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22 new of 107 responses total.
krj
response 86 of 107: Mark Unseen   Mar 1 05:28 UTC 1999

The March issue of the Ann Arbor Observer has a small feature
on WUOM, the University of Michigan's NPR station.  The story says 
that since WUOM ditched their all-classical format, listeners and 
contributions have almost doubled.
bruin
response 87 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 9 19:50 UTC 1999

Since the last response, I must announce that the former WQRS (105.1 FM --
please correct me if I am wrong) has again changed its format, this time to
classic soul music.  I was listening to the Four Tops singing "Baby I Need
Your Loving," and between that song and "Good Times" by Chic, there was a
station ID which read "Detroit's Classic Soul - 105.1 FM," or something like
that.
otaking
response 88 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 12 19:21 UTC 1999

It would've been the perfect opportunity to go back to a classical format.
Unfortunately, they chose to make yet another classic rock (or soul if you
prefer) station.
orinoco
response 89 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 12 20:22 UTC 1999

Well, no, it's not "yet another classic rock station", it's a soul station.
There is a difference.  With all the other local so-called-R&B-stations
playing the watered-down music that everyone seems to love these days, the
Detroit area needed a good one of these.  
cloud
response 90 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 13 01:36 UTC 1999

Just out of curiosity, is it good?
krj
response 91 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 04:20 UTC 1999

Channel 4 news announces tonight that a Detroit AM station will 
be playing classical music from 7 pm to 5 am.  
The station is WYUR at 1310 on the dial, and I do not know how 
well they are received in Ann Arbor.
 
(Also, I don't know if anyone has mentioned the classical 
music on Saturday nights at WJR-AM, 760.)
tpryan
response 92 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 22:57 UTC 1999

        Wow, that keen!
krj
response 93 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 17 19:05 UTC 1999

On our "average" bedroom radio, we cannot get a usable signal on 
1310 AM.
tpryan
response 94 of 107: Mark Unseen   Apr 18 15:05 UTC 1999

        Actually, at 1310, it used to be KeeNeR 13.
bmoran
response 95 of 107: Mark Unseen   May 12 13:32 UTC 1999

And for a while, it was a kids radio station, aimed at the 7-14 year old
group. Lousy reception here in A2, better the farther east you went.
krj
response 96 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 16 01:05 UTC 2000

The University of Michigan radio station
WUOM has decided to market itself as a 24-hour News and Information
station, so that means that the overnight classical music show has
to be dumped.  "Music Through The Night," the syndicated package,
has been replaced by the BBS World Service.  "Performance Today,"
which ran earlier in the evening, has been replaced by other shows.

http://www.michiganradio.org
scott
response 97 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 16 12:06 UTC 2000

I didn't much care for the usual "Music Through the Night" programming anyway.
dbratman
response 98 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 21 23:20 UTC 2000

What sort of thing did they play in the middle of the night?
krj
response 99 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 22 02:07 UTC 2000

It was fairly mainstream classical, nothing too atonal or noisy, but 
not entirely Classics Lite either.  I found it a rather enjoyable
program to drift off to sleep to.  It's a nationally syndicated package,
so I'd be surprised if a station in the Bay Area didn't carry it.
dbratman
response 100 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 23:13 UTC 2000

The San Francisco Bay Area is an absolute desert for classical music 
radio, and even more so for syndicated programs.  The new AM station in 
San Francisco, which I can't get down here, apparently carries Karl 
Haas, whom I had previously heard only in other cities on vacation.  The 
same is true for any other programs of that kind, though the stations 
have been known occasionally to carry ootie symphony or Metropolitan 
Opera broadcasts.

Recently, while near Baltimore, I was able to put stations playing 
classical music - from Baltimore, Washington, and elsewhere - on all six 
places on my car radio.  OK, a couple of them were repeater stations on 
different frequencies, but still ...  What a cornucopia!  Nothing like 
that could ever happen out here in the boonies.
rcurl
response 101 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 26 00:00 UTC 2000

Good grief. I lived in SF when its FM good music station was a pioneer in
classical music on FM. I can no longer recall its callsign - what was it?
What does it carry now? 

dbratman
response 102 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 26 18:34 UTC 2000

When were you in SF?

During my earlier years of listening to classical music - the 70s and 
80s, even through to the early 90s - there were two stations here: KDFC 
was the highbrow station with serious music and no personality (even the 
announcements were pre-recorded, and no human beings were ever named), 
and KKHI was the lowbrow station with characters (including an execrable 
schmaltz-purveyor named Doug Pledger), which played all Baroque during 
commute hours to make more room for commercials, and carried most of the 
broadcasts (which KDFC probably wouldn't touch because they had 
announcers with names).

A few years ago, both stations were sold, I guess, because they switched 
personalities: KDFC hired announcers and went lowbrow (probably the 
lowest brow was hit with this statement: "After the break, we'll hear a 
symphony by Beethoven.  I'll give you a hint: it goes da-da-da-dum."), 
and KKHI went highbrow, though not quite as frigid as the old KDFC had 
been.

KDFC is still around, as low as ever though at least they haven't hired 
Pledger; but the new KKHI lost money and was sold to become yetanother 
pop station.  But then the ex-owner had second thoughts and opened up 
this AM station which, as I said, I haven't heard much: I can't get it 
down here and it doesn't play at night, which is when I'm usually in the 
City.
rcurl
response 103 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 26 21:28 UTC 2000

Neither of those. I lived in Oakland 1955-61. 
dbratman
response 104 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 28 23:28 UTC 2000

Civilization has declined and fallen a great deal since 1961.

(But then, they said the same thing about 1861.)
rcurl
response 105 of 107: Mark Unseen   Jul 30 06:21 UTC 2000

No, wasn't there then.
carson
response 106 of 107: Mark Unseen   Aug 12 22:54 UTC 2000

(CBC Radio One has a late-night classical music program entitled
"That Time Of The Night."  www.cbc.ca )
krj
response 107 of 107: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 00:01 UTC 2001

News from Usenet:  WNIB, one of two classical music stations in Chicago,
has been bought and is changing formats.  We listened to them a couple 
of times on recent visits there, they seemed to be a decent station.
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