Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Live programming ended on July 20, 2012, [23] with the last song being "Let's Go to Bed" by the Cure (the first song on WFNX in 1983); [24] an automated version of WFNX remained available online until March 2013, when the Boston Phoenix publication shut down (citing huge financial losses), and was also heard on 101.7 FM [23] until 4:00 p.m. on ...
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee [1] Format [citation needed]; WACE: 730 AM: Chicopee: Holy Family Communications: Catholic WACF-LP: 98.1 FM ...
This article about a radio station in Massachusetts is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
The current station inherited a facility on the top floor of its studio now called the River Music Hall, which was designed for broadcasting live performances in the pre-rock era, and is used today to broadcast live performances and to record performances for later broadcast.
He was also WBET's program director, general manager and play-by-play announcer for high school sports during his time at the station. [28] In 2004, frequent fill-in host Steve Mason became the successor to Bergeron, who is currently a freelance broadcaster and weekend sports anchor at WBZ in Boston.
WROR-FM (105.7 FM) – branded as 105.7 WROR – is a commercial classic hits radio station licensed to Framingham, Massachusetts.Owned by the Beasley Broadcast Group, the station serves Greater Boston and much of surrounding New England, including portions of the Portsmouth and Providence radio markets.
WILD first went on the air in 1946 as WBMS, with a classical music format. Eventually, the station went to a "popular music" format, briefly adopted the call letters WHEE, then went back to being WBMS. By the end of the 1950s, the call letters were changed to WILD under owner Bartell Broadcasters, who tried a personality DJ and music format.
WZLX originally known as WCOP-FM is notable for being one of the first FM stations to break simulcasting with its AM partner.WCOP-FM's separate programming was initially classical music and was one of the first FM stations in the region to (briefly) broadcast in FM stereo (the station would resume stereo programming in the early 1970s).