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Obituaries

Obituary: Ian Sweiger

Enterprising, energetic pioneer of multi-ethnic commercial radio

December 21, 2017 15:21
ian sweiger

ByGloria Tessler, GLORIA TESSLER

2 min read

Instantly recognisable by his affable manner and smile, Ian Sweiger, who has died aged 79, was part of a duo with his partner of 25 years Beverley Bond, who helped launch Spectrum Radio in 1990. It opened up the airwaves to the polyglot sounds of multi-cultural communities. It rocked to London’s Afro-Caribbean rhythms, alongside Asian, Chinese, Arabic, Greek, Italian, Hispanic and — of course Jewish — voices which were not until that moment the voices of the British establishment.

Operating from a rather uninspiring 50s building, aptly called Endeavour House near Brent Cross shopping centre, its early broadcasting ambitions encountered challenges right from the start. Due to launch on the frequency 558AM, on June 25, 1990, that frequency was taken by pirate broadcaster Radio Caroline, so Spectrum International launched instead on a temporary frequency of 990AM. Sweiger was a director of the company for four years between 1992 and 1996.

Determined to launch a daily Jewish programme, he and his team were pioneers who recognised that the needs of London’s growing indigenous communities were not being met. With broadcasters like Pete Sipple, who spent four years as its commercial producer and engineer, they set out to fill that vaccum. Keith Belcher was first Chief Executive, and John Kaye, their first presenter.

Spectrum Radio, which continues to cover over 20 different ethnic communities, is distinguished by its foreign language programmes, many of which have been on air since its launch. Its concept generated other local Jewish radio stations, including Shalom Radio and Jewish Care Radio.