Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
AccuRadio (IPA: / ˌ æ k juː ˈ r eɪ d i oʊ /) is an independent, multichannel Internet radio property founded in 2000, and based in Chicago, Illinois, US, [1] available globally. [2] It currently offers over a thousand pre-developed 'music channels'. Some channels also highlight music from different locations around the world.
KDDD (800 AM) is a radio station broadcasting an oldies music format. Licensed to Dumas, Texas, United States, the station serves the Amarillo, Texas, area.The station is currently owned by Grant Merrill, through Southwest Media Group - Dumas, LLC, and features programming from The True Oldies Channel.
Music Choice similarly offers an interruption-free Oldies station, which includes music from the 1950s, 1960s, and decades channels for the 1970s through the 1990s. A number of Internet radio stations also carry the format. From the late 2010s until 2022, shortwave radio station WTWW operated an Oldies service in the evening hours.
Pages in category "Oldies radio stations in the United States" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 361 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
WRLL (1690 AM) was an oldies radio station licensed to Berwyn, Illinois, United States, serving the Chicago market. It was owned and operated by Clear Channel Communications . The station's transmitter was located in Chicago 's Ashburn neighborhood, near the Evergreen Park, Illinois border, and operated as a diplexed operation from one of the ...
In 1985, the station flipped the format to a rock oldies format using the Satellite Music Network Pure Gold music format and was call "The Lake". On February 25, 1987, the station changed its call sign to WLKD, when the owner moved the WLKE calls to an AM station he owned in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, (690 kHz). 1170 WLKD retained "The Lake" branding ...
WZCR (93.5 FM, "Oldies 93.5") is an oldies radio station licensed to Hudson, New York, and serving Columbia and Greene counties as well as the upper Hudson Valley, the southern Capital District, and Berkshire County, Massachusetts.
Originally, the Arrow format focused on rock-oriented oldies music from the mid-1960s through the mid-1980s, excluding pop, bubblegum, disco, and doo-wop. It also kept disc jockey talk and jingles to a minimum. [1] [2] Many Arrow stations were owned by Infinity Broadcasting and located throughout the United States.