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WYEP-FM

Coordinates:40°24′42″N79°55′52″W / 40.4117°N 79.9312°W /40.4117; -79.9312
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public radio station in Pittsburgh

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WYEP-FM
Broadcast areaPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Frequency91.3MHz (HD Radio)
Branding91.3 WYEP
Programming
FormatAdult album alternative (AAA)
Ownership
OwnerPittsburgh Community Broadcasting Corp.
WESA
History
First air date
April 30,1974 (at 91.5)[1]
Former frequencies
91.5 MHz (1974–1983)
Technical information
Facility ID52745
ClassB1
ERP18,000watts
HAAT116 meters (381 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewyep.org

WYEP (91.3MHz) is a listener-supported,non-commercialradio station that is located inPittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It carries anAdult Album Alternative (AAA)radio format and is run by the Pittsburgh Community Broadcasting Corporation, along with 90.5WESA. Thestudios and offices are located on Bedford Square.[2] WYEP-FM holds periodicfundraisers to support the station.

WYEP-FM has aneffective radiated power (ERP) of 18,000watts. Thetransmitter is on Longview Street in Pittsburgh.[3]

History

[edit]
WYEP on a SPARCHD Radio receiver withPSD.

WYEP was located in the South Oakland area of Pittsburgh in the former police horse stable at 4 Cable Place. It began broadcasting on April 30, 1974, on 91.5 MHz. Prior to using its own frequency, the Pittsburgh Community Broadcasting Corporation (the licensee which was incorporated in 1972 solely for the purpose of building and operating a community based, non-commercial radio station) produced three hourly music and public affairs programs under agreement withWDUQ 90.5. The programs scheduled at 4 p.m. provided an example of the content WYEP would broadcast. The radio station studios were built by volunteers.

During the station's early days, it was principally operated by volunteers knowledgeable in music or an area of public affairs.

In 1979, WYEP filed to move to 91.3 MHz and upgrade its signal to 18 kW. Transmission facilities were moved from atop the Cathedral of Learning on theUniversity of Pittsburgh campus to a tower above the Monongahela River near Hazelwood. The move became effective in 1983[4] and also sawWIUP-FM 91.3 in Indiana move to 90.1.

In 1987, the station reorganized and relocated its broadcast facility to the campus ofChatham University in Pittsburgh's East End. In 1994, the station moved to Birmingham Place on the South Side of Pittsburgh.

In early 2006, the station began broadcasting from the new WYEP Community Broadcast Center, located in the Bedford Square section of Pittsburgh's South Side. In September 2006, the WYEP Community Broadcast Center received aLEED-NC Silver rating, making it environmentally friendly and "the first green station in the nation"[1].

In 2011, WYEP purchased the license for WDUQ from Duquesne University, and launched an NPR News and information format station,90.5 WESA. The staff and management of 90.5 WESA were co-located at the Community Broadcast Center. In 2014, WYEP celebrated its 40th anniversary on the air.

In 2016, the boards of WYEP and WESA merged, becoming the Pittsburgh Community Broadcasting Corp.

WYEP currently broadcasts and streams music programming twenty-four hours per day.

Programs

[edit]
  • Dubmission - Produced and hosted by Kerem Gokmen, for the past 25 years on WYEP, beginning in 1998. Dubmission's format is a mix of glitch, house, techno, soul, funk, jazz, offbeat, leftfield, hip hop, dub, downtempo, disco, broken beat, and rare grooves, just to name a few. Featuring guest mixes and in studio performances and visits by artists such asBooka Shade,RJD2,Bob Sinclar, Thomas Cox,Scuba, Shawn Rudiman,Bonobo, DJ Vadim, Byron the Aquarius and many more. A signature of the show has been in offering a wide variety of music; often playing tracks that are strictly released onvinyl record only.[5]

Hosts

[edit]
  • Kerem Gokmen - DJ with WYEP since 1997. Kerem has produced and hosted a long standing free-formelectronic music based variety mix show, every Saturday overnight into Sunday morning, for the past 25 years, calledDubmission.[6]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^"Pittsburgh Community Broadcasting Timeline".pittsburghcommunitybroadcasting.org. Pittsburgh Community Broadcasting. RetrievedFebruary 15, 2019.
  2. ^PittsburghCommunityBroadcasting.org/contact
  3. ^Radio-Locator.com/WYEP-FM
  4. ^Fanning, Win (February 2, 1983)."NBC will replace 'Taxi' with 'Teachers Only' in Saturday slot".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 30. RetrievedOctober 7, 2019.
  5. ^"WYEP Dubmission Webpage".
  6. ^"WYEP Kerem Gokmen Host Bio".

External links

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40°24′42″N79°55′52″W / 40.4117°N 79.9312°W /40.4117; -79.9312

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