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BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (Sham 69 album) BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (Steve Earle album) BBC Radio One Live in Concert (Dexys Midnight Runners album) BBC Radio One Live in Concert (New Model Army album) BBC Radio One Live in Concert (Thin Lizzy album) BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (Atomic Rooster album) BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert (Caravan album)
The division was known as BBC Radio Enterprises (1967–1970), BBC Records (1970–1972) and BBC Records & Tapes (1972–1989). [1] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s BBC Records released a wide range of recordings, primarily but not exclusively as tie-ins to the BBC's television and radio output.
Live at the BBC or BBC Recordings are pop and rock music recordings originally made for or by the BBC Light Programme or BBC Radio 1. Many recordings were released under several name variants. Many recordings were released under several name variants.
The BBC Sound Archive is a collection of audio recordings maintained by the BBC and founded in 1936. Its recordings date back to the late 19th century and include many rare items, including contemporary speeches by public and political figures, folk music , British dialects and sound effects.
The BBC Sound Archive contains the archived output from the BBC's radio output. Widespread recordings exist in the archive from the mid-1930s, when recording of programmes and speeches were kept for rebroadcast; the catalyst for this was the launch of the BBC Empire Service in 1932 and the subsequent rebroadcast of speeches from political ...
It holds more than six million recordings, [2] including over a million discs and 200,000 tapes. These include commercial record releases (chiefly from the UK), radio broadcasts (many from the BBC Sound Archive), and privately made recordings.
BBC Sessions is an album of recordings by the rock group the Jimi Hendrix Experience, released on MCA Records on June 2, 1998. It contains all the surviving tracks from their various appearances on BBC radio programmes, such as Saturday Club and Top Gear, recorded in 1967.
The Los Angeles Times considered the album to be comparable to similar, previously released BBC recordings made by the Beatles during the period. [12] Robert Christgau wrote in Vice : "Billed 'R&B' as they started playing out in 1963, the Stones were catchier and quicker than blues, and on these 32 radio transcriptions they sound like the ...