Just to add a bit of history concerning the early days of WFMS. If my memory serves
me correctly, Martin Williams founded the station. It may have been primarily classical
at first but when I can remember listening to it in the mid and late sixties and then
later actually working there for a very brief time, the station aired one complete side
of an album...vinyl...usually stuff from Perry Como, the Melanchrino Strings, Percy Faith,
Ray Coniff....that sort of stuff. Moreover, I think there was an hour or so in the evening
of a classical orchestra broadcast.
Being a board operator there was rather frustrating. There was NO live microphone in
the control room. All announces were on 3 inch tape reels....not even carts back then, or
Mr. Williams did not invest in any.
Also to the operator's left was the turntable for the on-air LP, and to the right was the
turntable which supplied music for the subcarrier subscription music service. If you as
an operator found the on-air music a bit boring and drifted off with the needle 'fuh-thumping" away that went unnoticed, but man oh man, if the subscription LP went into
the center of the record all sorts of alarms went off! I guess we can discern where
Martin got most of his income in those days, huh?
That was when the station was operating out of the Antlers Hotel. Eventually it
moved to the new studios.....NINETY FIVE FIVE....W F M S stereo...Indianapolis, from
the Hawthorn Radio Center....or something like that at the top of the hour.
Great call letters!!!
End of history lesson for today.
(please check out
www.919witt.org and perhaps you have a few bucks to send to
get this new non-comm on the air and sounding great )