NHK FM Broadcast

Japanese national radio station From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NHK FM Broadcast

NHK-FM (NHK-FM, Enueichikei-Efuemu) is a Japanese radio station operated by the public broadcaster, NHK. Its programming output, which consists of classical music, jazz, rock, Japanese pop music, folk, seven times of news bulletins and talk is broadly similar to the BBC's Radio 1, Radio 2 and Radio 3 in the United Kingdom and KBS Happy FM, KBS Classic FM and KBS Cool FM in South Korea.

Quick Facts Broadcast area, Frequency ...
JOAK-FM
Broadcast areaNationwide (terrestrial/online)
Frequency82.5 MHz (Tokyo), and others
BrandingNHK-FM
Programming
LanguageJapanese
FormatClassical music, Contemporary hit radio, Japanese pop music, few news
Ownership
OwnerNHK
NHK Radio 1
NHK Radio 2
History
First air date
1 March 1969; 56 years ago (1969-03-01)
Technical information
Licensing authority
MIC
Classall
Power10kW
ERP89,270 Watts
Links
WebcastNHK Net Radio
WebsiteNHK.or.jp/fm/
Close

History

NHK started test FM broadcasts on December 24, 1957 in Tokyo.[1] This was followed by a second station in Osaka on February 20, 1958. The experimental station was based on the BBC Third Programme (the current BBC Radio 3).[2] In 1964, there were now 26 NHK FM stations, covering 70% of the country.[3]

Between 1962 and 1965, the following stations opened:[2]

  • September 17, 1962: Hiroshima, Fukuoka
  • December 2, 1962: Sapporo, Sendai, Nagoya, Matsuyama, Kumamoto
  • April 1, 1964: Shizuoka, Okayama, Yamaguchi, Kochi
  • May 1, 1964: Kitakyushu, Nagasaki
  • June 1, 1964: Morioka, Akita
  • June 25, 1964: Asahikawa
  • July 1, 1964: Fukushima, Niigata, Nagano, Kanazawa, Toyama, Matsue, Miyazaki, Kagoshima
  • December 2, 1964: Hakodate, Obihiro, Muroran, Aomori, Yamagata, Tottori
  • February 5, 1965: Kushiro, Fukui
  • March 1, 1965: Kofu, Tokushima, Oita
  • March 22, 1965: Takamatsu, Saga
  • March 27, 1965: Kitami

It wasn't until March 1, 1969 that these broadcasts became regular.[4] Since the beginning, the station had played a wide variety of music genres.[5]

Frequencies

82.5 MHz Tokyo (Power: 10 kW)

86.0 MHz Aomori (Power: 3 kW)

85.3 MHz Fukushima (Power: 1 kW)

88.1 MHz Osaka (Power: 10 kW)

82.3 MHz Niigata (Power: 1 kW)

86.7 MHz Akita (Power: 1 kW)

See also

References

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