cd637299 said:
Axman278 said:
I know prior to 1996 y-100 was a more of adult top leaning Chr rather than a true pop/Chr.
Ah, "no hard rock and rap".....
Actually Y100 has been CHR/Top 40 all its life since 1973, with tweaks like the above at times.
I myself cannot give a timeline as such.
cd
Not exactly. In 1990, they started to lean Adult CHR and abandoned their battle with Power 96 for the younger CHR audience. The station was similar at that point to many of the "Mix" stations that begin to pop up nationwide. Additionaly, Y100 began using phrases on the air such as "As you've grown, we've grown" and "The best music mix". Musically, the station avoided harder Rap, Dance, and Rock tracks, while embracing AC and Pop tunes, plus gold titles going back into the 70s.
The regular lineup at the time, IIRC, was:
"The Y Morning Zoo" with Bobby Mitchell, Footy, & "Captain Y"-Mornings
Stevie Knox (sp?)-Middays
Doug Dunbar-Afternoons
Al "Chio The Hitman"-Nights
FWIW: On Y100's 17th Birthday that year, the then-on air staff did a recreation of the station's on-air history each hour for 17 hours by playing the music that was popular for a specified year that the station existed, mixing it with old promos, jingles, and pop culture references.
By the fall of 1991, Y100's then-owner, Metroplex Communications, had entered into a LMA with crosstown WAXY (then Hot AC as the short-lived "Mix 105.9"). Since there was no need for both a Hot AC and a Adult CHR that was borderline Hot AC, management flipped WAXY back to Oldies as "Waxy 106" (they were Oldies/Gold based AC during the 80s) while adjusting Y100 to Hot AC. (Arbitron even listed Y100 as AC during that time).
Y100's started evolving back to CHR in early 1995 and had completed the transition by the end of that year.
Robyn