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Jazz Station was established as an exhibition venue in the former train station at Leuvensesteenweg and was inaugurated on 30 September 2005. The initiative comes from Jean Demannez (first), [1] [2] a jazz drummer and from 1999 to 2012 mayor of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode. [3] The opening was conducted by the mayor. [1] [4]
Crooze FM (styled CROOZE.fm) is a Belgian Jazz radio station created in 2004, broadcasting in Antwerp, Brussels and Ghent and specialized in mainly Jazz, Soul and Lounge. Other genres played regularly on Crooze FM include R&B music, Nu-jazz, Funk, Deep House and Chill. In 2004 and 2005, Crooze FM was elected in the Radiovisie.be Radio Awards.
Klara is a Belgian radio station operated by the Flemish public broadcaster Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroep (VRT). Its output is primarily focussed on classical music, but also includes jazz and world music. [1] The name is derived from Klassieke Radio, which translates as "Classical Radio". [2]
New clubs opened: the Blue Note and Pol's Jazz Club in Brussels, the Jazz Inn in Liège, and the Jazz Clu Hnita in Heist-Op-Den-Berg. Large outdoor gatherings called "festivals" were organized. Comblain-la-Tour is the oldest: the first edition took place in 1959.
Belgium has three public broadcasters, one for each national language. The Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroeporganisatie (VRT) for the Dutch-speaking Flemish Community (); The Radio Télévision Belge Francophone (RTBF) for the French Community of Belgium (Wallonia and Brussels)
Named after Saint Judoc, Saint-Josse was originally a farming village on the outskirts of Brussels. In the centuries before the dismantling of the ramparts encircling Brussels, Saint-Josse was also the place where noblemen built country estates, the most notable amongst them the Castle of the Dukes of Brabant built by Philip the Good in 1456 ...
Musiq'3 is a Belgian public-service radio station operated by RTBF.Its output is centred on classical music. The current director is Bernard Meillat. The channel first went on air – as the Troisième Programme of the then existing RTB (Radio-télévision belge, RTB) – on 1 October 1961. [1]
The station was built between 1854 and 1855 by the Grande Compagnie de Luxembourg, as part of the Brussels-Luxembourg railway line it was constructing. [1] It was to service the new Leopold Quarter , hence its original name of Leopold Quarter railway station (French: Gare du Quartier Léopold , Dutch: Station Leopoldswijk ).