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"AM Stations in the U.S.: Kentucky", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive; Terry L. Birdwhistell (1981). "WHAS Radio and the Development of Broadcasting in Kentucky, 1922-1942". Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 79 (4): 333– 353. JSTOR 23379633.
WOSL – 100.3 R&B – Urban oldies-leaning urban adult contemporary; WEBN-HD3 – 102.3 The Beat – Mainstream urban; WGRI – Inspiration 1050 & 103.1 – Urban contemporary gospel; WDBZ – The Buzz 1230 AM – Urban Talk/Urban Contemporary; WCVG - 1320 The Voice - Urban Gospel/Brokered Programming
WLOU is the heritage black station in Louisville, programming to that community continuously since October 21, 1951. It became a "Negro radio station," using a staff of black disc jockeys . The early conversion to Rhythm & Blues music makes WLOU one of the first five full-time R&B stations in the USA.
The station's studios are located at Triangle Center in downtown Lexington, and its transmitter is located east of Versailles, Kentucky. WBTF signed on its current format in 2000, playing hip hop and R&B music, making it the first time in six years that an Urban-formatted station returned to Lexington since WCKU flipped the format in 1994 to rock.
KGNU-FM FM 88.5 Denver/Boulder/Longmont, Colorado; WPKN FM 89.5 Real People Real Radio Bridgeport, Connecticut; WDUP-LP 92.9 FM Home of Timeless Hip Hop and R&B New London, Connecticut; WJKS 101.7 FM Wilmington, Delaware; WSLR 96.5 FM Radio Sarasota, Florida; WMNF FM 88.5 Tampa, Florida; WRFG-FM FM 89.3 Atlanta, Georgia ("Radio Free Georgia")
By 2003, the station was known as "Jammin' Oldies and More" with a broader playlist consisting of some newer R&B music. The station changed its moniker to "Denver's Classic Soul" in 2004. The station became a CBS Radio-owned and operated station with the renaming of Infinity in December 2005.
The TV stations formerly owned by Clear Channel were sold to Providence Equity Partners, a private equity firm, on April 23, 2007, with the deal closing in late November 2007. 185 radio stations were to have been sold to GoodRadio.TV LLC until the sale fell apart over financing., [1] [2] and another 177 stations have been sold to other entities ...
The station was founded in 1954 by the Louisville Free Public Library as a classical music station. It was a sister station to WFPL.. In 1975, the station received the entire inventory of classical music recordings from commercial outlet WHAS-FM (now WAMZ-FM), which had discontinued the format after a nine-year run; that station, which carried little or no advertising, was mainly a public ...