acroyear: (decisions...)
Joe's Ancient Jottings ([personal profile] acroyear) wrote2007-01-22 06:54 pm
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the ever changing face of DC radio

Today's changeover marked the end of the oldest consistent format station in DC history, and even then, it had moved frequencies several times.

WMAL is, as far as I know, now the oldest station (or darn close to it) as far as the combination of format and frequency goes - it was around  as a news-talk station (with slight conservative bias) when I arrived here in 1984.  WASH FM has been "adult contemporary" since the 70s.

Pretty much everything else has changed.
  • WTOP changed frequencies.  Twice.
  • WGMS changed frequencies and disappeared.  Its final frequency, 104.1, was a kids pop / top40 station through the 90s.
  • WAVA, once the #1 station, is now Christian radio
  • WCXR, at the forefront of classic rock, is now light jazz
  • 106.7 wasn't even consistent back then - it was pop, then new-age/jazz, then some obscure rock crap until it picked up Stern and went talk-humor with Don & Mike (who hit #1 in the mornings back in the 80s though constantly fighting the Greaseman to hold it)
  • 107.3 was pop/40, WAVA's then biggest competitor, and at some point became adult-pop ("best mix", meaning its in competition with the new 104.1 "George")
  • WGAY 99.1 was the muzak station for *decades* (though originally a country station) before finally giving in and turning into light adult contemporary (translation: mellow ancient history) - the call letters now belong to an internet radio station that does "pro-homosexual" music, and the station itself was bought by Bonneville (go fig)
  • WARW (94.7) is now the classic rock station, but it was light rock when i was here.
  • 95.5 (now one of the highest-rated *music* channels - which shows how much more popular "talk" is around here) went through phases of top 40 into adult contemporary before its current urban sound
  • DC101 was always contemporary rock and so didn't change as such - the music did.  It gave up on what was then termed "AOR" as that format died utterly in 1991 and by 1993 it was in full competition with WHFS, whose form of "alternative rock" had suddenly become the mainstream.  DC101 was, once, the last independent station in the area, but sold out in 2001.  (Nearby Baltimore's 98rock has also gone through the transition from AOR to "modern" rock)
  • and of course, we all know what happened to 99.1 WHFS...
*sigh*

is there nothing constant?

didn't think so.

[identity profile] mizjawnson.livejournal.com 2007-01-23 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
What's sad is it was only December when I realized that Z104 was no more. I listened to "George" on the way home. Meh. I had hoped that it would be like "Simon" in Greensboro (especially Flashback Fridays where they played 90s music all day), but from what I heard tonite, it's nowhere close.

[identity profile] thelongshot.livejournal.com 2007-01-23 03:02 am (UTC)(link)
is there nothing constant?

Considering most music is a moving target, it shouldn't be much of a surprise. No music movement is lasting in appeal to a large population, so stations adjust for the times.

I find Lee Abrams' blog, where he talks about some of the stations he has consulted for over the years before joining XM, quite interesting. In the end, it what gets ratings that wins out. Sometimes, you can do it by being creative and doing it well, but that takes work.

When I moved to this area, Z104 and 107.3 were the stations I listened to, partially because the stations closer to DC and Baltimore didn't come in as well in Frederick. I eventually discovered 98 Rock in the early 90s and they were still a great station then. I did listen to it not too long ago and was annoyed that they went with the "afternoon personality", one of those trends I really hate about modern radio. Sorry, I don't want to hear about whatever shit you have gotten into. Play the music, man.

Jason

[identity profile] blueeowyn.livejournal.com 2007-01-23 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm, for some reason I thought that WGAY became WARW when GAY became a charged word in some people's minds. I'm going back a ways of course.