For a while no car ride was complete without hearing it.
Atlantic 252 - on longwave - was a 90s Manchester radio stalwart, even though it was based in Ireland.
The commercial station ran from 1988 up until its last broadcast in 2002 from its transmission site at Clarkstown, County Meath, reports Dublin Live.
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Broadcasts from the station could be heard as far away as Finland, Ibiza and even Moscow- but the station had close ties to Manchester - from local radio presenters to the early days of Take That - as well as a loyal local fanbase.
At the peak of its popularity in 1993, the station had six million listeners.
The longwave frequency meant it was picked up by a lot of drivers in older cars without FM - but it quickly gained a reputation for playing the same records a lot. Extreme's More Than Words and anything by Mike and Mechanics were particular favourites.
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Many successful artists, including Take That, did radio tours with Atlantic 252 before they hit it big.
In 2010, North Wales Live reported how a group of young men dressed in somewhat questionable outfits had taken to an impromptu stage in a Llangefni car park almost 20 years before.
Visiting the town as part of an Atlantic 252 roadshow, Take That would soon become superstars, selling more than 25 million records during the 1990s and launching a hugely successful comeback ten years later.
Mail photographer Richard Birch remembers being sent to photograph the fresh-faced young band.
At the time, he said: "Most people hadn’t got a clue who they were. Atlantic 252 was one of the only stations you could get around here, but nobody had ever heard of Take That, who arrived in a black Transit van."
Do you remember listening to Atlantic 252? Let us know in the comments section below.
Legendary radio DJ Simon ‘Nicksy’ Nicks was another local link - building a fanbase on Atlantic 252 before moving to Manchester's airwaves.
He got his big break there in 1992, after cutting his teeth in hospital radio.
And after leaving Atlantic he worked at some of the biggest radio stations across the north for 25 years, until he was diagnosed with cancer in 2017.
He was a well-known breakfast show DJ at Galaxy Radio and Key 103 and was also one of the presenters of the annual Manchester Pride event.
By the late 90s Atlantic was struggling to compete with local stations in a crowded commercial radio space and losing listeners.
Relaunches - first as an indie station, then as an urban music station - failed to bring back listeners, and by 2001 it had been sold.
After 12 years, Enda Caldwell presented the station's last broadcast in December 2001. It limped on with automated programming for another few days, before ceasing transmission for good in early 2002.
If you would like to take your ears down memory lane, you can listen to Atlantic 252 broadcasts online - with hits exclusively from 1989 to 2001.