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WXLO (104.5 FM; "104.5 XLO") is a hot adult contemporary radio station owned by Cumulus Media, licensed to Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and serving the Worcester and Boston markets. [4] The station broadcasts on the FM band on a frequency of 104.5 MHz.
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee [1] Format [citation needed]; WACE: 730 AM: Chicopee: Holy Family Communications: Catholic WACF-LP: 98.1 FM ...
WICN (90.5 FM) is a NPR member radio station in Worcester, Massachusetts.It broadcasts commercial-free, 24 hours a day to an audience of over 40,000. The programming is mostly jazz, with daily evening shows dedicated to soul, bluegrass, Americana, folk and blues, world music, and Sunday night public affairs programming.
WOCN-FM (104.7 FM, "Ocean 104.7") is a soft adult contemporary radio station licensed to Orleans, Massachusetts.The station is licensed to Sandab Communications (doing business as Cape Cod Broadcasting) and operated locally.
WWBX (104.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to Boston, Massachusetts, serving Greater Boston with a hot adult contemporary format. The format started at 98.5 FM on February 9, 1991, and moved to 104.1 FM, replacing WBCN on August 12, 2009, to allow for the launch of WBZ-FM at 98.5 the next day.
It used Cumulus' brand for 1990s and 2000s country music, "Nash Icon". [14] On July 7, 2017, the Worcester Railers hockey team announced that WORC-FM would broadcast its games. [15] In March 2020, WORC-FM was named as the flagship radio station for the inaugural season of the Worcester Red Sox. The games began to be broadcast in the 2021 season ...
In January 2003, the station ditched Bob & Tom and took on an active rock format while keeping the name "The Fox" but identifying as "Worcester's Rock Station." That would be short lived, as in November 2004 the station changed format back to classic hits, retaining the WWFX call letters but changing its name to "100 FM The Pike" and ditching ...
By 1986, the station was using the satellite format middays, evenings, overnights, and weekends after noon. The music also gradually was modified both on Stardust and locally as soft rock songs from the 1950s to the early 1980s were being mixed in. By 1990 the station was playing about half baby boomer pop and half standards both locally and on ...