Internet radio for Luddites


I listen to Jazz FM a lot in my workshop but when they switched from DAB to DAB+ I bought a Denon DNP-800NE purely for that and continue with my beloved TU1800 for BBC as it's so easy to switch stations, sounds good enough and is internet free. Use a Wi-fi link at the moment which isn't great (might run a CAT cable but it's going to be a pain) but the main thing is I want to get all the great American jazz stuff and the DNP can do it but it's a major PITA for a simpleton like myself that just wants to press a button, store a few favourites and surf without staring at a tablet/ monitor/ phone etc. I don't do apps (have an old Nokia and my vintage I-pad doesn't play ball with a lot of stuff now). My amp (Cambridge Audio CXA80) will take digital which I use for both tuners and a CXC transport (even has XLRs on it) and is running Quad 57s and an REL. 

I used to have a portable radio thing in the kitchen that brought all the internet stations up on a screen and you just scrolled and pressed and used the headphone out to my separates- sound was surprisingly good but the main thing was useability.- just want station name and poss what's playing. When it died went back to a TIBO DAB+ which is OK but lost all those stations.

The only solution I can see at the mo is to make space for a spare computer with decent sound card and plug it in but want the workshop to be my escape from that...

Never bother with FM now despite decent antenna and reasonable reception (have an old Leak Troughline along with various other Denon, Technics etc tuners sitting unloved at the mo)

Anything under a grand (UK sterling) would be marvelous
keithsax
A music service like Amazon, Spotify or whatever has 60 million songs to listen to.  Jazz all day, never hear the same song.   A streamer setup or Bluetooth speakers connected to the computer..

Has the O.P. ruled out using a P.C.?  He doesn’t want “apps” and “phones” but never mentioned PC.  iTunes used to have an internet radio section by genre.  It was part of the Operating System so technically not an “app”.  I used it to pull in Classical Stations from all over the world.  You just simply hit the iTunes icon on the menu bar and it was as idiot proof as could be.  He could probably find old Mac from 15 years ago for a few bob that still has whatever versions of the MacOS ran iTunes.  Something tells me that this would also be off the table for him, although the reality is that the Cambridge is just a PC decked out like an audio component 
Thanks cm6td- have just been reading the instructions for CXN and you are totally right. It seems to be the only bit of kit out there that is pretty much switch on, set the WiFi up and listen/ explore with a reasonable display. The reviews seem pretty good for sound quality as well- the sound quality and useability of the CX amp/ transport does it for me.

The Denon will just stay on Jazz FM- it wants me to set up an HEOS account but I'm going to use it effectively as one large preset box. Have had mixed fortunes with Denon in the past- DRM 24-HX chewed up a fortune in cassettes (after second warranty fix gave up on it and have a Technics RS-BX747 that's still going!), have had AV amps break as well. Still love the TU1800 though.

Having said that have had broken Cambridge Audio subs and AV amps

I'm not IT illiterate- used to programme Fortran77, build computers from scratch including software installs, drivers, music software, keyboards etc; I just want to escape all that and listen to music.

My epitaph will be 'no I didn't get the app'!
I see Audiolab do a 6000N with presets on the front but it sounds like this has 'app synchronicity' issues. Also Arcam but again app based by the look of it to work effectively. Also it's radio stations with real people/ DJ's and human involvement that I want- can surf You-Tube, Spotify (used to subscribe) etc. anyway. Don't mind the adverts as you get those on everything else now as well anyway; 'skip-ad in 6s',  pop-ups, algorithms making you think you're finding new music