Adam Sherwin, Media Correspondent
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Britain has discovered life beyond the FM dial, with millions of listeners tuning in to digital-only radio stations.
Adaptations of Dickens, Latin jazz and celebrity gossip are thriving in a listening environment where mobile phones and computers are challenging analogue radios.
Figures from Radio Joint Audience Research (RAJAR), a listening bureau, show that the number of people listening to digital-only radio stations has soared from 905,000 in 2003 to 6 million today. One in four adults now listens to radio digitally, including through televisions, mobile phones and computers. A total of 136 million hours is spent listening to digital radio each week.
Although Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) sets are becoming increasingly stylish, they lack green credentials. Scientists estimate that they consume five to eight times more power than conventional analogue sets.
Listening to the radio through a mobile phone increased by 27 per cent last year, and 2.7 million people listen to podcasts on MP3 players. The number of people listening to the radio reached a new high of 46.5 million a week.
Music fans with niche tastes no longer have to wait for a BBC specialist programme. TheJazz started to broadcast a mixture of prebebop, swing, Latin and Brazilian music at Easter. Its debut figures showed that the station attracted 334,000 listeners a week, with jazz fans tuning in for an average of seven hours each week. The station claimed a 15 per cent bigger audience for jazz than Radio 3, which reaches 291,000 listeners when it broadcasts jazz programmes.
Darren Henley, the managing director of theJazz, said: “It is no longer a one-size-fits-all environment and digital stations are tapping into these specialist areas.
“No one was listening to the jazz audience, their music was becoming more and more marginalised, but we have now been able to fill that gap.”
Big winners of the digital age include BBC 6 Music, which caters for rock fans who feel alienated by Radio 1 but are not yet ready to Wake Up To Wogan, and BBC 7, which has attracted 738,000 listeners to its drama adaptations and classic comedies.
Changing tastes forced Smash Hits off of the magazine shelves but the brand lives on as a radio station that has nearly one million listeners. The celebrity magazine Heat also has a thriving digital spin-off.
The Today programme, which increased its audience to 6.2 million during Tony Blair’s final year at 10 Downing Street, faces its first determined digital competitor. Channel 4 Radio, which is due to be launched next year, will broadcast a news and current affairs breakfast show incorporating the values of its acclaimed television news presented by Jon Snow.
Radio 3 is feeling the blast of digital competition the most. Its audience has fallen to its lowest-ever recorded figure - down by 119,000 listeners to 1.78 million in the last quarter. The station’s audience failed to respond to a schedule shake-up that was instigated by Roger Wright, the station’s Controller.
A spokesman said that the station’s audience figures were traditionally low at this time of year.
But Chris Moyles, whose show is the BBC’s most popular podcast, soared to a new high for Radio 1. The breakfast show host now has 7.26 million listeners – up by 470,000 from this time last year. He is closing in on the nation’s favourite breakfast DJ, Terry Wogan on Radio 2, who is now only 660,000 listeners ahead.
Radio 2 remains Britain’s most popular radio station, attracting 13.1 million listeners.

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The Jazz' was my reason for buying a DAB radio, so I'm really dissapointed that it's closed down. It was an oasis of difference from the usual daytime dross output on Radio2 and other commercial sites. Clearly keeping a station on-air requires revenue and The Jazz ran very few ads. Still I am hopeful that more genre based music radio will be available in time. DAB is wasted on the likes of mainstream BBC voice only products since FM serves them so well.
DAB reception on the move is so poor that in-car or mobile DAB is no match for FM, despite FM's patchy mobile reception.
The majority of people are unlikey to buy a fifty quid plus DAB unit unless, like me, there is something more to be gained; were The Jazz not to have existed I would certainly not have purchased a DAB radio just to listen to the same content as I can get on FM.
I am strongly opposed to any form of coersion being used to force people to switch to DAB from FM.
Rod Griffiths, Bristol, UK
I agree with the 30 January media reporting of Enders Analysts concerns over volume of DAB stations, which I guess is another reason why senior executives are leaving the industry. DAB multiplexes are swamped with stations few listen to, therby reducing audio quality by deploying low bit rates.
My excitement with DAB is its improved reception of existing well established local and national AM stations like 5 live, complementing existing FM stations which need not be duplicated on DAB. The addition of stations like the Jazz and Planet Rock are welcome and popular, but we really don't need many more, nor I suspect can the market sustain them.
I would like to see the termination of all AM transmissions, retaining FM with DAB. An ideal compromise if the going gets tough?
Andy Newark, Cranleigh, UK
Pure DAB radios can be upgraded to DAB+ with a software upgrade. The government should announce a switch off date ASAP otherwise the industry will stagnate.
Neil, Sussex,
Think of the number of DAB radio's we will need to update if DAB+ using AAC technology comes into effect here in the UK. With over 5 million of us now tuning into DAB, think how many radios will become obsolete if we move to this.
Robin, Gillingham, Kent
Another major problem has to be that we were an early adopter of DAB but the rest of Europe adopted another incompatible standard?
(2nd attempt)
Ted F, Weston-super-mare, UK
Think of the number of radios that will have to thrown away if analogue broadcasting is ever switched off. Its mind boggling let alone the expense.
chris, woodbridge, suffolk