AM Rocks writes... >>>WQXR, if I remember correctly, was considered the more "pop" of the classical stations. WNCN had the snob appeal.<<<
WQXR-AM-FM, owned by the NY Times, was a "full service" classical station. Hourly newscasts, interviews with classical music artists in town to play at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center or the Met, a one-hour news and NY Times features magazine at 6pm, and Casper Citron's high-brow talk show from 11pm to midnight. Maybe in the 1960s, WNCN was more snobbish. It was all-music, while WQXR was more an AM station than FM. WNCN was only on FM and probably aimed at folks who were more serious about their classical music tastes.
But by the late 70s, when most people had FM radios in their homes and cars, WNCN had gone more mass-appeal, while WQXR remained more traditional. Once the classical format had returned after the brief WQIV rock episode, WNCN DJs were instructed to sound like FM album rock DJs, except they played classical music instead of rock album tracks.
The funny thing is, today's listener-supported 105.9 WQXR and its DJs sound more like WNCN than the old WQXR. One or two of them had been on WNCN.
WQXR-AM-FM, owned by the NY Times, was a "full service" classical station. Hourly newscasts, interviews with classical music artists in town to play at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center or the Met, a one-hour news and NY Times features magazine at 6pm, and Casper Citron's high-brow talk show from 11pm to midnight. Maybe in the 1960s, WNCN was more snobbish. It was all-music, while WQXR was more an AM station than FM. WNCN was only on FM and probably aimed at folks who were more serious about their classical music tastes.
But by the late 70s, when most people had FM radios in their homes and cars, WNCN had gone more mass-appeal, while WQXR remained more traditional. Once the classical format had returned after the brief WQIV rock episode, WNCN DJs were instructed to sound like FM album rock DJs, except they played classical music instead of rock album tracks.
The funny thing is, today's listener-supported 105.9 WQXR and its DJs sound more like WNCN than the old WQXR. One or two of them had been on WNCN.