Don said:
There was something about listening to a commercial classical station. It says something about a city's cultural vibrancy.
Very true. I've been listening extensively to WQXR in NYC and WCRB in Boston since their respectful moves to the world of non-com radio. Both stations have changed signifcantly since the switchovers. WCRB makes no contention about the station now being WBGH's baby. For instance, on their web site there is narry a mention of WCRB. It's all WGBH this, and WGBH that. (I'm talking about WCRB's webite here, not WGBH.) The station has largely lost two important things: it's identity and the long-proven music programming that had made it a viable commodity - and something worth listening to. Now WGBH has only kept two of the pre-merger announcers, who have obviously been forced into the WGBH mold. And their music has often goes way over into the terribly esoteric - music that is not as well know by classical music fans. They have, for the most part, retained their 'persona.'
Moving on to the WQXR changes; the one positive thing one can say about WQXR's migration from commercial to non-com is that the new owners, WNYC, kept much of the WQXR music in place, along with most of the announcers. Apart from the change in frequency from 96.3 to 105.9 and the lower power, the station -- by that I mean the "station sound" -- remains largely remains intact. There are, of course, differences here and there, but it remains listenable and sounds fairly commercial.
New York and Boston are the two most cultured centers in the northeast, with Philadelphia being third. In those two markets they found a way to keep 24/7 classical radio on-the-air, albeit non-commercially. Should classical music radio rate a full-time 24/7 radio station here - either non-com or commercial? Or is 12 hours a day on WRTI enough? I believe it does deserve a fulltime presence...even if it is on an HD2 channel. But, of course, you know that once Greater Media finds something more viable that will bring in additional cash, they'll dump the format like a hot potato. That's not a jab at GM...if it were me, I'd probably do the same.