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Tony Blackburn hijacks BBC Radio 2 show to mark 60 years of pirate radio

The DJ, 81, worked on pirate stations Radio Caroline and Radio London in the 1960s.

Hannah Roberts
Thursday 28 March 2024 10:06 EDT
The DJ played Caroline by The Fortunes, which he used to play on Radio Caroline in the 1960s (BBC/PA)
The DJ played Caroline by The Fortunes, which he used to play on Radio Caroline in the 1960s (BBC/PA)

Veteran DJ Tony Blackburn hijacked The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show on BBC Radio 2 in a stunt celebrating the 60th anniversary of the UKā€™s first pirate radio station.

Radio Caroline was a British radio station that began regular broadcasting on March 28 1964 from a ship anchored off the coast of Felixstowe in Suffolk.

In the 1960s, Blackburn, 81, who presents Sounds Of The 60s and Tony Blackburnā€™s Golden Hour on Radio 2, worked on the pirate radio stations Radio Caroline and Radio London.

On Thursday morning, Blackburn took over Ballā€™s Radio 2 show and played Caroline by The Fortunes, which he used to play as a DJ on Radio Caroline.

He said: ā€œThe pirates are back. Zoe Ball has been locked out of the studio. Iā€™m here. Anarchy once again.

ā€œWe are pirates. Weā€™re pirate Radio 2 and here we go.

ā€œFor the next hour, Iā€™m gonna play you proper music.ā€

I understand that Radio 5 Live is celebrating 30 years. We laugh at them. We actually laugh at Radio 5 celebrating 30 years for goodness sake. Unbelievable

Tony Blackburn

Later on Blackburn said that he and fellow radio presenter Johnnie Walker had been ā€œthinking aboutā€ hijacking the radio station for a while.

ā€œUnfortunately, Johnnie Walker has overslept and heā€™s having a lie-in, but itā€™s one of those thingsā€, he said.

On Friday, Blackburn will co-host Clash Of The Pirates with Walker and the two veteran pirate broadcasters will ā€œmusically battle and banter to become ā€˜captain of the pirates'ā€ in a programme celebrating the 60th anniversary.

Later on in his takeover, Blackburn laughed at Radio 5 Liveā€™s 30-year celebrations.

ā€œWe are here. At last, after 60 yearsā€, he said.

ā€œI understand that Radio 5 Live is celebrating 30 years.

ā€œWe laugh at them. We actually laugh at Radio 5 celebrating 30 years for goodness sake. Unbelievable.ā€

After Blackburn played a variety of songs from the 1960s, he was joined by Ball who joked she had freed herself from the tape and got out from the cupboard she was locked in.

ā€œIā€™m loving this pirate takeoverā€, she said.

ā€œCongratulations, itā€™s 60 years.ā€

Blackburn said: ā€œI started on Radio Caroline in July actually, 1964.ā€

ā€œI remember seeing the pirate ship, the Mi Amigo, for the very first timeā€, he said.

ā€œWe went out from Harwich (Essex), we sailed over from Harwich and it was quite a choppy day and I saw this little pirate ship giving the government so much trouble and I thought ā€˜wow, thatā€™s greatā€™.ā€

He continued: ā€œEverybody remembers Radio Caroline, I particularly loved ā€˜Big Lā€™ Radio London and that was a bigger ship and we had our own cabins and everything.

ā€œBut we all got on well out there. It was three years ā€¦ I just thought it was wonderful.ā€

Pirate stations beamed music from ships outside British territorial waters and became popular as they reflected changing attitudes towards music at a time when the BBC ruled the waves.

They were unlicensed and did not observe copyright law and in August 1967, a new Act of Parliament called the Marine, & Broadcasting (Offences) Act came in to effect in a bid to silence these offshore radio stations.

In the aftermath of the Act, Blackburn became the first DJ on BBC Radio 1 when it launched in September 1967.

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