Re: Spring 2014 | Page 12

people that if you really want something you’ve got to keep going at it. When I was living in Surrey I applied to Southern Sound Radio which started in 1983 they asked me to come and see them. They liked what I sent them and eventually they offered me a job in 1986. That is what it was called in those days, then it changed from Southern Sound Radio to Southern Sound and eventually Southern FM and it’s now called Heart of course - I worked for them for 17 years. everyone else thought I was brilliant. When everybody thinks you’re good and you think you’re rubbish you just have to stick with it. So I stayed and did the show and it was successful - loads of people listened and, of course the record companies knew about it as well so when I left university, instead of going to a job where I could use my chemistry degree, I got offered jobs by record companies. I went and worked for CBS, which is now Sony in London and that’s how my working life began. Across the road was Bush House, which is where the BBC World Service was broadcast. I got a six-month graduate placement to work there and that’s how I got a lot of training for radio. From there I did a bit of work for the BBC local radio in London and then when commercial radio started I applied for loads and loads of jobs but I got so many refusals. I’ve still got a pile of the letters somewhere in the house that I’ve saved just to remind me. I tell young My first show was nothing to do with love, it was called Soul Direction. It was all about soul music and I used to be on from 7-11pm on a Saturday night just playing some great soul. It was fantastic. That’s my kind of music - motown, classic soul music like Otis Redding, Wilson Pickett, James Brown and Aretha Franklin - music that makes you want to dance. It was early evening on a Saturday and it was really, really good. I loved it and that was my first proper show, my own show which was fantastic and I loved it. In those days, Southern Sound Radio was quite new and we never used to broadcast for 24 hours like they do now. In those days we used to finish at midnight then there was a recorded programme from 11pm to midnight which was recorded in London and sent down to us on tape. When I finished, I pressed the button but I had to stay because I had to lock up the whole radio station and you can’t leave in case anything goes wrong so I used to stay there till midnight. About three or four months into my show, the managing director at the time, Rory McCloud, told me the contract for the 11pm-midnight slot was coming to an end and needed filling. He asked me what we should do and in a flash - I don’t know where the inspiration comes to you from sometimes - I said to him, ‘I know exactly what we should do, Rory, we should play love songs from eleven to twelve’. He said he would go away and think about it. So he went away and a week later he called me into his office and said, ‘I like the love songs idea so let’s give it v