Classic 21 is a Belgian public FM radio station, part of the RTBF broadcasting organisation. The station, based in Mons, was the only Classic rock radio in Belgium until 2008 when they switched to adult-contemporary and pop. The station plays predominantly B-side and obscure Anglophone music of the 1960s to 1990s for a French-speaking audience across Wallonia and Brussels and beyond.

Classic 21
Broadcast areaBelgium
Frequency93.2 MHz (Brussels)
90.8 MHz (Namur)
99,1 MHz (Charleroi/Mons)
104.6 MHz (Tournai/Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France)
95.6 MHz (Liège/Verviers)
87.6 MHz (Ardennes/Luxembourg)
Programming
Language(s)French
Ownership
OwnerRTBF
La Première
Tipik
Musiq'3
VivaCité
History
First air date
April 1, 2004; 20 years ago (2004-04-01)
Former call signs
Radio 21 (1983–2004)
Links
Websiteclassic21.be

History

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Classic 21 was created in 2004, at the same time as Pure FM, in replacing Radio 21.[1] Marc Ysaye, once best known as the drummer with Machiavel and Burning Plague,[2] was the controller of the station from its creation until an emotional last broadcast on 18 December 2022,[3][4][5] playing out with Jeff Buckley's version of Hallelujah and a snatch of the Beatles' The End with the message the love you take is equal to the love you make.[6]

Ysaye, great-grandson of composer-violinist Eugène Ysaÿe, had become an established feature on Radio 21 with his Sunday morning's Show "Les Classiques du dimanche matin", a show which continues on Classic 21 featuring 1960's-1980's music. Another Radio 21 show to have been carried across to Classic 21 is Walter de Paduwa's 'Doctor Boogie' which has been featuring upbeat blues, boogie and zydeco music since 1994[7] - every show starting with a track by Canned Heat.

Market share

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Classic 21 reached 9% of the Belgian Francophone market share in 2016.[8]

References

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  1. ^ Story of Radio 21 in French
  2. ^ Ysaye drummer for Burning Plague before 1998
  3. ^ Ysaye quits Classic 21
  4. ^ FB announces Marc Ysaye's farewell broadcast
  5. ^ Ysaye's last broadcast announced on RTBF website
  6. ^ Les Classiques online
  7. ^ Walter de Paduwa's self introduction on RTBF Archived 2012-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ CIM. "CIM 2016-3 Belgian Radio Market Share". CIM Belgian Media Market Statistics Authority. CIM. Retrieved 17 February 2017.
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50°51′7.24″N 4°24′9.94″E / 50.8520111°N 4.4027611°E / 50.8520111; 4.4027611

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