Radio Record is a Russian radio station that broadcasts on 106.3 FM from Saint Petersburg. It airs an electronic dance music format with primarily trance and house offerings now expanded to variety of different genres including Rock, Deep House, Future House, Dubstep.
Radio Record began broadcasting on August 22, 1995.[1] It was originally recorded from a small office. It was the first radio station to switch to the dance format and this was based on a vote from the listening audience. Since 2004, the radio station began broadcasting via satellite to the European territory of Russia.
According to statistics from 2011, listeners are mainly from 15 to 35 years old.[1] The station mainly focuses on a male youth audience. In 2011, the average daily audience of the radio station in Saint Petersburg was 350,000 people now expanded to worldwide.[11]
Also, although I am looking for a program that would record songs with tag names, I am not aware of a Linux program that can record radio songs separately (split) even without tag names and titles. - So, a such program may deserve to be mentioned too.
Streamtuner2 is a basic application used primarily for playing internet radio from any number of sources including Xiph, basic.ch, punkcast.com, Google Stations, Live365, and SHOUTcast. It will use streamripper to record and an external player to play a stream.
To set custom folder for recordings in Streamtuner2, under 'Edit-Properties-Recording application', edit the line under 'Application' by adding -d path_to_folder at the end (like x-terminal-emulator -e streamripper %srv -d /home/user/Audio/Recordings). There can be added many other custom commands that streamripper allows - see below on more options.
Streamripper sits stealthily in the terminal recording and parsing all of the music piped through your system into MP3s. Leaving Streamripper running all day will rack you up a healthy dose of your favorite tunes. By itself streamripper is able to record streams with the command:
What is particularly nice about the combination of Streamripper and streamtuner2 is that once you choose a station to record, you can exit streamtuner2 leaving only a tiny, non-obtrusive terminal window for Streamripper.
StreamWriter has more features: it can record multiple streams at the same time, can schedule recording of specific station, tracks, artists, etc. It can convert to mp3, aac and ogg, or it can avoid changing format. Two issues need attention though:
the tags-saving feature is disabled by default for some reason. So, enable it under 'File-Settings-Posprocessing' and in 'File-Settings for automatic recordings-Posprocessing'. The fully tagged file will be saved in a separate folder at the end of each track. During recording the incomplete file will not be tagged.
The Exaile music player for a long time has had the ability to use Streamripper built-in. Just install Exaile and Streamripper, then enable it in the preferences gui of Exaile,you'll find it with all the other plugins. That's it, just hit the record button while listening to your favorite radio station.
The Philco Phorum is a family-friendly place for the discussion of Philco radios and related items.Please feel free to join us! Unlock sections of the Phorum that non-members cannot see. Sign up for Phorum membership today!Welcome to The PHILCO Phorum
Flip through the stacks of more than 10,000 vinyl records from over 10 dealers to find your next album at the Rise Radio record fair with tunes by DJs Son of Sound, Lupe Loop, CamilleBWR, Albert Mix and D. Briggs. Genres include House, disco, techno, italo/hi nrg/eurodance, jazz, hip hop, rock, punk, metal, reggae, more. Featuring Discogs allstars like Studebakerhawk, Dom Casual, Disco de Facto and many more.
The filesink contains the filename variable and appends the properly formatted date/timestamp. Since we may want to trigger multiple recordings after starting the flowgraph, the date/timestamp needs to be generated each time the user triggers a recording, so the syntax must be expressed inside block. If we didn't do this, the date/timestamp would only be set once during the initial setup of the flowgraph.
Then we will use two different variable blocks to define first, the top-level directory (/home/) and second, the appropriate subdirectory data/iq_captures for the recordings. This can be changed to your preference.
The below python syntax is put in the "file" parameter of the file sink block. It includes the radio parameters with the date/timestamp. This is incomplete however, as it would record constantly from the time the flowgraph starts. When recording raw IQ we need to be mindful of disk space as raw IQ can take up space fast. In the next section we will show how to trigger the recording with a momentary pushbutton as a safety for our disk space and to keep our recordings limited to only the signals we want to record.
Using python conditional statement, we can send the I/Q samples to /dev/null until the record button is pressed (and held). When the record button is pressed, the I/Q samples will begin streaming to a file with a timestamp and radio parameters of the flowgraph's state at the time the button was pressed. When released it will send the samples back to /dev/null
But I do know that this was aired back in the days when all radio was live. DJs were not always adept at working with prerecorded material, and so it is interesting to note the warning (typed with a typewriter) on the label of this record:
With nearly 72 years on the airwaves, a Conroe woman now holds the Guinness Record title for being the "World's Longest Serving Female Radio Presenter/DJ." Growing up, Mary McCoy, 85, dreamed of getting into the entertainment business. She spent part of her childhood living in a tent without electricity or running water but her life took a turn when she got her break in 1951 at the age of only 12. After signing up to sing in a talent show at radio station KMCO, she told presenters that she wanted her very own show.
McCoy was officially verified by Guinness on Feb. 15, 2023 after beating the previous record holder by more than three years. However, it's not the first major recognition McCoy has received: She has also been inducted into the Texas Radio Hall of Fame and is featured in a Legends Mural in Conroe.
An image of radio DJ Mary McCoy and Elvis Presley during his 1955 visit to Conroe hangs on the wall of the KSTAR Radio building along with other signed images to McCoy from country music legends, Wednesday, March 1, 2023, in Montgomery.
Earlier this week, McCoy even earned a shoutout from Ryan Seacrest on Live with Kelly and Ryan for her new record. "I started when I was 15," Seacrest said about his own radio career on Wednesday's telecast, adding that he is "on the way" to break McCoy's record.
Welcome to Record Breakin\u2019 Music (RBM), a Philadelphia-based indie record label started by tastemaker DJ Junior. We have a straightforward approach to releasing quality new music with a soulful foundation. DJ Junior has been dropping soulful gems for some time now. Eavesdrop Radio his weekly radio show on WKDU 91.7FM (that he co-host with lil' dave) is a staple for music heads tuning in for jazz, soul, hip hop, latin grooves, afro-beat, broken beat and everything in-between.
You can listen some popular radio stations using play command with link to stream you want to listen. You can see full list of supported streams from tables below. For example: !play -srv1.11one.ru/record192k.mp3`
Penn State University astronomers using the world's largest radio telescope, at Arecibo, Puerto Rico, have discovered flaring radio emission from an ultra-cool star, not much warmer than the planet Jupiter, shattering the previous record for the lowest stellar temperature at which radio waves were detected.
The team from Penn State's Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics and the Center for Exoplanets and Habitable Worlds, led by Alex Wolszczan, the discoverer of the first planets ever found outside our solar system, has been using the giant 305-m (1000-ft) telescope to look for radio signals from a class of objects known as brown dwarfs. These objects are small, cold stars that bridge the gap between Jupiter-like giant planets and normal, more-massive, hydrogen-fusing stars. The astronomers hit the jackpot with a star named J1047+21, a brown dwarf 33.6 light years away in the constellation Leo, in a result that could boost the odds of discovering life elsewhere in the universe.
Matthew Route, a graduate student at Penn State and the lead author of the discovery paper, said, "This object is the coolest brown dwarf ever detected emitting radio waves -- it's half the temperature of the previous record holder, making it only about five times hotter than Jupiter."
The new radio-star is much smaller and colder than our Sun. With a surface temperature not much higher than that of a giant planet, and a size comparable to Jupiter's, it is scarcely visible in optical light. Yet the radio flares seen at Arecibo show it must have a strong magnetic field, implying that the same could be true of other similar stars.
The discovery of radio signals from J1047+21 dramatically broadens the window through which astronomers can study the atmospheres and interiors of these tiny stars, using the radio detection of their magnetic fields as a tool. At the temperature of this brown dwarf, its atmosphere must be made of neutral gas, which would not give off radio signals like those seen. SO The energy to drive the signals is likely to come from magnetic fields deep inside the star, similar to the field that protects the Earth from dangerous high-energy particles. By monitoring the radio flares from J1047+21, astronomers will be able to tell how stable the magnetic field is over time, and, from flare duration, they can infer the size of the emitter itself. The results were published in the March 10 2012 edition of the Letters section of the Astrophysical Journal.
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