Can you name... Signature Tunes of Radio Ceylon..
( I would like to give a credit to eraksoldies for this compilation )
Broadcasting on an experimental basis was started in
Ceylon by the
Telegraph Department in 1923, just three years after the inauguration of broadcasting in
Europe.
Gramophone music was broadcast from a tiny room in the
Central Telegraph Office with the aid of a small transmitter built by the Telegraph Department engineers from the radio equipment of a captured
German submarine.
The results proved successful and barely three years later, on
December 16, 1925, a regular broadcasting service came to be instituted.
Edward Harper who came to Ceylon as
Chief Engineer of the Telegraph Office in
1921, was the first person to actively promote broadcasting in Ceylon. He launched the first experimental broadcast as well as founding the Ceylon
Wireless Club together with
British and
Ceylonese radio enthusiasts. Edward Harper has been dubbed the '
Father of Broadcasting in Ceylon.'
The
Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation in
Colombo, to this day, is one of the finest radio stations in the world. It also happens to be the oldest radio station in
South Asia.
Vernon Corea was one of the pioneers of this radio station and he was deeply proud to be part of the history of
Radio Ceylon. He loved the
Station.
Radio was
King in South Asia in the
1950s,
1960s and
1970s and Radio Ceylon really did rule the airwaves - the station was like no other - it led the
field in South Asia.
People in the
Indian sub-continent tuned into Radio Ceylon.
The station was known as a 'market leader' in the field of entertainment. People wrote to Radio Ceylon from all over the world.
On December 16, 1925 the then British
Governor Sir Hugh Clifford inaugurated the broadcasting service - It was first known as
Colombo Radio. The name was changed to Radio Ceylon and the radio the station shifted to
Torrington Square on
October 5, 1949.
Radio Ceylon broadcaster Gnanam Rathinam in her book '
The Green Light' (
Memories of Broadcasting in
Sri Lanka) notes: ' In 1943 the Broadcasting Station premises was sited in a bungalow named The
Bower, in
Cotta Road,
Borella (in the city of Colombo). In early days the programmes in all languages were scheduled and produced by announcers who covered airtime as well. The Colombo radio station at 'The Bower' ceased broadcasts by
midnight on
31st December 1949 and Radio Ceylon came into being on
1st January 1950. On January 5,
1967, it became a state corporation - the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation.
Commercial broadcasting from Radio Ceylon was inaugurated on
September 30, 1950 and
Clifford Dodd was seconded for service via the
Colombo Plan. Dodd was charismatic and innovative and there was a real 'buzz' in Radio Ceylon after his arrival.
South Asian leaders and ministers of the
British Commonwealth, including
India's
Jawaharlal Nehru, Ceylon's
J.R. Jayawardene and
Ghulam Mohammed, decided that Asia needed something like the
Marshall Plan that had just helped rebuild Europe after the ravages of war.
The Colombo Plan, which resulted from these deliberations, was the first multilateral effort in foreign aid in Asia. The key donor countries were
Australia, New Zealand,
Canada,
Britain and the
United States, and the organisation included
Asian members of the
Commonwealth like India, Ceylon and
Pakistan.
Australia sent
Clifford.R.Dodd to Radio Ceylon under the '
Plan' and it was a 'ground breaking' experience, as far as broadcasting in Ceylon was concerned. Clifford R.Dodd is regarded as the 'Father of
Commercial Broadcasting in Ceylon.
Vernon Corea joined Radio Ceylon in
1957. He left the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation as
Director News in
1975.
(for full article visit)
http://ivan_corea.tripod.com/id8
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