Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KBON went on the air in late 1997, the brainchild of Paul Marx, a DJ and nightclub owner from Crowley, Louisiana. [2] Marx wanted a mix of music that resembled what he played at DJ gigs — a core of Louisiana music like Cajun, zydeco, and swamp pop, with sides of country, blues, soul, and R&B. [2] Station DJs also broadcast in a mix of English and Cajun French.
KBON: 101.1 FM: Mamou: Rose Ann Marx ... Cajun Prairie Broadcasting, LLC ... 105.5 FM: Eunice: Cajun Prairie Broadcasting, LLC: Country and Cajun music, Swamp Pop and ...
In 2011, Rocky McKeon's band, Isle Dernière, released a cover of Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" entitled "L'homme en fer" with lyrics sung in Louisiana French on the compilation album En Français: Cajun 'n' Creole Rock 'n' Roll produced by Bayou Teche Brewing and Louis Michot of the Lost Bayou Ramblers. [13]
KLEB (1600 AM "The Rajun' Cajun") is a radio station in Golden Meadow, Louisiana, broadcasting a mix of swamp pop and traditional cajun music.In September 2019, it began to simulcast on K274DE 102.7 MHz, which broadcasts from the KLRZ tower facilities in Larose and allows the station's listening audience to choose between AM or FM.
WNOE-FM (101.1 MHz) is a country music station based in New Orleans, Louisiana. The iHeartMedia outlet broadcasts with an ERP of 100 kW. Its transmitter is located in New Orleans' East Area, and its studios are located downtown .
KEUN-FM (105.5 FM) is an American radio station licensed to Eunice, Louisiana, United States, and serving St. Landry Parish and surrounding areas. Owned by Dane Wilson, through licensee Cajun Prairie Broadcasting, LLC., which is owned by Wilson, [2] it broadcasts a contemporary country and Cajun music format every day except Saturdays, when it plays Cajun music from 5 a.m. to 6 p.m.
LRM944 in Esperanza, Santa Fe (it has assigned 101.3 MHz.); LRS774 in San Genaro, Santa Fe; Calchaquí in Tafí del Valle, Tucumán; del Sur in San Juan; Oxigeno in Suardi, Santa Fe ...
The two stations simulcast country music, WYNK-FM has kept the same call letters and country format ever since. Originally powered at 33,300 watts, WYNK-FM got a boost to 100,000 watts in the early 1970s, [ 2 ] then relocated to a taller tower in the early 1980s, allowing the station to be heard from New Orleans to Lafayette . [ 3 ]