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A Blast From The Past... NY Radio in the 1970s -- Pt. 2: FM

This is a vague recollection of how I remember New York radio in the early 70s. A lot of details may be incorrect or missing...

89.3 – WBGO. As I recall, they have been jazz for years.
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92.3 - WHOM-FM. I seem to remember them as being some sort of AC/Soft Rock in the early 70s. Later they became WKTU. Sister station was 1480 WHOM.
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93.1 – WPAT-FM. They were beautiful music, I believe until the 90s.
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93.9 – WNYC-FM. New York's NPR station. More or less unchanged.
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94.7 – WFME "Family Radio" out of Newark. Christian broadcaster until the station was sold in 2013.
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95.5 – WPLJ. WABC-FM until 1971. AOR in the early 70s, then in the 80s, top-40 and hot AC. Best known in the early 70s for their rivalry with the other AOR station, 102.7 WNEW-FM. Amont their alumni are Jim Kerr and Pat St. John (who is now on 60s Gold on SiriusXM.) Former sister station with 770 WABC. The call letters come from an old song by the Four Deuces (later remade by Frank Zappa) called "White Port Lemon Juice."
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96.3 – WQXR-FM. One of New York's two classical stations. Became Spanish in 2009 and the WQXR programming switched to 105.9. Former sister station was 1560 WQXR.
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97.1 – WNBC-FM. Mostly pop and rock. Adopted an automated format called "The Rock Pile", then experimented with an all-news format as WNWS. Went to AC in the late 70s and WYNY "Y-97." Sister station was 660 WNBC.
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97.9 – WEVD-FM. Ethnic. They were "The Station That Speaks Your Language." Sister station was 1330 WEVD. You have to go way back to the early days of the station's history for the call letters, which stood for "Eugene V. Debs," former publicist for the Socialist Party of American, who originally launched the (AM) station.
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98.7 – WOR-FM. Top-40, rival to WABC. Became WXLO 99X in 1972. Became WRKS Kiss 98.7 in the 80s. Their sister station was 710 WOR.
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99.5 – WBAI. You could do a whole thread on WBAI. Mostly alternative political programming, which they have been doing for years. Owned by the Pacifica Foundation.
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100.3 – WVNJ-FM. They were beautiful music until they switched to WHTZ in the 80s. Sister to 620 WVNJ.
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101.1 – WCBS-FM. An interesting mix of mostly softer AOR, until they went to an all-oldies format in 1972. Sister to 880 WCBS.
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101.9 – WPIX-FM. Another rival to WABC, as they were top-40 until the mid 70s, when they adopted a disco format, and then a variety of formats until the mid 80s when they went to smooth jazz format and became CD101.9 WQCD. Known in the 70s for the Crazy Eddie spots with Dr. Jerry Carroll. (The Crazy Eddie story could have its own thread here.)
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102.7 – WNEW-FM. AOR, rival to 95.5 WPLJ. Pete Fornatale and Scott Muni were notable alumni. Sister to 1130 WNEW.
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103.5 – WTFM. Beautiful music. Switched to soft rock in the late 70s. WAPP in mid 80s.
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104.3 – WNCN. "New York Concert Network." The second of two NYC classical stations, the other being 96.3 WQXR-FM. A brief stint as rock station in 1974 as WQIV, but due to listener demand, went back to classical until 1993 when they became WAXQ.
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105.1 – WRFM. Beautiful music. Started adding vocals, and then became WSNR soft rock in the 80s.
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105.9 – WHBI. Don't remember too much, they may have been ethnic/Spanish. They were Spanish later on, and switched frequencies with WQXR, putting Spanish on 96.3 and classical on 105.9.
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106.7 – WRVR. Owned by Riverside Church and was a mix of classical and jazz before being sold and becoming WLTW.
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107.5 – WBLS. Formerly WLIB-FM, changed to WBLS when the AM was sold. Urban format.
 
WHBI was primarily brokered ethnic during the day; disco, then Urban/EDM music at night. Later became WNWK with basically the same format before the switch to Spanish.
 
WBGO is on 88.3 FM. Until 1979 it was run by the Newark Board of Education. At that point, it became a jazz station.

 
WBGO is on 88.3 FM. Until 1979 it was run by the Newark Board of Education. At that point, it became a jazz station.

Of course... I knew that. Once you mentioned it, I remembered. But no matter how many times you go over your post, there's always at least one typo that sneaks in...
:)
 
93.9 – WNYC-FM. New York's NPR station. More or less unchanged.

Not exactly. Back in the 70s, it was owned by the city. In the 90s, Mayor Rudy Giuliani sold both AM & FM to the WNYC Foundation, who had been operating it in conjunction with the city. It was a mix of classical music and news in those days. In the last 20 years it dropped the classical music and became news/talk.
106.7 – WRVR. Owned by Riverside Church and was a mix of classical and jazz before being sold and becoming WLTW.

The church ran it as a "public radio station," and actually some former employees went on to work at NPR. The church sold it to Sonderling, who kept it jazz for a while. They sold it to Viacom in 1980 who flipped it to country WKHK. The country format was dropped for WLTW. Viacom continued to own it into the 90s, until they merged with CBS, and were forced by the FCC to sell to Clear Channel, who became iHeart.
 
101.9 – WPIX-FM. Another rival to WABC, as they were top-40 until the mid 70s, when they adopted a disco format, and then a variety of formats until the mid 80s when they went to smooth jazz format and became CD101.9 WQCD. Known in the 70s for the Crazy Eddie spots with Dr. Jerry Carroll. (The Crazy Eddie story could have its own thread here.)
They did not "adopt a disco format" in the mid-'70s; They were Top 40 until 1978. However, they had an evening show called "Disco 102" that started in '75 as a weekend thing and then expanded to 7 nites a week (10p-2a, mostly, longer on Saturdays) as it became quite popular. But in '78 the station started leaning AOR (right around the time that WKTU went all-disco), and that lead eventually to the From Elvis to Elvis "pure rock" format which only lasted a year or so.
 
I remember WPIX most for their Punk Rock Format. Joe From Chicago-Meg Griffin-Jane Hamburger- Dan Neer. Best format they ever had but seems like I was the only one🤷‍♂️
The only one listening. Their ratings were non existent I nearly cried when they started stunting before they chose another format. In between punk & whatever was next. They Had a Guitar 🎸 Strum & The station ID
 
During the early 70s, WPIX used to run an edited version of Isaac Hayes' "Theme From Shaft" as their news intro.
 
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They did not "adopt a disco format" in the mid-'70s; They were Top 40 until 1978. However, they had an evening show called "Disco 102" that started in '75 as a weekend thing and then expanded to 7 nites a week (10p-2a, mostly, longer on Saturdays) as it became quite popular. But in '78 the station started leaning AOR (right around the time that WKTU went all-disco), and that lead eventually to the From Elvis to Elvis "pure rock" format which only lasted a year or so.
I recall their 1972 ad tag; "Your "X" wants you back".
 
The sad thing about WPIX/101.9 was that they never missed an opportunity to miss an opportunity. Back in the early '70s, they picked up Gus Gossert after WCBS-FM (where he'd been PD during their "Chicken All-Over-The-Road Progressive Rock" format) unceremoniously let him go. He came over to PIX and did a Sunday (IIRC) evening oldies/doo-wop program, a year or more before CBS-FM switched formats to that very same thing. PIX dropped it, CBS-FM went on to become a heritage/legendary station on the backs of 50's/60's R&R songs. And as others have mentioned, there was also Love Songs (thing Lite FM), Disco (think 92/KTU), early Punk (think WLIR) and a couple of others not immediately coming to mind, any one of which would have made them legenday too if their owner (Tribune/The NY Daily News) had shown a little patience and a few bucks for promotion. Instead, they're a footnote, a Trivial PursuitsTM question.
 
Pretty sure that was much later than 1972 -- it was for their "Love Songs, nothing but Love Songs" format circa 1983.
Thank you, I will certainly take your word about circa 1983 as I wouldn't know anyway, however, I distinctly remember they used it in April 1972 either billboards, on air or both. '72 only time I was in Manhattan. Airport stops not counting or listening.
 
I suggest that 'The 70's' held more changes in contemporary pop music than any other documented decade (before or since), thus more changes of format on a dial frantically in search of a trend that appeared to promise durability.
For all intents and porpoises though, 'scavenge' is probably the more apt term than 'search'. After all, FM in the 70's certainly had become 'theee' dial for music. But FM programmers everywhere, not just in NYC, were literally left with half-lifes of previously giant music eras that'd been done as far as could be ridden on AM.
Merely some idle math from a 26-year DJ and occasional news guy puts the Standards as having had some 35 solid years (in mono!) as a valuable product that virtually sold itself. In fact, the format's cheesier b@$+@rd relative -- Beautiful Music, some of which, blush, I liked -- haunted elevators into the early 80's.
The 'rock and roll' that replaced Standards went some 17 years before its sound and intrigue became more suitable in nostalgia form, as Solid Gold. Ousting the Belmonts, Supremes, Beach Boys et al in those 70's, along came Album Oriented Rock. THAT upheaval, that tsunami, went for some 8 years -- two, three such stations in the majorest markets -- before it turned into @$$#ole-Oriented-Rubbish after Vietnam ended and the girls fled to Disco and A/C -- the latter of which represented, really, the dregs of Top 40.
Punk, Rap and MTV finally ripped asunder more youth. imo for good. In those same 70's.
It is pretty quaint, though, to see a form of pop music culture even *older* than those formats having itself endure through all of the styles, garb, slang, tempos, wars, national boundaries and other turmoil for over a full century. That's the one poster Ed Nielson lists first. From another Nielsen:
WBGO-FMJazzNewark Public Radio Inc.0.60.60.60.7
 
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