It's Official: The Top Ten Most Played Artists On UK Radio!

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
1. George Michael
2. Elton John
3. Robbie Williams
4. Kylie Minogue
5. Bryan Adams
6. Madonna
7. Phil Collins
8. Cliff Richard
9. Mick Hucknall
10. Paul McCartney
Source: Radio Academy

Full Article & A Chance To Leave Your Comments on "Do you think there is too much of the same music spread across the UK stations or are you happy with the choice on offer? " Here!

Newshound, Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:03 (nineteen years ago) link

I have to say that the women own that top ten.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:06 (nineteen years ago) link

All two of them?

Super-Kate (kate), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:06 (nineteen years ago) link

Compared to the offerings of the other eight people!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:07 (nineteen years ago) link

Gosh, that's depressing.

Sinéad (mokey), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:10 (nineteen years ago) link

Bryan Adams??? Has he had a record in the past 7 years?

dieblucasdie (dieblucasdie), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:13 (nineteen years ago) link

So, this is basically every local radio station, which might as well have one central record-playing centre, and an information centre with how long a gap in seconds till the next record, so the local station can fit in the local news, late night chemists, and people phoning in requests for "Umm, can you play "Everything I do" for my husband/wife" in the sure fire-ness that it will probably get played anyway, within the next hour.

Or, no?

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:29 (nineteen years ago) link

my guess at the top ten most played artists on ilx:
1. Junior Boys
2. Dismemberment Plan
3. Wiley
4. Magnetic Fields
5. Dizzee Rascal
6. Basement Jaxx
7. Streets
8. Busted
9. Guy Mitchell
10. Styx

Jesus H. Clapton, Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:35 (nineteen years ago) link

GEORGE MICHAEL!?!?!??!??!?!!?!?!?

Mr. Snrub (Mr. Snrub), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:36 (nineteen years ago) link

"Monkey on my back" only, though.

mark grout (mark grout), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:42 (nineteen years ago) link

Why is it all solo artists?

Sick Nouthall (Nick Southall), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:44 (nineteen years ago) link

Because there is no such thing as society, only individuals.

Milton Friedman, Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:48 (nineteen years ago) link

that top 10 represents the typical mainstream local radio stations ala Capital Radio or GWR type stations.

DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Which bands would compete with the artists above over the last 20 years? U2? Boyzone?

hmmm (hmmm), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Hey, Commercial Radio sucks.

In other News, Bears found to shit in woods. Pope rumoured to be Catholic. Etc.

noodle vague (noodle vague), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 14:55 (nineteen years ago) link

but this is just the sort of music the public loves. why else would westlife had so many no.1s? Did anyone listen to that bank holiday special radio 1 did a few weeks ago? They let the public choose what they would play all day, and ended up with a playlist of records that Radio 1 hasn't touched for a least a decade.

jellybean (jellybean), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 15:01 (nineteen years ago) link

Dismemberment Plan!?!?!??!??!?!!?!?!?

N. (nickdastoor), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 15:14 (nineteen years ago) link

this is over the last 20 years too.

The Huckle-Buck (Horace Mann), Wednesday, 28 April 2004 15:34 (nineteen years ago) link

Read a selection of your comments on the music that dominate the airwaves.


Back to top

I think there is so much rubbish being churned out by record companies that the radio stations have little choice but play what are the audience's favourites from the near & distant past. It's a credit to those artists & production teams that the radio stations keep playing them.
Phil Johnston, St Cyprien, France

During the day there is no choice. All local stations whether they are 'gold' or not play exactly the same songs. It's like they only have 10 acceptable records per style - for instance if the computer wants a 'classic r'n'b' song it will always play that Janet Jackson song 'Together Again'. Radio 1 is just as limited but with more modern music. After 6pm things improve alot. Vic on Radio Scotland is excellent.
Tom, Edinburgh


I was in London and the music had a fair mix of sounds. England Rocks! The best bands in the world have come from your country and you folks should be proud of the diversity in your music.
Clay Sword, Portland, USA

It¿s good to see that the established acts with talent still rule the airwaves despite the manufactured 'here today, gone tomorrow' acts. All the entries in that chart use music to entertain, that's what makes them so great.
Keith Smith, Neston, England

Music? What Music? They barely fit in any music between the news, weather, traffic and adverts!! Everytime you tune in to any station it's either the DJ loving the sound of his own voice or adverts and then they try and squeeze a song in before the news and weeather so you never get to hear a whole song anyway because if they're not doing that then the DJ is talking over it!! All radio stations are nowadays is an advertising/information service with specks of music every now and then if you are lucky!!
Taylor Williams, Surrey

Yes I do agree that too much of the same music is spread across the UK. Day in and day out I have to listen to the top ten listed above along with the likes of will young and dido and maybe the occasional 70's and 80's tracks thrown in. Infact sometimes I can set my watch by what they are playing. Music has been around for over 50 yrs and yet I have to listen to the same 50 songs a week more less at least once or twice a day..if it is in the charts if I am lucky it will be played at least 10. Surely it is about time to give back some of the power to the DJ to play some of the music instead of a computer picking a daily playlist from about 100 songs which lets face it never get changed. Something needs to be done!!
Phil Donnachie, Folkestone, England

I think there is too much pop music played on radio today and there is not enough variety. Urban music is the fastest growing music genre in the world. The UK has a lot of talent but its black music industry is very poor and it needs all the support it can get. 1Xtra is providing this but it is seldom done and times are changing and radio seems just like it was 10 years ago.
Mark Reardon, Croydon, England

Good for George, it's about time he was rewarded for all his hard work and brilliant songwriting.
Dan Marshall, Brighton MI USA


I used to listen to the radio. Now I have stopped. There is simply too much influence from popstars who become famous for their looks and not their talent. I would recommend listening to Internet radio - wide ranges of taste, no adverts, no annoying presenters and huge variety of music.
Neal, Bath


I would rather listen to the likes of George Michael and Elton John but thanks to programs like Pop Idol, radio stations depend far too much on music that sounds the same and is performed by people who's musical careers last as long as the song they're "singing".
Mark Merryweather, Bracknell , UK.


There are a lot of stations playing the same pop music and there are fewer stations that play alternative types of music such as classical and rock. There are, however, no stations playing proper club dance music. Radio 1 and Kiss play quite of few hours of it in a week but there is no station that plays it enough apart from on the internet.
Ian, Exeter, england


We always used to refer to our local (independent) radio station as "Phil Collins FM". Always, it seems, whenever you tuned in it was either him or Genesis. We have a good selection of independent and BBC stations in this part of the country, but even so the majority of what you hear does come from that list. Plus Dido.
Alan, Poole, Dorset


What chance do most new or unknown artists have, when almost every radio station is playing from the same sheet? It's time the major labels and stations lost their grip on what they think we should be listening to. Is it any wonder the same artists are always at the number one spot, especially now that 'airplay' is taken into account - how else do they explain reaching number one on airplay alone, even if no-one has purchased the record yet?
H Kani, London, UK

It's quite scary that this completley middle of the road, music by the numbers dominates radio. These characters are always made into jokes a few years after their career suffocates, yet mainstream radio endorses these figures who have have their completely neutral, inoffensive "music" written by someone else.
Dan, London, UK


I personally don't feel the problem is across radio stations as a whole, just some like Radio One with a tired playlist. I turned on for the first time in ages recently, and they were still playing a certain song they'd been playing a year ago! Please DJs, let's get some freshness!
Tony, UK


The consolidation of Independent Local Radio stations by one or two major groups has vastly reduced the quality of commercial radio. You can now listen to ILR in Exeter, and it will be almost indistinguishable from the stations in, say, Wrexham or Crawley. This has caused commercial radio to give too much coverage to mainstream music from the major labels. The only possible result is further marginalisation of less popular musical genres. One solution would be to say that no single entity could own more than three local radio licenses. This would encourage stations to develop their own unique styles, as opposed to slavishly copying the corporate format.
Michael Hall, Exeter, Devon


Is this not the top 10 of bland music? You'd hear better in a lift.
Nicky, Dublin


If it's all the same then maybe it's because people aren't buying enough diverse music. So where do you hear this diverse music? On the radio, etc. It will be interesting to see what happens when the single disapears, charts may have to be based on downloads and then perhaps there will be more diversity as people find out what they want to listen to by themselves.
Andy Cottier, London


I think the radio stations, with a few exceptions, are terrible. If you have to be forced to listen to Radio 1 or Capital (or ANY commercial station for that fact) you will be driven crazy by the same five records, it seems, played over and over and over again all day long. I have worked in factories where this is the case and it really does do your brain in!!!
Stuart Hacking, Watford, Herts


Henry Ford told his customers they could have his Model-T in any colour they liked "so long as it's black." Well, nowadays they'll let you hear any music you like - so long as it's Blue or Pink. Thank God for the internet!
Phillip Edwards, Nottingham, UK


Yep, the main stations in the UK seem to survive on a horribly syrupy mix of naff dance music and boy bands, with a mix of pop idol thrown in. Go anywhere else in the wrold and you get good honest music written by real people without the horrible corporate sheen we get stuffed with in this country. Can you picture where the next George Michael is coming? I can't.
Rick Byers, Preston, UK


After waking up to the same song at the same time on the same radio station three days in a row, I thought I was in "Groundhog Day". When a song is popular it does get played a lot though, but that's the way a station has to operate. It has to play to its targeted audience.
Ayoub, London


If anything I think that it is the new tunes that are over played. I find myself starting to like a new song, but after a couple of weeks I'm sick to the back teeth of it. They are played several times each day on every station. Then after a short 'honeymoon' period they dissapear into thin air. I think they need to be mixed up with older songs. Even on more up to date stations like Radio 1, they could play tuned from, say, the last 5 years in between the recent ones. Also more specialist stations are needed, the ones that exist can be impossible to pick up on the frequencies they use.
Nick McDonald, Lancaster, England


The fact that Bryan Adams is so high is probably down to one song. You know the one I mean...
Gianni Brancazio, London, UK


X, Friday, 30 April 2004 17:57 (nineteen years ago) link

seventeen years pass...

Not sure where to put this grim thing, make sure to check out the figures for RadioX (formerly XFM)

FULL report: An analysis of the Top 20 Domestic British Artists/Bands featured across UK radio stations Top 20 Airplay Charts during the period of Aug 1st 2020-2021
: click here:https://t.co/OabYJQYxgU >>>> #GenderDisparityRadioUK pic.twitter.com/JmLT1h8Osc

— linda Coogan Byrne (@lindacooganb) September 17, 2021

edited to reflect developments which occurred (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 18 September 2021 08:43 (two years ago) link

Damn, wouldn't expect Radio 1's to be that bad in particular as it seems like the chart itself is more evenly matched (I guess not for UK artists?). A disgrace.

nashwan, Saturday, 18 September 2021 11:51 (two years ago) link

Radio X not a surprise but find it difficult to believe that Absolute didn’t play any solo female artists last year.

Dan Worsley, Saturday, 18 September 2021 13:29 (two years ago) link

Not what it says, just no female artists in their top 20 artists.

edited to reflect developments which occurred (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Saturday, 18 September 2021 13:38 (two years ago) link

Aah, ok. Missed that bit.

Dan Worsley, Saturday, 18 September 2021 14:51 (two years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.