Most people who remember WEW probably associate them with standards or MOR type music.
But in the late 1950s, they were the first 100% country station in St Louis.
Billboard reported on 2/25/56 that since going all country in June 1955, WEW is now in 4th place overall in the Hooper Ratings, 3rd at times. Article also said WEW had been classical for the previous 5 years.
Thank you for mentioning that. I didn't know about it, so I did a little research.
The format switch to country happened when "Bruce Barrington", who had been a news commentator at KXOK, bought WEW from St. Louis University in 1955. The switch was effective June 1 of that year; that's also when the flip to country happened.
Two days later, the Post-Dispatch described the station's new programming policy:
(quote)
The usual dulcet tones of classical music emanating seven hours a day from Radio Station WEW were jangled by the jingle of steel guitars and country fiddles today, treating faithful listeners to country and western tunes, not to be confused with "hillbilly" music.
And so it has been since Wednesday when the station reverted from a four-year policy of presenting classical music to a schedule of country music five and one-half days a week. Other regular programs will be retained, including some religious broadcasts, a jazz record show on Saturday afternoons and standard popular and light classical music programs on Sundays.
(end quote)
I put Barrington's name in quotes because his real name was Aubrey Reid.
The Post-Dispatch printed letters to the editor protesting the move away from classical music. Some things never change: classical music listeners tend to be a pain in the you-know-what, never happy with what's being played and then complaining loudly when the format goes away.
The country music went away after Barrington sold the station in 1961, when it went to a "good music" format. A little bit of irony: Barrington took his money to the west to Columbia a couple of months later, bought top-40 KBIA (no relation to the present-day KBIA), and changed the call letters to KCGM: "Columbia's Good Music". Barrington sold that station almost six years later, after not really succeeding in what was then a two-station market, and it went back to top-40 as KTGR.
Back to WEW: the station's new program director in 1961, Charley Hale, explained the station's programming philosophy to the Globe-Democrat's Pete Rahn:
(quote)
"The truth of the matter is we don't intend to play any rock 'n' roll, nor will WEW go to a 'heavy classical' format. By good, listenable music, I mean that our programming schedule will have an abundant supply of music by people like Montavani, Gordon Jenkins, David Rose, and Fred Waring.
"I would appreciate if you would identify our new programming as an FM sound on AM radio," continues Mr. Hale. "We're calling it 'The Wonderful World of Music' and we hope to attract people who appreciate a little bit more in the way of sound than the noises made by two guitars in an echo chamber."
(end quote)
One thing that's a little startling in reading these descriptions is the vitrol directed at rock music, often called rock-and-roll at the time. In his newspaper columns, Rahn made his disdain for rock-and-roll very clear. He wasn't the only writer to do that.
But 18 months later, a new program director made adjustments. Again, from Pete Rahn's Globe column, where Rahn first expressed some fears that an announced format shift would lead to rock-and-roll being broadcast on WEW, a quote from that new program director:
(quote)
"Still good music but we are playing a lot more vocals now -- songs by artists like Frank Sinatra and Andy Williams -- in fact, we've heard from some listeners who aren't exactly happy. The people who had been using us as a free background service say they prefer the old schedule that contained more straight orchestral pieces."
(end quote)
That new program director? Lee Coffee.
So Pete Rahn could thenceforth sleep more easily at night, knowing that WEW wasn't going to play any of that rock-and-roll music.
Without being an insider at the P-D:
It's probably more that they don't have a ton of incentive to assign a reporter to a feature like this that the assignment editor doesn't expect will draw clicks. It seems like a lot of the features in the P-D are "Here's the top 8 climbing gyms in StL", which could be a pay-to-play arrangement.
For one thing, I'm pretty sure they don't have a radio-TV editor any more. Starting in the early 1990s, the Post's radio coverage started to decline, though there was still plenty of coverage of local and national TV.
WEW is a thousand watt daytimer on 770, which it shares with clear channel WABC. If you look at the stations early history, they bounced around from frequency to frequency more often than Aimee Semple McPherson! They were obviously looking for a warm place to settle, and this is where they placed their flag. Bad idea.
Those frequency changes really don't mean all that much. There were major FRC-initiated shifts in 1927 and again in 1928. A lot of stations were bounced around. Especially considering that it was associated with a university, with such stations getting relegated to lesser status, WEW may have had no choice in the matter. It was put on 760 in the November, 1928 reallocation, and stayed there until the NARBA move in 1941 to 770. As it was, WEW was lucky that it wasn't forced to share time with one or more other stations. Though SLU did have WEW-FM for a while, the fact that they gave up the FM to help put an educational TV station on the air and sold the AM in 1955 indicates that they weren't all that interested in sinking money into WEW. If I'm reading the FCC history cards for WEW correctly, the station didn't move off a longwire antenna until after Barrington took over. That's kind of late.