The album "No Televison" and especially the hit-single "She goes nana" became a huge success in Belgium , the Netherlands and even in Germany.
 

Humo reviewed the album as follows : " ... with an almost repulsive virtuosity they run havoc with the legacy of the Beatles. The records is bursting with enchanting melodies, the brothers Mosuse form - in all modesty - a heavenly choir. Add a twinkling production by Jan Leyers (see Soulsister or My Velma) and you know "The sound of music" is a case of popmusic : a passing sound, for a moment you think "oh how beautiful", but then you stop thinking and nothing remains. It doesn't run deep, because it doesn't want to. It mainly wants to please".

Their popularity was at it's greatest at the 1993 edition of Marktrock, where a live-album was captured. The eagerly awaited successor to "the sound of music", entitled "Baby Yes!" didn't live up to the expectations. Or as Humo put it in a review of another bad album : "You would almost start to scream for the Radios when you hear this, if these hadn't just released "Non, non rien a changé", an all-time low in the history of western civilization."

In 1994, the last hit of the band was "Teardrops", a sentimental and melancholic love song, beautifully sung by Robert Mosuse. A little bit later the band fell apart, as they preferred the band to end when it hadn't dried up completely yet.

Members :
- Bart Peeters (vocals, guitar, drums)
- Danny Lademacher (guitar)
- Alain Van Zeveren (keyboards)
- Robert Mosuse (percussion, vocals)
- Ronny Mosuse (bass, vocals
- Marc Bonne (drums)

Albums :
- No Televison (EMI - 1991)
- Dreaming wild soundtrack to "Boys" (1991)
- The sound of music (EMI - 1992)
- The Radios Live (EMI - 1993)
- Baby Yes (EMI - 1994)