The Voice of Greece are well-known for their multi-hour sessions of phenomenally diverse music from around the world. So, without much further commentary, here is a recording of their signal made yesterday at 1904 UTC using AirSpy HF+ Discovery and the YouLoop passive loop antenna, mounted onto a tripod on the balcony of my QTH. The first hour contains tracks from Indonesia, the Middle East, Latin America, and beyond, while the second hour has a selection of traditional Greek music.
The Voice of Greece are well-known for their multi-hour sessions of phenomenally diverse music from around the world. So, without much further commentary, here is a recording of their signal made yesterday at 1904 UTC using AirSpy HF+ Discovery and the YouLoop passive loop antenna, mounted onto a tripod on the balcony of my QTH. The first hour contains tracks from Indonesia, the Middle East, Latin America, and beyond, while the second hour has a selection of traditional Greek music.
All India Radio office in New Delhi. Photo by Sanjeev Verma |
When I returned to the shortwave bands two weeks ago I was sad to learn that All India Radio had suspended its overseas shortwave transmissions at the end of March, owing to the COVID-19 lockdown imposed by the Indian government. It was also being reported that AIR National Channel – a more difficult catch in Europe compared to the External Services Division (ESD) broadcasts – was running on reduced power. However, it seems that we can now hear AIR's English language news bulletins once again, on the same frequency where a limited number of non-English language ESD broadcasts were announced to be broadcasting two weeks earlier. The transmission takes place daily at 1500 UTC on 11560 kHz and is only 30 minutes long. The mixture of English and Hindi suggests that it is a high-power relay of AIR National Channel programming. Below is a recording of this transmission made on May 21st, 2020 with a PocketCHIP handheld Linux computer, AirSpy HF+ Discovery and a YouLoop passive loop antenna. The antenna was positioned on the balcony of my current QTH in London.
Hello, dear blog readers and Twitter followers. I hope you are all well and keeping safe in these extraordinary times. I'm sorry I have been out of action on the radio front for a long time and that many of your emails and DMs had gone unanswered until recently. Like many of you, I have been readjusting to life under the COVID-19 lockdown and this has been consuming a lot of my time and energy. My ability to venture outdoors to hunt for faint and exotic radio signals has so far been quite limited. Consequently, I decided to use this blog as a space to explore my previous recordings – spectrum and otherwise – to take us back to the times when life was normal and to remind us that it will be so again. I will also occasionally post recordings that I am able to capture from my current residential location, but expect fewer of those.
To kick things off, below is a recording of Radio New Zealand International ringing in the Year of 2020, captured outdoors in a rural location in the Russian Central Region, using a Tecsun PL-680 and a long-wire antenna. Listening to it, one gets the sense of a very different outlook on the year ahead compared to what then followed.
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