The Third Programme was dedicated to the discerning or "high-brow" listener providing serious classical music, concerts and plays as well as room for modern composers, and jazz. It was the first station to multifrequency on 909 KHz (MF) and 90.0 to 92.5 MHz (FM). It was the first channel to broadcast in stereo and in quadraphonic (matrix HJ) which enjoyed only short term success. A number of broadcasts were experimental for the engineering department and the listener, for instance one play consisted mainly of sound effects to be listened to wearing headphones only. After the death of Sir Henry Wood the BBC stepped in to sponsor his Promenade concerts, carrying them live every night on the Third Programme. It initally broadcast for 5 hours a night from 7pm to midnight, then from 07.00 to midnight; now it broadcasts 24 hours a day, following the useful technique commenced in Milan of repeating the day's output late at night. To improve the quality of outside broadcasts over telephone lines the BBC designed a NICAM style digitisation technique called pulse code modulation running at a sample rate of 14,000 per second per channel. It later designed digital recording machines (transportable) sampling at the same rate. Following the shake up of radio frequencies in 1978 it lost its MF channel. Radio 3 is renowned for its quality and quantity of chamber music output, tending to play pieces in its entirety rather than small parts of pieces. It is now available world wide on the internet and is broadcast digitally throughout the UK.