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WETA (90.9 FM) is a non-commercial, public FM radio station licensed to serve Washington, D.C., broadcasting a classical music format. Its studios are located in Arlington, Virginia and its broadcast tower is located near Arlington at ( 38°53′30.0″N 77°7′54.0″W / 38.891667°N 77.131667°W / 38.891667; -77.131667
Classical/Public Radio WEPV-LP: 104.1 FM: Hampton: St. Mary Star of the Sea Catholic Church: Catholic WEQF-FM: 105.3 FM: Dillwyn: Calvary Chapel of Lynchburg ...
The Washington metropolitan area is currently the seventh-largest radio market in the United States. [1] While most stations originate within Washington, D.C. proper, this list includes also stations that originate from Northern Virginia and Annapolis, Maryland.
WILL-FM's HD2 digital subchannel is a 24-hour music stream with the C-24 classical music service, along with WILL-FM's locally produced classical music shows. This programming is relayed by translator station W266AF 101.1 MHz in Urbana, but moved exclusively to a webstream on February 1, 2024.
102.5 FM: Rocky Mount: New Lite Media: Gospel WAME: 550 AM: Statesville: Statesville Family Radio Corporation: Classic country WAOG-LP: 100.7 FM: Aberdeen: Calvary Chapel of the Sandhills: Christian WARR: 1520 AM: Warrenton: Logan Darensburg d/b/a Darensburg Broadcasting: African-American Variety WART-LP: 95.5 FM: Marshall: Radio Madison ...
Late night/early morning broadcasts are provided by Classical 24. WBJC's primary competition for classical music listeners is WETA 90.9 FM in Washington, D.C. Although WETA-FM is a Washington metropolitan area station, its service contour covers portions of the Baltimore metropolitan area. [8] WBJC 5th Anniversary Program Guide September 1957
WETA assumed the classical format just five hours later, at 8 p.m. EST. WETA hired Jim Allison as its new program director, and Bonneville donated its 15,000-disc WGMS music library to WETA. Bonneville also gave WETA the right to use the WGMS callsign; WETA adopted it for its repeater station in Hagerstown, Maryland , previously known as WETH.
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