25 Years of Top of the Pops
Words: Chris Arnsby
Mike Read:
“This is where Top of the Pops started life on the first of January 1964. A
converted church in Dickenson Road, Manchester.”
Paul
Gambaccini: And this is was the very first disc jockey. He's still going strong
as well. Despite groups leaning on them these cameras as still working.”
Mike Read: “And
they are still rolling the cameras 25 years later as we head into twenty five
years of Top of the Pops.”
Jim Moir: “Yes
it's number one! It's Top of the Pops.”
[Roll credits].
Welcome to 25
Years of these writeups Top of the Pops. Extensive research (I used
Google for nearly five minutes) has told me Jim Moir was the voice of the
introduction. That's Jim Moir, director of a couple of episodes of Top of
the Pops, and producer of Juke Box Jury and assorted other Light
Entertainment programmes. Not the Jim Moir latterly known as Vic Reeves.
Let's start as
I mean to go on, with a conspiracy theory. Look at that picture of the
Manchester studio. Does the sign over the door look odd to you? I can't find a
comparable picture of the building but others show the BBC using a much simpler
sign, black background with white BBC letters. And, wouldn't it read BBC North rather than BBC Television
Service Manchester Studios?
The sign is
very bright with an overexposed look to the white background compared to the
rest of the photo and there's an odd stepped black line at the bottom. Let's
stop beating around the (Shepherds) bush. The picture looks doctored. I could
believe the sign was an electronic overlay but if it is, it's a stunningly good
one. The photo is clearly mounted on a caption stand, look at the way it
wobbles, and the sign moves with the wobble and matches the zoom out perfectly.
Maybe I'm overthinking it. The picture could be genuine but printed with
boosted contrast on the sign to make it stand out.