Back in the old analog days, there were two types of analog audio channels. What is described above are the subcarriers that were often described as FM^2, particularly if they were on channels that didn't have analog video, but they were on channels with and without video. The ones on regular video channels could be tuned in with the regular analog receivers, but the other ones needed to be tuned with a communications receiver tuned to the baseband output of the analog receiver.
The second type of analog audio were the SCPC analog signals. These either requirred a communications receiver capable of receiving in the 950-1450 band directly off the coax from the LNB, or some people did it with a communications receiver connected to the 70 mHz loop of the analog receiver (some receivers had the loop at another freq, like 140MHz), which is about a 40 MHz band covering the channel that the receiver is tuned to.
There used to be about an equal number of audio channels on FM^2 and SCPC modes, but the last time I checked, which was several years ago, they were 98% gone. It was such a time consuming job searching for the darn things, that it became not worth the effort looking for them.
When those things were there though, it was really fun finding them. In addition to regular audio, there were APT images sent up there with weather maps from the GOES satellites rebroadcasted on regular TVRO sats, along with those AP/UPI type pictures that you'd see in the newspaper the next day. It was a lot of fun doing FM^2 / SCPC stuff.