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Radio 1
Saucepan Echo Radio 1 - The Afterlife. Many of the great DJs have now passed away some migrated to commercial/public stations. The "good old" National Radio 1 is now a "dead" station, has been unmanned for almost 35 year...
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First Seen: 04/26/2024
Last Indexed: 10/23/2024
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D2HW Television | Home Saucepan Echo Radio 1 - The Afterlife. Many of the great DJs have now passed away some migrated to commercial/public stations. The "good old" National Radio 1 is now a "dead" station, has been unmanned for almost 35 years. Its music library remains. In the following stream you'll hear all of the tracks from the days, when the station was active, being played all at once. The old and new jingles are also merged and used, you should hear those old-school jam jingle as you would in the 70s, 80s top40 programme, except no chatterings between tracks. Since the studio had been previously used by the radio pirates. You'll hear some niche tracks (including modern day, up-beat music being played). I will try my best to filter them out. This site will serve as a "radio museum" for the classic "National" Radio 1. The broadcasting system has been adapted to modern format to cut operating costs. FAQ Why are there inconsistent volume levels? When FM (Stereo VHF) was first introduced, stations broadcasting on FM used least dynamic compressions to target audiophile listeners until "The Loudness Wars" started. This clone of Radio 1 replicates that effect, like the original did, by toning down the AGC thresold / "drive" settings on the processing unit. This results in listening-fatigue-free experience, perfect for extended listening period says 12+ hours, but still retains dynamics of the track while "enchances" the low-freq portion (bass). Are there any differences between "this" radio 1 and the original radio 1? As I mentioned above, this National Radio 1 revival has no DJ talking over. Also, less repetitive music. The format is tailored for extended listening. We try our best to rip tracks into computer-readable files and sort them into categories so you won't hear the same sequence of tracks being played every hour. Isn't the manual approach better? Not really, it is time consuming also more prone to repetitions. The computer approach is more accurate since the date/time played are recorded into database, allowing the least played tracks to be broadcasted. Also, this radio 1 broadcasts 24/7 whereas the original broadcasted every Sunday evening How to listen on external player (with uninterruptable playback) install torsocks create a sh file then copy the following: while true; do torsocks mpv --network-timeout=3 http://27zjwyzy2fykq7xwgzi5jjmrzaewvqh2b2447e5mwas5em2b5luseiqd.onion/stream/live done if there are unstable connections causing the player to buffer for 3 seconds, the stream will automatically restart. record the stream (ffmpeg required) torsocks ffmpeg -i http://27zjwyzy2fykq7xwgzi5jjmrzaewvqh2b2447e5mwas5em2b5luseiqd.onion/stream/live -c copy radio1.ogg coming soon, an optional uninterupttable javascript player