A continuation of the thread I posted a couple of weeks ago, but now focusing on favorite Buffalo radio stations of the 90’s. Local ownership was being replaced by corporate radio groups, AM music was being replaced by news, sports, talk, FM formats with increasingly narrower playlists. Unfortunately, IMO not many stations that stood out, but here are my thoughts…
1. WGRQ 97 Rock - The reboot that started in ‘88 was probably at its high point. A solid DJ lineup with Larry Norton, Anita West, Carl Russo, John Hager, JP and others. If you needed your Zep, Rush, AC-DC and other classic rock staples then you found your comfort zone. Unfortunately, it was starting to get a little stale.
2. WHTT 104.1 - Probably the peak of the oldies or classic hits format. Late 50s to mid 70s playlist. Heritage DJ’s like Dan Nevearth, Tom Shannon, Craig Matthews and others. Very enjoyable listen - real pros at the mic there.
3. WGR 550 - They had a News-Sports format that competed with WBEN during most of the decade. Roughalong the edges, but lots of talent - both past and present. Art Wander, Clip Smith and Ray Marks were some of the grizzled veterans while some young talent got the chance to grow - Tom Bauerle, Barbara Burns, Eileen Buckley, Lynne Dixon, etc. And for a brief time JR Gach who kind of sounded like Rush Limbaugh and had lots of air presence.
4/5. WJYE/WYRK - They weren’t my preferred formats but they knew who their audience was and delivered the goods. JYE with its AC and YRK with country. Both with strong on air talent and very professional sounding.
6. WEDG 103.3 - Buffalo’s first stab at a 90’s Alternative/New Rock Station. A poor man’s version of CFNY, but was better than nothing. Probably the best thing to come out of it was the pairing of Shredd and Ragan which continues to this day now on 97 Rock.
I have to say that most of my listening during that time period was CFNY 102.1 The Edge. A who’s who of Toronto radio talent and a great playlist that sounded fresh and cool - perfectly timed for the rise of grunge music, lots of 80’s alternative too. Humble and Fred, Maie Potts, Alan Cross, Kim Hughes, Martin Streek, Brother Bill - just a fantastic station. Q-107 was pretty solid which was probably a better version of 97 Rock - but in small doses, 97.7 HTZ-FM was pretty interesting too, particularly in the first half of the decade. If you were over 40, CHFI 98.1 was a nice alternative to WHTT or WJYE if you were looking for a slightly different playlist - lots of heritage Toronto DJ’s there too.
By the end of the decade, this thing called Napster and internet radio was starting to come into play. The seeds of radio’s decline were planted. You didn’t need radio anymore to discover or hear your new music or find whatever you were looking for. New technology in the next decade including iTunes, the iPod and ultimately music streaming would change radio forever.
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