. The phone system was hard wired except for microwave links from switch offices which were usually 100's of feet over surrounding structures. So what I'm saying is that in those days everyone was transmitting on shortwave, in a time when it was easy to hear someone on shortwave. The only noise you ever had to deal with was usually passing motor vehicle engine noise, or atmospheric lightning and on rare occasions deliberate jamming. Nowadays when you turn on a shortwave radio all you will hear is basically the roar of digital hash ! And even if you do have a properly designed external antenna with a coaxial downlead, youv'e basically got China and a few American syndicated religious broadcasters to chose from. Ah....such were the days...............
Oh my! This is fantastic. This takes me back 25yrs to DX-ing as a schoolboy. Some of these call signs I still hum to this day. Please save international radio broadcasting even if it is just through the internet.
Was listening to Radio Sweden on a Gold Star Cassette Radio in 1984...I was six. Now it's interval is my SMS-tone on my Galaxy phone...Things change....
We were truly blessed to have this every night, every day of our lives for all those years. I sure miss shortwave. It helped me to be fascinated about the world, languages and life. I am a much better person because of shortwave. All these interval signals are engraved forever in my brain. Happy DX ing fellow SWers! We are a dying but wonderful breed.
Anyone else find this whole video weirdly relaxing/soothing? Helps that half the interval signals sound like they're coming out of a music box. Sometimes when I can't sleep I like to play this and imagine I'm surfing the shortwaves of 40-50 years ago, something I sadly never got to experience growing up in the 90's/2000's. Thanks for posting.
I was born in 2003 and have never experienced shortwave radio. To me, born in the 21st century, shortwave broadcasting feels unique and warm. Isn't it romantic to listen to broadcasts from different countries through a small radio? It's like traveling the world through your ears without a passport.
I got my first shortwave radio for Christmas when I was in 4th grade. It was a very simple AM only SW from Sears with plug-in coils to switch bands. There was no cable or internet in 1972 and I was utterly fascinated by radio; it was magical to me. I delivered lots of papers and saved all my money to buy a used SW with a BFO. I was now able to receive SSB and life was good! I later got into CB radio, then ham radio. I went to college and earned a degree in electrical engineering. That first shortwave radio literally changed my life.
When I was stationed in West Germany during the Cold War in the 70s I use to work as a Desk Sergeant in a Military Police Station during the midnight shifts.....and I would alway listen to Cold War short wave stations for Radio Moscow, Albania, and Eastern Europe...fascinating time for listening to short wave radio and hams...missed those nights and late night radio...way before Art Bell...
When the internet is wiped out, we'll go back to shortwave radio again. Internet is only temporary, but radio is more long-term, more permanent...and less distractive and less destructive!
Ok let's see which of these I can remember hearing in the mid-2000s: 7:02 - Can still be heard today. 14:10 - But in another version. 15:53 - This was always very strong, I guess they had a relay here in Germany. 19:59 - Of course. 21:14 - I would say this can still be heard today. 21:45 - Also on medium wave here in Europe. 23:03 - A little bit creepy, isn't it? 25:06 - There was a longer version with some kind of flute. 30:20 - Can still be heard today. 34:08 - I guess I still heard it on medium wave 531 khz, but am not sure. 34:07 - Not totally sure either...
I used to live only a few miles from the Radio Canada international site. I could see the towers from my bedroom window. It was so strong the station would play through the speaker in my guitar amp. We could also here it through the copper pipes in my friends house. I was heartbroken to see it gone.
Here's a list of all the intervals in the video: 0:00 - KNLS Anchor Point, Alaska 0:30 - Radio Tirana International, Albania 1:04 - Radio Andorra, Andorra 1:08 - Adventist World Radio (AWR), USA (Broadcasted via Radio Andorra) 1:32 - Radio Anguilla / The Voice of Anguilla, Anguilla 1:50 - LRA36 Radio Nacional Arcángel San Gabriel, Argentina (Argentine Antarctica) 2:17 - Radio Yerevan, Armenian SSR (now Armenia) 2:39 - BBC World Service Radio (Transmitting from BBC Atlantic Relay Station), Ascension Island 3:13 - ABC Radio Australia, Australia 4:04 - Radio Baku, Azerbaijan SSR (now Azerbaijan) 4:55 - Radio Bangladesh / Bangladesh Betar, Bangladesh 5:25 - Radio Minsk, Byelorussian SSR (now Belarus) 5:41 - Rádio Canção Nova, Brazil 6:10 - Radio Sofia, Bulgaria 7:02 - China Radio International (CRI) (ex-Radio Peking), People's Republic of China 7:41 - China National Radio (CNR), People's Republic of China 8:29 - Radio Havana Cuba (RHC), Cuba 8:51 - Radio Canada International (RCI), Canada 9:24 - CyBC Radio External Service, Cyprus 10:29 - Radio Prague International, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic) 10:50 - Radio Denmark (DR), Denmark 11:21 - HCJB "The Voice of the Andes", Ecuador (Japanese Broadcast) 12:11 - Radio Tallinn, Estonian SSR 12:38 - YLE Radio Finland, Finland 13:08 - ORTF Radio Tahiti, French Polynesia 13:45 - ERT The Voice of Greece, Greece 14:10 - Voice of America (VoA), USA (Transmitting from Rhodes, Greece Relay Station) 15:00 - IRIB World Service / The Voice of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Iran 15:40 - Radio Riga, Latvian SSR (now Latvia) 15:53 - Trans World Radio (TWR), Monaco (Possibly transmitted from another nation, I'm not sure) 16:23 - The Voice of Mongolia, Mongolia 17:16 - Radio Nederland Wereldomroep (RNW), Netherlands 17:44 - ORF Blue Danube Radio, Austria 18:10 - Radio Polonia, Poland 18:43 - Adventist World Radio Asia / The Voice of Hope, Guam (Transmitting from Portugal) 19:19 - Deutsche Welle (DW), Germany (Transmitting from Sines, Portugal) 19:46 - RDP Internacional Rádio Portugal, Portugal 20:13 - Radio Vilnius, Lithuania 20:44 - Radio Bucharest, Romania 21:10 - WYFR Family Radio, USA 21:44 - Vatican Radio, Vatican City 22:02 - Radio Moscow, Soviet Union (USSR) 23:03 - The Voice of Russia, Russian Federation 23:48 - Radio Yugoslavia, Yugoslavia / Serbia 24:26 - SR Radio Sweden International, Sweden (60s-Early 70s Interval) 25:06 - SR Radio Sweden International, Sweden (Current Interval) 26:09 - Makedonska Radio / Radio Makedonija, North Macedonia 27:36 - Rai Internazionale Radio, Italy 28:19 - All India Radio (AIR), India 29:12 - NRK Radio Norway, Norway 29:35 - Radio France Internationale (RFI), France 30:20 - Radio Pyongyang, North Korea 31:20 - KOL Israel / Israel Radio International, Israel 31:40 - RTBF International / La Voix de l'Amitié, Belgium 32:00 - Radio Veritas Asia, Philippines 32:29 - Radio Kiev, Ukrainian SSR (now Ukraine) 32:51 - Radio Thailand World Service, Thailand 33:37 - TRT The Voice of Turkey, Turkey 34:08 - Swiss Radio International, Switzerland 34:37 - Trans World Radio Swaziland, Eswatini 35:15 - Radio Budapest, Hungary 36:08 - Radio Berlin International (RBI), East Germany 36:40 - DeutschlandFunk (DLF), Germany 37:10 - RRI World Service The Voice of Indonesia, Indonesia 37:41 - RÚV Ríkisútvarpið Radio Iceland, Iceland 38:20 - Radio Baghdad, Iraq 38:44 - Africa N°1, Gabon 39:23 - Radio Exterior de España (REE), Spain 40:45 - Radio Frunze, Kirghiz SSR (now Kyrgyzstan) (It took me 50 minutes. Totally worth it.)
I was fortune to work in the last few years of Radio Netherlands Worldwide 2013-2015 as RNW Media for Latin America. We produced a 13 minute radio show called El Toque and it was broadcast on shortwave targeting mainly to Mexico, Cuba and Venezuela. I was based in Mexico City, where I fully produced some of the editions of the show and multimedia content. I also had the fortune to work a full week in RNW legendary HQ in Hilversum, before they moved out the new newsroom and studios where it once was the RNW Training Center right beside the main building.
Voices from the ether. It was fascinating in those days to hear the gifts these countries were sending your way, as if they were programmed just for you. It all felt very warm and personal. Thanks for the memories.
I was an active SWLer in the 60's and 70's and never got a chance to hear many of these stations in North America. It was great to hear all these again. It's the best collection I have heard since Ian McFarland put out his CD set years ago.
This is a marvelous archive. I am glad you recorded all this. It brings back a lot of memories. I was a teenager in India in the 1970s when I "discovered" the Telerad vacuum tube radio that occupied the pride of place in our living room. I used to spend many teenage hours late into the night chasing shortwave broadcasts from different countries. My parents would invariably admonish me when they found me hunched in the dark over a glowing radio. They would remind me that I had to be at school in a few hours! I developed something of a "reputation" in our little, close-knit neighborhood as the "kid" who regularly got exotic-looking mail from "abroad". Usually these were marvelously colorful QSL cards from stations I wrote to. In those days, money was tight and I had to scrounge around a lot (often pouncing on dropped coins in the street!) to save the money required to send in a reception report on an "aerogramme". So my collection of QSLs was not large. But my collection of memories are! Sometime in 1976, I wrote to Radio China and a few weeks later there arrived a substantial package in the mail. There was a station pennant in silk and a vinyl LP of traditional music and other "goodies". Of course, there were a few high-gloss pamphlets on the the "glories of communism" (LOL). A month or so after this, one dark evening, my family got a visit from an agent of the Central Bureau of Investigation who interrogated me for a while on what my "connections" to China were. He showed me a list of targets he was required to investigate. Against my name in the list was the remark: "reported to be receiving communist material from China." This was an era of political instability in India and it was not unknown for people to disappear overnight. So, naturally, this brought another round of chastisement from upset parents. But not everything ended so badly. The BBC used to have a weekly show on Tuesday nights called The Jolly Good Show (hosted by DJ Dave Lee Travis) that used to play song requests from listeners around the world. If they played your song, you got a BBC t-shirt. One night I was thrilled to hear "DLT" acknowledging my letter and playing my song request. (I can't for the life of me remember what I requested!). I couldn't sleep for the next 10 days because I could only think of the t-shirt making its way slowly to our little backwater of a city. My (jealous?) siblings said it would probably be stolen in transit. But the mailman did bring it in one hot afternoon. Wearing that t-shirt around the neighborhood was one of the few highlights of my somewhat deprived, yet strangely rich teenage years.
As a teenager in the early 80s I would tune into Radio Moscow and dream of living in a world that wasn’t dominated by capitalism. I was fortunate to visit the soviet union and Cuba later on. The world would be a better place if the USSR was still there 😔
I started listening to Shortwave in 1972 , I was 10 at the time. My uncle traded for a 1930s giant SW radio and had no where to keep it so my Dad let him keep it at our house. It was great no one used it but me . about a year later he traded it off and I was hart broken but a couple months later he traded for another one and it came to our house also and it was there about a year. My uncle would trade on anything but no more Shortwaves. I still have the hobby today but not my uncle. Thanks for the video.
What a GREAT collection of old QSLs and sign on intervals. They bring back so many memories of when I started DXing as a kid. I have that same QSL card from Radio Sofia, shown at 6:15, from back in April 1975. 73s WA1YKL
I am very glad that I was a teenager in the 60s and 70s where such innocent hobbies was all we had. So I think you are right in what you say. I remember always renting apartments or dorm rooms in the vicinity of tall pine trees so I can stretch my antenna.
I miss the old time! They were wonderful moments to hear all those international radio stations and receiving their QSL cards and all those beautiful souvenirs! I really miss all that!
Remember hearing many of these as a teen with my Soundesign portable shortwave radio, out in my mom and dads garage in the winter, hooked to a long wire, logging them all. I miss the stations....beautiful short tunes....took me a way for a short while. I miss hearing them all
Thank you for posting this. It's been so many years since I've heard all these great musical interval signals. I loved looking up new interval signals in the World Radio TV Handbook. The few bars of music printed at the end of each station listing put my music reading to good use.
Excellent video, I enjoy hearing all the classic interval signals that I never got the chance to hear. I'm still glad I got into this hobby two years ago. There is nothing I love more than receiving a station that I haven't heard before and writing out a reception report, and then waiting for the mail to deliver a QSL card to me. Here's hoping for shortwave radio to stay strong for years to come!
Some lovely stuff here. So many echoes of my teenage years. Particularly miss Radio Nederland which went "toes up" on shortwave a few years ago and shut down almost all its English language side down a couple of years ago.
RNW has indeed gone off the air. But many of the media network shows you may remember are now on the Interwebs to be enjoyed again. jonathanmarks.libsyn.com/
@@JonathanMarks I agree Jonathan, I have built up a collection of your shows on my Windows 10 Samsung Netbook which I regularly play through my LG Home Cinema speaker system on stereo phono input using Dolby Pro Logic II Surround Sound movie mode and the results are great. I've also converted stereo expended them on Adobe Audition 3.0 editing software, converted them to multichannel WMA six channel surround sound audio files and used a free converter off the internet to give the home cinema treatment. When played back on my multimedia DTT PVR device on usb flash drive connected via coaxial digital audio connection, it produces your shows with yours and Dianna's voices centrestage or sometimes stereo separated, with jingles voices and sound effects spread out across all 5 speakers. Most shows are stereo but the Luxembourg special yourself and Dianna did after RNW started hiring 208 metres / 1440 kHz MW transmissions on the UK night aerial is mono. I tried everything, stereo expanding it, reversing it and stereo expanding it (obviously not saving it as a reverse file, otherwise yourself and Dianna would sound like foreign announcers lol and music / effects would sound hilarious!). I've left that as is and folded it to two channel Dolby Digital mono.
Oh yes Radio Nederland.. Used to listen to their evening broadcasts on 9,590kc. back in the 60s-70s. That interval signal they had was unique. Also RSA, Radio South Africa.. interval signal of a chirping bird and a struming guitar..
The glory days of shortwave I would say ended in 1962 with the launch of Tellstar the first radio, TV broadcast repeater satellite. I first got into shortwave at age 9 in 1973 the same year Elvis Presley did his famous, Aloha from Hawaii.TV satellite concert broadcast which I actually did watch with fascination knowing those telecasts came from space so even then the writing was already on the wall, but glory or not I still love shortwave.
A lot of people my age aren't really into shortwave listening, (I wasn't around when most of these signals were in use! I almost wish I had been so I could hear them live!) but I personally can't go a day without seeing what's happening on the airwaves. I remember the first time I heard the interval signal of Radio Romania, I ran out and showed my mom. Ever since, I've amassed a nice collection of recordings, from your everyday interval signals to silly pirate broadcasts and all kinds of sounds, and I always show my friends when I catch a new recording because I'm just so passionate about all of this. SWLing made me love radio so much as a whole that I'm now working at a radio station as a board operator and I'm dreaming of starting my own station someday, which will definitely broadcast on shortwave if I can help it. Shortwave truly is a magical and fascinating thing and I hope it never dies! I can promise that in the future I'll be showing my kids these recordings, too. :) Long live shortwave!
Fabulous, it may be an old video but it pulls at my heart strings. I spent years working in the wilds and short wave was my sanity booster. On those evenings I had little to do so I searched the short waves for contact with the outside world. So many of the stations I've listened to. Thanks for the nostalgia trip.
I was just posting on my Facebook page that right before going to sleep at night in my last semester in high school I listen to a lot of these stations and it helped me whine down after some tough days and some good days. Thank you very much for posting.
Fantastic Video ! Remember well listening to many of these stations in the late evening into the early hours, up until dawn was a regular event, on my Eddystone 365X receiver, all valves, so kept me warm through the night. Thanks Again.
Thank you very much for your time and efforts to keep these glory days for generations to follow who did not know those days. Greetings and thanks from Sri Lanka. 4S7VK