4 April – BBC Radio's sports coverage transfers from Radio 3 to Radio 2, although cricket commentary continues to be broadcast on Radio 3. Also transferring away from Radio 3 is other factual programming, moving mostly to
BBC Radio 4. Consequently, the station now focuses on classical music, the performing arts and adult education.
8 April – Choral Evensong is broadcast on Radio 3 for the first time. It had previously been aired on Radio 4. Initially, it is only broadcast once a month but following the receipt of 2,500 letters of complaint, weekly transmissions resume on 1 July.[1]
1971
August – Pied Piper, a programme aimed at primary school children, is broadcast for the first time.
19 July – Homeward Bound, a new 20-minute teatime programme, is launched.[2]
21 July – The station extends its broadcasting hours by 25 minutes, closing down at midnight instead of 11:35pm.
1973
1 January – Homeward Bound is doubled in length and now broadcasts in two 20-minute segments with a five-minute break for the teatime news bulletin.
1974
From this year,
cricket commentary is broadcast only on MW, thereby allowing Radio 3's usual music schedule to continue on VHF.
1975
29 September – Radio 3's weeknight teatime adult education slot Study on 3 is renamed Lifelines.
1976
May – The final edition of Pied Piper is broadcast due to the death of the programme's presenter
David Munrow.
1977
No events.
1978
29 September – Adult education slot Lifelines is broadcast for the final time, bringing to an end of Radio 3's non-
Open University adult educational output.
2 October – For the first time, Radio 3 broadcasts a music programme on weeknights at 6:30pm when it launches At Home. However, the programme is only broadcast on MW as the station continues to broadcast
Open University programmes on VHF.
23 November – Radio 3 moves from 464m (647kHz) to 247m (1215kHz) medium wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception and to conform with the
Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975.[3]
22 December – Industrial action at the BBC by the ABS union which started the previous day, extends to radio when the radio unions join their television counterparts by going on strike, forcing the BBC to merge its four national radio networks into one national radio station from 4pm and called it the BBC All Network Radio Service. The strike is settled shortly before 10pm on Friday 22 December 1978 with the unions and BBC management reaching an agreement at the British government's industrial disputes arbitration service ACAS.[4][5][6][7]
2 January – Radio 3 launches a new, extended teatime programme Mainly for Pleasure. The two-hour long programme replaces the much shorter Homeward Bound.[8]
3 May – Financial cutbacks at Radio 3 result in the station closing down 45 minutes earlier, at 11:15pm instead of midnight.
15 October –
Open University programmes are broadcast on weekday teatimes for the final time. Consequently, from the following day, Mainly for Pleasure and the full Radio 3 schedule, is heard on VHF all the year round for the first time.
1981
February – The new
Open University year sees OU transmissions on Radio 3 moved to late at night and early in the morning and are broadcast prior to and after the end of the stations' daily output. The programmes continue to be broadcast only on VHF.
24 September – John Lade presents Record Review for the final time. His last broadcast is the programme's 1,000th edition.[9]Paul Vaughan takes over the programme the following week.
1982
No events.
1983
No events.
1984
13 October – Radio 3's broadcast hours are extended. The station regains the 45 minutes of late night broadcasting time that it lost in 1980, closing down at midnight instead of just after 11:15pm and weekend broadcasts begin an hour earlier, at 6:55am rather than 7:55am. Consequently, the station is now on air from 6:55am until midnight seven days a week.
9 February – The 9am and 5pm news bulletins are replaced by a ten-minute bulletin from the
BBC World Service. The bulletins are titled World Service News.
1988
15 January – The final World Service News bulletins are broadcast.
16 January
Record Review is relaunched as Saturday Review. Instead of a one-hour programme, the expanded programme, which now incorporates Record Review, is broadcast throughout the morning, between 9:30am and 1pm.
The weekend morning news bulletins are rescheduled and instead of three on the air bulletins, the station now broadcasts two bulletins, at 7:30am and 8:30am.
A new 15-minute preview programme, The Week on 3, is broadcast for the first time.
24 September – Radio 3's Night School opens. It airs a repeat of the schools programmes broadcast the previous morning on
BBC Radio 5. This allows schools to record an FM-quality transmission of the programmes which, following their transfer from Radio 4 to Radio 5, resulting in the morning broadcast now being heard on the inferior MW waveband. Night School is broadcast on FM only.
1 October
Radio 3 stays on air for an extra 30 minutes on weeknights, ending broadcasting at 12:35am. The station continues to close at midnight at the weekend.
Experimental music programme Mixing It is launched, initially broadcasting once a fortnight.
29 February – Radio 3 stops broadcasting on MW. Its frequency is to be used by a new national commercial station.
20 May – Ball-by-ball cricket commentary moves to Radio 3's FM frequencies for the Summer following the switching-off of the station's MW frequency.
13 July – In a bid to counteract the forthcoming launch of
Classic FM, Radio 3 makes major changes to its programmes, including the launch of new weekday breakfast and drivetime programmes.[11]On Air replaces Morning Concert on weekdays and In Tune replaces Mainly for Pleasure.
May – The broadcasting arrangements for Test Match Special are changed for the 1993 cricket season. The morning play is on
BBC Radio 5, switching to
BBC Radio 3 for the afternoon session.
23 August – Cricket is broadcast on Radio 3 for the final time.
26 September – Radio 3 launches a new Sunday breakfast programme Sacred and Profane, presented by Penny Gore.[12]
1994
19 September –
BBC School Radio moves to Radio 3 and is transmitted for one hour at 2pm.
1995
15 April – Weekly discussion programme Private Passions is broadcast for the first time.
Radio 3 begins broadcasting an hour earlier on weekdays at 6am, when breakfast show On Air is extended from two to three hours.[14]
Paul Gambaccini joins to present a new morning programme called Morning Collection. Consequently, This Week's Composer moves to the later time of 12pm.
1996
4 May – Radio 3 commences 24-hour transmissions.[15]
June –
Schools programmes are broadcast during the day for the final time although they continue to be broadcast overnight until 2003.
13 September – Experimental music programme Late Junction is broadcast for the first time.[21]
2000s
2000
July – Radio 3 hires
Andy Kershaw to host a world music programme, as Andy himself joins the station.[22] two months after
BBC Radio 1 axed his world music show.[23]
Radio 3, along with other BBC Radio stations, stop broadcasting via Sky's analogue satellite service.
2002
No events.
2003
No events.
2004
No events.
2005
5–10 June – Radio 3 clears its airwaves for almost an entire week to broadcast the music of a single composer –
Ludwig van Beethoven.[24] This is followed up at the end of the year with ten days of non-stop
Johann Sebastian Bach which is broadcast in the run-up to Christmas.[25]
Radio 3 launches an annual Free Thinking Festival. Its aim is to create a platform for innovative thinking and debate on ideas relevant to contemporary society.
2007
9 February – Mixing It is broadcast on Radio 3 for the final time. It is revived later in 2007 by community station
Resonance FM.
17 February – Radio 3 makes major changes to its schedule. These include
Rob Cowan replacing
Penny Gore as breakfast presenter and an extended weekday afternoon show which will run from 2pm until the start of In Tune at 5pm. The programmes previously broadcast at 4pm are axed with one of those – Choral Evensong – moving to Sunday afternoons. The changes also see a reduction in the number of live concerts with live broadcasts replaced by pre-recorded concerts.[26]
17 September – BBC Radio 3's breakfast programme is renamed from Mornings on 3 to Breakfast.
2008
September – Following protests,[27] the live broadcast of Choral Evensong returns to Wednesdays with a recorded repeat broadcast at the same time of day – 4pm – on Sundays.
2009
No events.
2010s
2010
No events.
2011
3 May – Radio 3 resumes the broadcasting of regular live concerts. This overturns the much criticised 2007 decision to replace almost all of its live broadcasts with pre-recorded concerts.[28]
2012
16 May – Spending cuts approved by the
BBC Trust will see Radio 3 have "25 per cent fewer live and specially recorded lunchtime concerts".[29]
28 September – Radio 3 announces a raft of new weekend programmes. They include a new concert series Live in Concert, a new film music programme called Sound of Cinema, a chance to hear highlights of the weekday lunchtime concerts, consistent times for the station's jazz programming and a new Monday night slot for Opera on 3.[30]
15 November –
Sara Mohr-Pietsch presents Radio 3 Breakfast for the final time. She leaves the show to become presenter of Radio 3's
Wigmore Hall lunchtime concerts and to present Sunday afternoon programme The Choir, replacing
Aled Jones. She is replaced on 2 December by weekend breakfast presenter
Clemency Burton-Hill.[31]
2014
7 January – Arts discussion programme Night Waves is relaunched as Free Thinking.
5 April – Controller
Alan Davey announces plans to revive Pied Piper, the 1970s series that introduced young listeners to classical music.[33]
12–15 November – Radio 3 joins with commercial station
Jazz FM to operate a four-day pop-up station called
BBC Music Jazz.[34] The station returned a year later, running from Thursday 10 November 2016 at 10am until Monday 14 November at 10am.[35]
2016
2 January – After 17 years as CD Review, the programme reverts to its original name of Record Review.
2017
2 October –
Katie Derham joins the In Tune presenting team to replace
Suzy Klein who moves to morning programme Essential Classics.[36]
2018
January –
Rob Cowan leaves the station to rejoin
Classic FM after 17 years of broadcasting at the station. He is replaced as presenter of Essential Classics by
Ian Skelly.[37]
24 March – Controller Alan Davey announces a raft of new programmes, including a new world music show called Music Planet which will replace World on 3 and a new weeknight late show called After Dark.[38]
24 October – FM coverage in Wales is reduced when Radio 3's frequency at more than 30 relay transmitters is reallocated to
BBC Radio Wales.[39]
2019
Autumn – Late Junction's airtime is more than halved, from three 90-minute episodes a week to a single two-hour slot on Fridays.[40]
2020s
2020
No events.
2021
5 April –
Georgia Mann becomes a presenter of Essential Classics.[41]
BBC Radio 3 begins a week of programmes celebrating the life and work of
Igor Stravinsky to mark the 50th anniversary of his death.[42]
9–11 April – Following the death of
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh,
BBC Radio 3 abandons half its weekend scheduled programming in favour of simulcasting the BBC Radio News special programme and from 5:10pm the station broadcasts a revised schedule for the rest of the day and over the weekend.
12 April –
Ian Skelly joins the Afternoon Concert presenting team.[41]
2022
8–11 September & 19 September – Following the death of Queen
Elizabeth II, BBC Radio 3 abandons its regular scheduled programming in favour of simulcasting the BBC Radio News special programme, and from Friday to Sunday as well as 19 September the station broadcasts a revised schedule for the end of the week and over 19 September on the day of the funeral.[citation needed]
7 February – The
BBC announces plans to launch a new Radio 3 spin-off station on
DAB and online via
BBC Sounds. The station will focus calming classical music, aimed at helping listeners "unwind, de-stress and escape the pressures of daily life".[44]
1 April –
Major changes take place to radio 3's weekday schedule, including extended editions of Breakfast and Mornings. This Week's Composer moves to the later time of 4pm.[45]
A new weeknight jazz programme launches on
BBC Radio 3. Titled Round Midnight, the show is presented by saxophonist, composer and MC
Soweto Kinch.[46]
4 April – BBC Radio's sports coverage transfers from Radio 3 to Radio 2, although cricket commentary continues to be broadcast on Radio 3. Also transferring away from Radio 3 is other factual programming, moving mostly to
BBC Radio 4. Consequently, the station now focuses on classical music, the performing arts and adult education.
8 April – Choral Evensong is broadcast on Radio 3 for the first time. It had previously been aired on Radio 4. Initially, it is only broadcast once a month but following the receipt of 2,500 letters of complaint, weekly transmissions resume on 1 July.[1]
1971
August – Pied Piper, a programme aimed at primary school children, is broadcast for the first time.
19 July – Homeward Bound, a new 20-minute teatime programme, is launched.[2]
21 July – The station extends its broadcasting hours by 25 minutes, closing down at midnight instead of 11:35pm.
1973
1 January – Homeward Bound is doubled in length and now broadcasts in two 20-minute segments with a five-minute break for the teatime news bulletin.
1974
From this year,
cricket commentary is broadcast only on MW, thereby allowing Radio 3's usual music schedule to continue on VHF.
1975
29 September – Radio 3's weeknight teatime adult education slot Study on 3 is renamed Lifelines.
1976
May – The final edition of Pied Piper is broadcast due to the death of the programme's presenter
David Munrow.
1977
No events.
1978
29 September – Adult education slot Lifelines is broadcast for the final time, bringing to an end of Radio 3's non-
Open University adult educational output.
2 October – For the first time, Radio 3 broadcasts a music programme on weeknights at 6:30pm when it launches At Home. However, the programme is only broadcast on MW as the station continues to broadcast
Open University programmes on VHF.
23 November – Radio 3 moves from 464m (647kHz) to 247m (1215kHz) medium wave as part of a plan to improve national AM reception and to conform with the
Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975.[3]
22 December – Industrial action at the BBC by the ABS union which started the previous day, extends to radio when the radio unions join their television counterparts by going on strike, forcing the BBC to merge its four national radio networks into one national radio station from 4pm and called it the BBC All Network Radio Service. The strike is settled shortly before 10pm on Friday 22 December 1978 with the unions and BBC management reaching an agreement at the British government's industrial disputes arbitration service ACAS.[4][5][6][7]
2 January – Radio 3 launches a new, extended teatime programme Mainly for Pleasure. The two-hour long programme replaces the much shorter Homeward Bound.[8]
3 May – Financial cutbacks at Radio 3 result in the station closing down 45 minutes earlier, at 11:15pm instead of midnight.
15 October –
Open University programmes are broadcast on weekday teatimes for the final time. Consequently, from the following day, Mainly for Pleasure and the full Radio 3 schedule, is heard on VHF all the year round for the first time.
1981
February – The new
Open University year sees OU transmissions on Radio 3 moved to late at night and early in the morning and are broadcast prior to and after the end of the stations' daily output. The programmes continue to be broadcast only on VHF.
24 September – John Lade presents Record Review for the final time. His last broadcast is the programme's 1,000th edition.[9]Paul Vaughan takes over the programme the following week.
1982
No events.
1983
No events.
1984
13 October – Radio 3's broadcast hours are extended. The station regains the 45 minutes of late night broadcasting time that it lost in 1980, closing down at midnight instead of just after 11:15pm and weekend broadcasts begin an hour earlier, at 6:55am rather than 7:55am. Consequently, the station is now on air from 6:55am until midnight seven days a week.
9 February – The 9am and 5pm news bulletins are replaced by a ten-minute bulletin from the
BBC World Service. The bulletins are titled World Service News.
1988
15 January – The final World Service News bulletins are broadcast.
16 January
Record Review is relaunched as Saturday Review. Instead of a one-hour programme, the expanded programme, which now incorporates Record Review, is broadcast throughout the morning, between 9:30am and 1pm.
The weekend morning news bulletins are rescheduled and instead of three on the air bulletins, the station now broadcasts two bulletins, at 7:30am and 8:30am.
A new 15-minute preview programme, The Week on 3, is broadcast for the first time.
24 September – Radio 3's Night School opens. It airs a repeat of the schools programmes broadcast the previous morning on
BBC Radio 5. This allows schools to record an FM-quality transmission of the programmes which, following their transfer from Radio 4 to Radio 5, resulting in the morning broadcast now being heard on the inferior MW waveband. Night School is broadcast on FM only.
1 October
Radio 3 stays on air for an extra 30 minutes on weeknights, ending broadcasting at 12:35am. The station continues to close at midnight at the weekend.
Experimental music programme Mixing It is launched, initially broadcasting once a fortnight.
29 February – Radio 3 stops broadcasting on MW. Its frequency is to be used by a new national commercial station.
20 May – Ball-by-ball cricket commentary moves to Radio 3's FM frequencies for the Summer following the switching-off of the station's MW frequency.
13 July – In a bid to counteract the forthcoming launch of
Classic FM, Radio 3 makes major changes to its programmes, including the launch of new weekday breakfast and drivetime programmes.[11]On Air replaces Morning Concert on weekdays and In Tune replaces Mainly for Pleasure.
May – The broadcasting arrangements for Test Match Special are changed for the 1993 cricket season. The morning play is on
BBC Radio 5, switching to
BBC Radio 3 for the afternoon session.
23 August – Cricket is broadcast on Radio 3 for the final time.
26 September – Radio 3 launches a new Sunday breakfast programme Sacred and Profane, presented by Penny Gore.[12]
1994
19 September –
BBC School Radio moves to Radio 3 and is transmitted for one hour at 2pm.
1995
15 April – Weekly discussion programme Private Passions is broadcast for the first time.
Radio 3 begins broadcasting an hour earlier on weekdays at 6am, when breakfast show On Air is extended from two to three hours.[14]
Paul Gambaccini joins to present a new morning programme called Morning Collection. Consequently, This Week's Composer moves to the later time of 12pm.
1996
4 May – Radio 3 commences 24-hour transmissions.[15]
June –
Schools programmes are broadcast during the day for the final time although they continue to be broadcast overnight until 2003.
13 September – Experimental music programme Late Junction is broadcast for the first time.[21]
2000s
2000
July – Radio 3 hires
Andy Kershaw to host a world music programme, as Andy himself joins the station.[22] two months after
BBC Radio 1 axed his world music show.[23]
Radio 3, along with other BBC Radio stations, stop broadcasting via Sky's analogue satellite service.
2002
No events.
2003
No events.
2004
No events.
2005
5–10 June – Radio 3 clears its airwaves for almost an entire week to broadcast the music of a single composer –
Ludwig van Beethoven.[24] This is followed up at the end of the year with ten days of non-stop
Johann Sebastian Bach which is broadcast in the run-up to Christmas.[25]
Radio 3 launches an annual Free Thinking Festival. Its aim is to create a platform for innovative thinking and debate on ideas relevant to contemporary society.
2007
9 February – Mixing It is broadcast on Radio 3 for the final time. It is revived later in 2007 by community station
Resonance FM.
17 February – Radio 3 makes major changes to its schedule. These include
Rob Cowan replacing
Penny Gore as breakfast presenter and an extended weekday afternoon show which will run from 2pm until the start of In Tune at 5pm. The programmes previously broadcast at 4pm are axed with one of those – Choral Evensong – moving to Sunday afternoons. The changes also see a reduction in the number of live concerts with live broadcasts replaced by pre-recorded concerts.[26]
17 September – BBC Radio 3's breakfast programme is renamed from Mornings on 3 to Breakfast.
2008
September – Following protests,[27] the live broadcast of Choral Evensong returns to Wednesdays with a recorded repeat broadcast at the same time of day – 4pm – on Sundays.
2009
No events.
2010s
2010
No events.
2011
3 May – Radio 3 resumes the broadcasting of regular live concerts. This overturns the much criticised 2007 decision to replace almost all of its live broadcasts with pre-recorded concerts.[28]
2012
16 May – Spending cuts approved by the
BBC Trust will see Radio 3 have "25 per cent fewer live and specially recorded lunchtime concerts".[29]
28 September – Radio 3 announces a raft of new weekend programmes. They include a new concert series Live in Concert, a new film music programme called Sound of Cinema, a chance to hear highlights of the weekday lunchtime concerts, consistent times for the station's jazz programming and a new Monday night slot for Opera on 3.[30]
15 November –
Sara Mohr-Pietsch presents Radio 3 Breakfast for the final time. She leaves the show to become presenter of Radio 3's
Wigmore Hall lunchtime concerts and to present Sunday afternoon programme The Choir, replacing
Aled Jones. She is replaced on 2 December by weekend breakfast presenter
Clemency Burton-Hill.[31]
2014
7 January – Arts discussion programme Night Waves is relaunched as Free Thinking.
5 April – Controller
Alan Davey announces plans to revive Pied Piper, the 1970s series that introduced young listeners to classical music.[33]
12–15 November – Radio 3 joins with commercial station
Jazz FM to operate a four-day pop-up station called
BBC Music Jazz.[34] The station returned a year later, running from Thursday 10 November 2016 at 10am until Monday 14 November at 10am.[35]
2016
2 January – After 17 years as CD Review, the programme reverts to its original name of Record Review.
2017
2 October –
Katie Derham joins the In Tune presenting team to replace
Suzy Klein who moves to morning programme Essential Classics.[36]
2018
January –
Rob Cowan leaves the station to rejoin
Classic FM after 17 years of broadcasting at the station. He is replaced as presenter of Essential Classics by
Ian Skelly.[37]
24 March – Controller Alan Davey announces a raft of new programmes, including a new world music show called Music Planet which will replace World on 3 and a new weeknight late show called After Dark.[38]
24 October – FM coverage in Wales is reduced when Radio 3's frequency at more than 30 relay transmitters is reallocated to
BBC Radio Wales.[39]
2019
Autumn – Late Junction's airtime is more than halved, from three 90-minute episodes a week to a single two-hour slot on Fridays.[40]
2020s
2020
No events.
2021
5 April –
Georgia Mann becomes a presenter of Essential Classics.[41]
BBC Radio 3 begins a week of programmes celebrating the life and work of
Igor Stravinsky to mark the 50th anniversary of his death.[42]
9–11 April – Following the death of
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh,
BBC Radio 3 abandons half its weekend scheduled programming in favour of simulcasting the BBC Radio News special programme and from 5:10pm the station broadcasts a revised schedule for the rest of the day and over the weekend.
12 April –
Ian Skelly joins the Afternoon Concert presenting team.[41]
2022
8–11 September & 19 September – Following the death of Queen
Elizabeth II, BBC Radio 3 abandons its regular scheduled programming in favour of simulcasting the BBC Radio News special programme, and from Friday to Sunday as well as 19 September the station broadcasts a revised schedule for the end of the week and over 19 September on the day of the funeral.[citation needed]
7 February – The
BBC announces plans to launch a new Radio 3 spin-off station on
DAB and online via
BBC Sounds. The station will focus calming classical music, aimed at helping listeners "unwind, de-stress and escape the pressures of daily life".[44]
1 April –
Major changes take place to radio 3's weekday schedule, including extended editions of Breakfast and Mornings. This Week's Composer moves to the later time of 4pm.[45]
A new weeknight jazz programme launches on
BBC Radio 3. Titled Round Midnight, the show is presented by saxophonist, composer and MC
Soweto Kinch.[46]