
Photo credit Fran Hayles
Few mediums have shaped modern British music and identity like pirate radio. In Gaps in the Dial, a six-part audio series commissioned by the Barbican as part of their Rebel Radio programme, award-winning audio producer, DJ and presenter Tayo Popoola dives deep into the radical legacy of UK pirate radio. From the soulful transmissions of Radio Invicta and the jungle revolution of Kool FM to today’s digital pioneers like NTS and Worldwide FM, the series is both a tribute and a revelation, told by those who built the sound and those carrying it forward.
Blending archive recordings, personal memories and interviews with cultural icons like Gilles Peterson, Andi Oliver and Norman Jay, Gaps in the Dial captures the defiant energy of underground broadcasting and how it forged a lasting cultural blueprint. With a career that spans both sides of the mic, from BBC Radio 1 and Kiss to documentaries on politics, sport and beyond, Tayo brings a personal, deeply informed lens to the untold stories of pirate radio’s past and present.
We sat down with Tayo to explore what drew him to this story now, the voices he chose to spotlight, and how pirate radio continues to inspire a new generation of community-led broadcasting.
Gaps in the Dial dives into the radical history of pirate radio in the UK, what drew you personally to tell this story now, and in this way?
Pirate radio – in fact all radio, had a huge impact on my life as a kid, offering a glimpse into a world that at the time I was too young to be a part of. Pirate radio offered a musical education, where myself and my brother would diligently write down the names of songs that we heard, and make our ‘play and record’ cassettes. Through the adverts, the DJs’ personalities that shone on the radio, and all the clubs and records they spoke about, I knew it was a world I would want to be part of as soon as I could. So, telling these stories, and finding the people behind the stories appealed to my younger self on that emotional level, as much as it did on a curious, intellectual, and sociological level.
These stories of pirate radio are really the story of London and its development.
I’d like to stress here that these are particular stories about one city, my city — London. And doesn’t even try and be the whole story… There is a wider UK pirate radio and underground radio story out there that we haven’t gone near.
The series spans from soul and jungle to today’s digital platforms like NTS, how did you choose which stations and voices to spotlight across the six episodes?
It was hard to decide. I tried to focus on the earlier period of pirate radio history that has perhaps been less told – there’s a lot more you can read about or listen to around the era of Jungle / Garage / Grime, and I wanted to tell the story of some of the super important stations that got us to that era, and focus on some of the maybe less well known, but incredibly important names that got us here.
Essentially it spans the 80s where there was loads of legislation around pirate radio at the same time as loads of social, and economic change in the UK, and the stations I picked covered that, as well as covering a wide range of black music genres that were developing at the time — soul, rare groove, reggae, boogie, electro, early house and more.
You’ve spoken to legends like Gilles Peterson and Andi Oliver for this — was there a moment in those conversations that really stuck with you or surprised you?
So many — talking to Gilles Peterson and Jez Nelson together was fascinating – they both go back so far as friends, and it was so exciting for this particular nerd to listen to them looking back on a time when they too were getting into radio and being music nerds. Walking around Notting Hill with Mike Williams from Dread Broadcasting Corporation was really evocative, hearing the inside track from Norman Jay MBE and Gordon Mac on the station that I was glued to probably most of all – Kiss FM. But perhaps my favourite bit was chatting to a legendary radio engineer, Pyers Easton, who built quite a few transmitters for a variety of stations, who told the tale of meeting Lee Scratch Perry in the founder of DBC’s flat while he was dictating a letter to the pope.
Rebel Radio is all about amplifying underheard voices. How does Gaps In The Dial reflect or challenge the idea of who gets to shape music culture in Britain?
I think what the Rebel Radio experience, and my podcast series celebrate is the lengths these marginalized voices went to make themselves heard, despite the risks. It’s not the illegality that stays with you, but the zeal – the NEED to do it. It’s not for money that you crawl to the 14th floor of a building so you can broadcast two step soul, or community messages on London Greek Radio, or on a Nigerian Pentecostal network.
As far as shaping music culture, you only have to look at how many of those DJs made their way through the music business and mainstream music radio to see the impact.
You’re a rare talent who’s been both in front of and behind the mic. How does that dual perspective shape the way you tell audio stories?
That’s kind ha. It doesn’t really shape how I tell the stories; I guess it just means I can say what’s in my head as well as write a script for other people to say. I started on the other side of the mic as a presenter on Kiss and for the BBC, so it’s a minor really. I just want to tell stories to people, find out something interesting over ‘here’, and then shout about it over ‘there’. Much the same as my old job of DJing – find a song I like and then find some way of telling people about it.
There’s a clear reverence in the series for pirate radio as a form of cultural resistance. What do you think today’s digital broadcasters are inheriting or missing from that legacy?
I don’t think they are missing anything at all. I think today’s digital broadcasters are embracing the DIY aspect of radio, putting out their shows on all the myriad platforms available, are celebrating the fact that they can be as niche as they like. Big or small, they are also aware of the need to establish a community and an identity alongside their stations. That’s hopefully something we touch on in the last episode in the series.
Can you talk a bit about the use of archive audio and music in Gaps in the Dial? How important was it to you to bring the sonic textures of those eras into the present?
From an audio producer perspective, I always try and make programmes like that as I would a mixtape — with beats, rhythm and layers. I wish there was some more music in places, but you can’t have it all.
Essentially, I wanted to make each story as evocative as possible, so taking archive audio from that period was essential to help recreate that sense of place and time.
You’ve made everything from political documentaries to sport programs, what made Gaps in the Dial different or particularly meaningful for you?
That’s a good question – because it really was. I guess it was because it was personal and answered questions that the teenage me had been wondering about. Some of the people I spoke to were guys I admired as a youth and grew up listening to, who I have got to know very well since, like Norman Jay and Gilles Peterson. Some of the stories were of stations that had a mythical place in my mind, like LWR, so to talk to the founder of the station Zak Dee was fascinating. I could go on. These were stories about people and places, but they were also stories that made me think of my musical and cultural education. All my story telling starts with a curiosity of sorts of course, but not all of them are so personal.
The series is part of a wider push for community media and DIY platforms, what role do you see projects like this playing in shaping future broadcasters and listeners?
If it can encourage anyone else to realize that those small stories of community action and defiance are worth documenting, then job done. Having projects like this legitimized by institutions as fantastic as the Barbican are an encouragement and an acknowledgment to keep making sure that people are making themselves heard, by traditional methods as well as through more modern story telling techniques.
What’s next for you after Gaps in the Dial, and what kinds of stories are you most excited to tell in this current chapter of your career?
Next is a documentary for World Service about a Nigerian fashion designer called Adeju Thompson and his “Lagos Space Programme” label, and also a six part football series (my other love apart from music ha). The stories I’m excited to tell tend to be about the ‘why’ of culture, or sport, or politics, rather than just the ‘what’. The reasons behind it, the journey (metaphorical or actual) of people towards that moment. That’s what gets me excited. Further still I’d like to return to the story of pirate and underground radio, but I’ll tell you more about that

Rishma
