Planet Rock was founded in 1999 as the only
classic rock radio station in the UK at that time. On 11 February 2008, the previous owner
GCap Media (now
Global Radio), announced that the station would close by 31 March 2008, along with sister station
theJazz, unless a buyer was found. According to a statement by former presenter
Fish, this was not due to the profitability of Planet Rock itself, which had been reported to be good, but rather to GCap's overall financial state. The station's relative popularity on digital radio brought controversy to the closure threat. Although theJazz ceased broadcasting on schedule, a campaign by listeners meant that a number of buyers expressed interest in Planet Rock, including a consortium publicly headed by
Queen guitarist
Brian May. On 4 June 2008, the station was sold to a consortium led by
Malcolm Bluemel and supported by
Tony Iommi,
Ian Anderson,
Gary Moore, and
Fish. There was no break in transmission and the programming remained unchanged. On 25 September 2012, it was reported that Malcolm Bluemel was looking for a buyer for the station. On 6 February 2013, the station was sold to
Bauer Media for a deal worth between £1 million and £2 million. On 23 May 2013, Bauer Media announced that the output of Planet Rock would become available on FM in the
West Midlands on the frequency used by
Kerrang! Radio in Birmingham from 14 June 2013. All programming now comes from London with the Birmingham studios closed and Kerrang! continuing in a different form on digital platforms. From 8am on 7 September 2015, the 105.2 FM frequency was taken over by
Absolute Radio. From 1 March 2016, Planet Rock moved from the Digital One DAB multiplex to the Sound Digital DAB multiplex.
Devon,
Cornwall, parts of Scotland and Wales and some other areas could not receive Planet Rock on the new multiplex. In late 2017/early 2018, new transmitters started at Pontop Pike and Ely, which widened the listening area of stations broadcasting via the Sound Digital ensemble. On 16 October 2023, Planet Rock converted to the DAB+ format, along with several other Bauer stations on SDL; this allowed Planet Rock to broadcast in stereo on digital radio again after a decade in mono, and freed up capacity which allowed sibling stations including
Absolute Classic Rock and
Kerrang! Radio to join the national lineup. A mono broadcast of Planet Rock was added to local DAB in certain areas at the same time, for the benefit of users of older receivers not compatible with DAB+. It promotes and runs its own events, notably 'Rockstock', an indoor rock festival. In 2017, Planet Rock launched its own magazine, also called
Planet Rock, as a replacement for
Kerrang! in Bauer's portfolio of music magazines. The magazine was edited by Paul Brannigan and was published once every two months until 2020, when it was decided that a number of titles (such as
Q) would be sold on to other publishers, with
Planet Rock magazine closing so the brand could be kept by Bauer for the radio station. On 13 December 2023, Planet Rock was removed from
Freesat,
Sky and
Virgin Media TV platform, along with every other radio station owned by Bauer Media on either of the three platforms, including
Absolute Radio,
Absolute Radio 80s,
Absolute Radio 90s,
Absolute Radio Classic Rock,
Hits Radio,
Greatest Hits Radio,
Kiss,
Magic and
Jazz FM. ==Notable presenters==