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Heart 104.9 FM was originally launched as P4 radio in July 1997. [1] Then P4 radio was considered one of the fastest growing radio stations in South Africa at the time. [1] P4 Radio was the first radio station is South Africa to target and attract high-income earners from the black and coloured communities of South Africa and see positive growth in both revenue and audience.
KCRZ is located in the Visalia, California, area and broadcasts at 104.9 FM with a CHR format. The station, which debut on the air in 1996 and licensed to Tipton, California, is owned by Momentum Broadcasting.
The "Wolf" branding would give way on May 24, 2013 to the new branding of "Nash FM, 99.5 and 104.9;" WPCK and WPKR were two of six Cumulus country stations to adopt the "Nash FM" branding that day, part of Cumulus' plan to nationally expand its multimedia "Nash FM" country branding, which was launched earlier in 2013 at its New York City ...
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On November 10, 2010, at Noon, the station dropped its 11-year-old active rock format and flipped to a '90s-leaning adult hits format as "GenX 104-9". [5] [6] The final three songs on The Monkey were "Brass Monkey" by the Beastie Boys, "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M., and "Closing Time" by Semisonic, while GenX's first three songs were "Get Ready for This ...
In the early 1980s, WGAT-FM became WZXY, an album-oriented rock station branded "Y105". Sometime in the mid- to late-1980s, WZXY changed its to CHR / Top 40 . Through much of the 1990s and a large part of the 2000s, the format was oldies under its new callsign WKOS, [ 3 ] [ citation needed ] and then adult hits .
WLKZ (104.9 FM) is an American licensed radio station in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire, serving the Lakes Region. The station is owned by Dirk Nadon, through licensee Lakes Media, LLC, and carries a classic rock format , under the "104.9 The Hawk" branding.
KXSC (104.9 FM) began in 1961 as KHYD, a 3,000–watt station operating from a house on Mowry Avenue in Fremont, California.. The station call letters changed to KFMR in 1964. 18-year-old Bill Stairs was among the alumni of early days of KFMR who went on to a career as a DJ, program director and broadcast consultant in markets from Spokane, Sacramento and San Diego in the west to Boston and ...