The HD-2 is still there, with more mid- and late '60s titles being added to the library, including songs like the Mamas and the Papas' "Twelve Thirty," Edwin Starr's "Agent Double-O Soul" and the Amboy Dukes' "Journey to the Center of the Mind," which weren't even part of the regular playlist during DRC-FM's oldies days. Not a bad listen at all, despite unnecessary repetition of many '50s/early '60s songs. I seem to run into "Topsy, Part 2," "Shake, Rattle and Roll" or "Rip It Up" an awful lot.
Last six songs played:
Positively 4th Street -- Bob Dylan
Come On Let's Go -- Richie Valens (another "repeat offender")
Uptown -- Crystals
I Can't Stay Mad at You -- Skeeter Davis
Not Fade Away -- Buddy Holly
A Whiter Shade of Pale -- Procol Harum
For what it's worth, i'm starting to hear DRC-FM (the main signal) in places that used to have WRCH playing in the background, and the people in charge of the radio in those places are mostly in their early/mid 40s, so the new music mix looks like it's finding its desired demographic sweet spot. So few people have HD radios that it's probably unfair to expect any DRC-HD2 workplace penetration.
Disagree with the original poster that DRC-FM is sounding like WAQY. If anything, it's sounding more like WKSS sounded in the '80s and early '90s -- heavy on the rhythmic pop (Madonna, Janet Jackson, etc.), light on rock. With the addition of '70s titles, of course, but even those tend more to be disco/dance/rhythmic rather than classic rock.