Broadcast area United Kingdom Owner Bauer Radio | Format Adult Contemporary | |
Frequency FM: 105.4 MHz (London)
RDS: Magic
DAB:
11D (England/Wales/N. Ireland)
12A (Scotland)
12C (London)
Sky: 0180
Virgin Media: 928
Freeview: 715
Freesat: 770 First air date 9 July 1990 (as Melody FM) Audience share 4.2% in London/5.6% nationally (June 2016, RAJAR) |
Magic 105.4 FM is an adult contemporary Independent Local Radio and national radio station based in London owned by Bauer Radio. Magic 105.4 FM forms part of Bauer's National portfolio of radio brands.
Contents
As well as being carried on FM and DAB in London it is carried nationally on DAB, as well as online and on digital television.
History
In 1998, Melody FM was purchased by media group Emap from Hanson plc for a reported £25 million and rebranded Magic that December.
On changing the station's name, Emap introduced automation for the first time - weekday afternoons were split with a 'non-stop music hour', first sponsored by the now defunct energy company Calortex, and later by the Emap-owned Red magazine. Magic was criticised for automating a further eleven hours of its daily output (7pm-6am) given the reach and size of the station.
In an attempt to cut costs, Magic began networking its mid-morning show, hosted by Richard Skinner, and automated overnight output with the eight other Magic Radio stations in the North of England in January 2002. Audience figures fell on all nine stations in the twelve months that followed, some arguing a lack of local content had driven listeners to tune away. Networking was ended in January 2003, although the eight 'northern' Magic stations continued to share a mid-morning show, hosted by Mark Thorburn, and were subsequently networked again, with the exception of local breakfast shows, following a repositioning of the northern Magic group in mid-2006. These stations were later rebranded into the Bauer City 2 network in 2015.
The end of networking heralded a programming shift; Magic adopting its 'more music, less talk' ethos. Former Capital FM head and radio consultant Richard Park was brought in to increase the station's audience share. In September 2003, Magic saw its first major revamp: live programming replaced automated output in the evening, and Independent Radio News-employed staff manned the station's daytime news output, removing shared presenting/newsreading responsibilities, a legacy from Melody FM. IRN retained the contract to supply Magic's news bulletins until 2015, when the service was brought in-house.
Later years saw a reliance on weekend celebrity-hosted content and large cash prizes to entice listeners - the award of £110,600 to Nicola Diss, the winner of the popular Magic Mystery Voices contest on 12 January 2006 was the largest cash prize given away on UK radio since 1999, a sum surpassed just a few months later by the prize collected by listener Dawn Muggleton in the Smooth Secret Song competition on London rival 102.2 Smooth FM, scooping £118,454 on 19 April 2006. However, Magic regained the honour on 30 March 2007 with listener Maria Crosskey winning £168,600 in a six-month-long Mystery Voices contest, although she was later disqualified (see 'Mystery Voices' below).
In 2008, Emap sold its radio stations, including Magic, to Bauer Media Group.
Magic, along with urban-music station Kiss and a number of other radio brands, broadcasts from Bauer Radio's headquarters in Golden Square. It had previously broadcast from studios on Winsley Street (Mappin House) until September 2014.
Magic launched two digital-only sister stations in March 2016 as part of the Sound Digital multiplex jointly owned by Bauer. The stations are Mellow Magic, a service of relaxing classic hits based on the successful Magic night-time programming strand of the same name, and Magic Chilled, a station in the DAB+ format playing current and contemporary melodic pop. Fran Godfrey has hosted the breakfast show on Mellow Magic, its only live programme, since the station's official launch.
There is also a complementary Magic music television channel available on the Sky and Virgin Media digital TV platforms in the UK.
Mystery Voices
For a number of years, Magic ran a Mystery Voices competition in which listeners were required to guess the names of three celebrity voices. One said "Magic", the second "One-oh-five" and the third "Point-four". Every hour a listener guessed the names of the celebrities and for each failed attempt £100 was added to the prize fund. The competitions often ran for several months with the winner eventually receiving a prize potentially worth upwards of £100,000.