Radio Netherlands says farewell in style

http://swling.com/blog/2012/07/radio-netherlands-says-farewell-in-
style/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=radio-netherlands-says-farewell-
in-style
Posted on July 2, 2012 by Thomas 
Thursday night, by the light of an oil lamp, I tuned my trusty Sony portable 
shortwave to 6,165 
kHz. At 2:00 UTC, I was rewarded with a rich, full signal from Radio 
Netherlands Worldwide´s 
transmission site in Bonaire. Here in this off-grid cabin, on sixty rural 
acres, I bask in the 
freedom from electrical noise that might otherwise interfere with my shortwave 
radio 
listening-at least in this respect, this is the perfect DXpedition cabin.

The signal coming out of Bonaire, however, would have overcome any 
interference: Radio 
Netherlands, my dear friend of some 32 years, had opened a special frequency 
for those of 
us in eastern North America...in order to say their good-byes to the airwaves.

I can only describe the experience of listening as radio bliss...pure radio 
bliss...marred only 
by the bittersweet realization that these were RNW´s final days on the air. The 
experience 
harkened back to the day when the big broadcasters had booming signals directed 
toward 
us.

But, alas. All too brief.

The broadcast was simply entitled Farewell and Thank You. You can hear it just 
as I heard 
it-through my recording-here:


Then, all day Friday, for nearly 24 hours straight, RNW bid good-bye and 
farewell to various 
parts of the world via shortwave, satellite and the internet. I was lucky 
enough to catch two 
more broadcasts.

This time of day (19:00 UTC), however, I needed bigger ears than the Sony could 
provide. I 
was listening to broadcasts targeting west and east Africa, not North America. 
Having already 
charged my laptop battery, I plugged in the Bonito Radiojet (an SDR that I´m 
currently 
reviewing) and, just before 1900 UTC, directed her towards 17,605 kHz. Though 
my Sony 
found the signal barely audible, the RadioJet produced beautiful fidelity.

This RNW broadcast, entitled The First 50 Years, took listeners through the 
highlights and 
history of the Dutch radio service. Here´s the recording I made with the 
RadioJet:


A final sign-off


RNW headquarters in Hilversum, Netherlands (photo coutesty: RNW)
At 20:00 UTC, RNW broadcast their very final show-a repeat of Farewell and 
Thank You 
(above) appropriately targeting Africa once more. I tuned the dial to 11615 kHz 
and listened 
again to the full broadcast. This time, however, as the program drew to its 
close, the 
broadcast crew added a personal message.

Jonathan Groubert, the talented host of The State We´re In, broadcasted live 
from 
Hilversum´s Studio 4 for a deeply touching adieu. Tears were shed, and I´m not 
ashamed to 
confess that I, too, listened through a haze of them as these capable and 
dedicated 
journalists, whom I´ve grown to trust, signed off the RNW airwaves for the last 
time.

But listen for yourself:

Jonathan Marks, RNW´s host of MediaNetwork, also featured in the farewell 
broadcast, 
recorded the final sign-off from within Studio 4. You can listen to this and 
read the description 
on his excellent website.

Dank je wel, Radio Nederland

RNW-my dear radio friends-I´m going to miss you. Your personalities-and the 
collective 
personality of RNW itself-your award-winning content, news, reporting, and your 
integrity 
stood out amongst all those Cold War broadcasters I listened to growing up-who, 
as you so 
well put it, were merely mouthpieces for their respective governments.

Radio Nederland, I loved your broadcasting because you were fearless: you 
marched to the 
beat of your own drummer, were not afraid to turn a critical eye even upon 
yourself, and as a 
result-in a world of sham journalism, of compromise and hypocrisy-you earned my 
trust. 
You had nothing to hide, and you had so many stories to tell.

RNW: I listened.

I wish you (and your intrepid creators) the very best in all that you do. I 
trust your new 
incarnation(s), whatever form they take, will do much good in this world which 
so sorely 
needs it, and sincerely believe that your integrity will live on.

Share:ShareinShare0Standard rig : ICOM R75 / 2x16 V / m@h40 heads Sennheiser 
Please read and distribute this 15 year research article 
http://tinyurl.com/5vzg7e 
Please read my article on SINPO at http://tinyurl.com/yt7qjd
________________________
http://zlgr.multiply.com (radio monitoring site plus audio clips ) MAIN SITE 
http://www.delicious.com/gr_greek1/@zach (all mypages !!)
........
Zacharias Liangas , Thessaloniki Greece 
greekdx @ otenet dot gr  ---  
Pesawat penerima: ICOM R75 , Lowe HF150 , Degen 1102,1103,108,
Tecsun PL200/550/600, Chibo c300/c979, Yupi 7000 
Antenna: 16m hor, 2x16 m V invert, 1m australian loop 


---[Start Commercial]---------------------

Order your WRTH 2011:
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/redirect2.php?id=wrth2011
---[End Commercial]-----------------------
________________________________________
Hard-Core-DX mailing list
[email protected]
http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/hard-core-dx
http://www.hard-core-dx.com/
_______________________________________________

THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science License
published by Michael Stutz at
http://www.gnu.org/licenses/dsl.html

Reply via email to