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WNRQ

Coordinates:36°02′10″N86°50′56″W / 36.036°N 86.849°W /36.036; -86.849
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radio station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States
For the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania radio station that held the call sign WNRQ from 1995 to 1996, seeWPGB.

WNRQ
Broadcast areaGreater Nashville
Frequency105.9MHz (HD Radio)
Branding105-9 The Rock
Programming
FormatClassic rock
SubchannelsHD2:Black-oriented news (Black Information Network)
Ownership
Owner
WLAC,WRVW,WSIX-FM,WUBT
History
First air date
1953; 72 years ago (1953) (as WSOK-FM)
Former call signs
WSOK-FM (1953–1955)
WHCY (1955–1957)
WFMB (1957–1964)
WLAC-FM (1964–1978)
WKQB (1978–1981)
WJYN (1981–1983)
WLAC-FM (1983–1998)
Call sign meaning
Nashville'sRoQ (pronounced as "Rock")
Technical information
Facility ID34392
ClassC
ERP100,000watts
HAAT376 meters (1,234 ft)
Translator(s)HD2: 97.5 W248BQ (Nashville)
Links
WebcastListen Live
HD2:Listen Live
Website1059therock.iheart.com
HD2:nashville.binnews.com

WNRQ (105.9MHz) is acommercialFMradio station inNashville, heard in northern middle Tennessee and southern centralKentucky. It airs aclassic rockformat. It is owned byiHeartMedia, with studios in Nashville'sMusic Row district.

WNRQ is aClass C FM station. It has aneffective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000watts, the maximum for most FM stations. Thetransmitter site is on Johnson Chapel Hill Road West inBrentwood, Tennessee, a Nashville suburb.[1] WNRQ broadcasts usingHD Radio technology. Its HD2digital subchannel carries theBlack Information Network (BIN), anall news service directed at theAfrican-American community. It feedsFM translatorW248BQ at 97.5 MHz.

History

[edit]

The stationsigned on the air in 1953; 72 years ago (1953). Its originalcall sign wasWSOK-FM. The station was owned by Cal Young, who happened to own 1470 WSOK-AM, according to FCC records. Cal Young sold 1470 WSOK-AM to Robert Roundsaville in 1957 and became what is known today as WVOL. In that same year, Cal Young sold WSOK-FM (at that time the call sign was WHCY) to Great Southern Broadcasting Company, and the new call sign became WFMB. In 1964, WFMB was sold again to WLAC, Inc. WFMB switched toWLAC-FM, becoming thesister station toWLAC1510 AM. WLAC-FM had aneasy listening format, airing quarter-hour sweeps of mostly instrumentalcover versions of popular adult music, along withHollywood andBroadwayshow tunes.

In 1978, WLAC-FM switched toalbum oriented rock (AOR), as "Rock 106,"WKQB.

On December 24, 1980, at 12 noon, the album oriented rock (AOR) format came to an end and a format change to "The Joy of Nashville,"WJYN, the latter reflecting a former easy listening format. In spring 1983, the call sign was changed back to WLAC-FM and went to an Adult Contemporary Format.

In 1998, Dick Broadcasting, owner ofWGFX, and SFX Broadcasting, the then-owner of WLAC-FM, agreed to trade the intellectual property of the stations. The trade, to have taken place February 2, 1998, would have moved WLAC-FM to 104.5 FM, and moved WGFX's classic rock format to 105.9 under SFX ownership. However, when the agreement fell apart, SFX decided to go ahead with launching a classic rock format anyway, and flipped WLAC-FM toWNRQ on January 30.[2]

Current format

[edit]

The current format features harder-edgedclassic rock. Most of the station'splaylist first hit the Nashville-area airwaves on the now-country-formattedWKDF during the 1970s and 1980s, as well as WKQB, "Rock 106" (from 1978 to 1981).

It was also Nashville's station for the syndicatedJohn Boy and Billy morning show, heard on numerousSouthern stations with the same format as WNRQ. The station stopped airing John Boy and Billy in the spring of 2020. It later had a local wake-up program, "The Josh Innes Show".[3] The show also aired onWEGR inMemphis andWLLZ inDetroit.

The current morning show is hosted by Rock Radio veteran Jeremy "Loper" Loper and long time local co-host Tim Battle, under the name "The Loper Show." Loper was lured to Nashville's WNRQ from Columbus, Ohio's Active Rock WRKZ-FM 99.7 The Blitz where he hosted "Loper and Randi in The Morning." Some of theDJs for WNRQ arevoicetracked from other iHeartRadio stations. In afternoondrive time, the station airs Big Rig fromWXTBTampa.

Former disc jockeys

[edit]
  • "Moose" – currently programsWCJK, "96.3 Jack FM,"Murfreesboro/Nashville.
  • "Proud Mary" – worked before at sister stationWRVW, now retired.
  • "Big Rig" – worked nights, was atWFBQ, now atWXTB
  • "Squeegie" – now atWBUZ-FM
  • "Riley"
  • "Joe Elvis" – afternoons; let go in August 2013 in favor of automation.
  • "Tyler"
  • "Mud" – programming director for the station; also worked nights, then afternoons; now atWBGG-FM.
  • "Jimmy The K"
  • "Laura Steele" – also worked at WFBQ inIndianapolis, Indiana; still heard onThe Classic Rock Channel.

HD Radio

[edit]

WNRQ broadcasts twoHD Radio channels; WNRQ-HD1 simulcasts the analog station, while WNRQ-HD2 serves as the Nashville affiliate of theBlack Information Network, and is the originating channel fortranslator station W248BQ (97.5 FM).

WNRQ-HD2

[edit]

WNRQ-HD2 was at first aClear Channel Communications-provided channel called "Vinyl Vineyard", but due to technical difficulties, the simulcast of sister station1510 WLAC was moved to the HD2 signal. On August 25, 2014, the WLAC simulcast was replaced by analternative rock format, branded "Alt 98.3" (reflecting its simulcast ontranslator station W252CM) made its debut, replacing the WLAC simulcast. On September 2, 2016, the format changed toclassic country, branded as "The Big Legend 98.3"; this format served as abrand extension of sister stationWSIX-FM.[4] On March 31, 2017, WNRQ-HD2 returned to alternative rock, branded as "Alt 97.5" (reflecting its simulcast on translator W248BQ), featuring the same airstaff as "Alt 98.3" and broadcasts ofNashville Sounds baseball; origination of the "Big Legend 98.3" classic country format moved to WSIX-HD2.[5] On December 16, 2018, WNRQ-HD2 changed its format to gospel music, branded as "97.5 Hallelujah FM".[6]

On June 29, 2020, fifteen iHeart stations in markets with large African American populations, including W248BQ/WNRQ-HD2, beganstunting with African American speeches, interspersed with messages such as "Our Voices Will Be Heard" and "Our side of the story is about to be told," with a new format slated to launch on June 30.[7][8] That day, W248BQ/WNRQ-HD2, along with the other fourteen stations, became the launch stations for theBlack Information Network, an African American-orientedall-news network.[9]

WNRQ-HD3

[edit]

WNRQ-HD3 was a simulcast of sister station WLAC until 2013, when the simulcast moved to WNRQ-HD2. WNRQ-HD3 was then removed; it resumed broadcasting in 2016 carryingAir1, feeding translator station W223BV (92.5 FM). WNRQ-HD3 was again discontinued on January 1, 2020, whenEducational Media Foundation, owner of Air1 and W223BV, transferred origination of the translator's programming to the HD2 channel ofWLVU.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"WNRQ-FM 105.9 MHz - Nashville, TN".radio-locator.com. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2024.
  2. ^"RR-1998-02-06"(PDF).American Radio History.
  3. ^"Josh Innes Show to Anchor Mornings at 105.9 the Rock Nashville".
  4. ^iHeart Debuts The Big Legend 98.3 Nashville Radioinsight - September 2, 2016
  5. ^"Alt Returning to Nashville".Radioinsight.com.
  6. ^"HALLELUJAH! 97.5 NASHVILLE FLIPS FROM ALTERNATIVE TO GOSPEL".Radioinsight.com. December 17, 2018.
  7. ^"IHEARTMEDIA LAUNCHES BLACK INFORMATION NETWORK".Radioinsight.com. June 30, 2020.
  8. ^"Several iHeartMedia Stations Stunting With Speeches, New Format To Be Announced Tomorrow".All Access. June 29, 2020. RetrievedJune 30, 2020.
  9. ^"iHeartMedia Debuts All-News BIN: Black Information Network".All Access. June 30, 2020. RetrievedJuly 1, 2020.

External links

[edit]
Radio stations in theNashville metropolitan area (Tennessee)
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Classic rock radio stations in the state ofTennessee
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36°02′10″N86°50′56″W / 36.036°N 86.849°W /36.036; -86.849

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