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WZUM (1550 kHz) is a jazz AM radio station serving the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, market. The station broadcasts with a power of 1,000 watts daytime (4 watts at night) from studios in South Park, Pennsylvania, and is licensed to Braddock, Pennsylvania.
Power Station opened in 1977, [7] [8] The studio's largest room, Studio A, is a pine-paneled 52 x 48 foot space with 35-foot ceilings and several isolation booths and a control room equipped with a 40-channel Neve 8068 mixing console.
Irregular pattern between Brighton and Arch Streets and between O'Hern and West Park; also roughly bounded by Armandale Street, Carrington Street, Charlick Way, Reddour Street, and West North Avenue 40°27′24″N 80°00′45″W / 40.456667°N 80.0125°W / 40.456667; -80.0125 ( Mexican War Streets Historic
Braddock Avenue and Waverly Street Park Place 1970 Old St. Luke's (St. Luke's Episcopal Church) 1852 Washington Pike and Church Street Scott Township 1976 Old Sewickley Train Station (Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Station) 1887 20 Chadwick Street Sewickley 1993 Old Stone Bridge 1870 c.
WHJB began as a daytimer, operating at a power of 250 watts, non-directional, and required to go off the air at night. The station's call letters stood for founder H.J. Brennen. doing business as Pittsburgh Radio Supply House, broadcasting from a studio at 128 North Penn Avenue in Greensburg.
The station signed on as an R&B and top 40 station, partly owned by popular Pittsburgh polka bandleader James Psihoulis "Jimmy Pol". During the 1970s, WZUM was a freeform AOR outlet, operating from 10:00 a.m. until sunset, (broadcasting polkas in the morning from sunrise).
1992, the studio was put in Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and sold to Chieko and Kirk Imamura, who re-named it Avatar Studios to ensure that Bongiovi could continue to receive Power Station production royalties. Bongiovi moved to Florida, where he did sound design consulting for Universal Studios Florida before returning to New York, where he ...
Pennsylvania electricity production by type. This is a list of electricity-generating power stations in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, sorted by type and name.In 2022, Pennsylvania had a total summer capacity of 49,066 MW through all of its power plants, and a net generation of 239,261 GWh. [2]