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WHAL-FM (95.7 MHz) is a radio station in Memphis, Tennessee broadcasting an urban gospel format. The iHeartMedia, Inc. outlet is licensed to nearby Horn Lake, Mississippi . The station's studios are located in Southeast Memphis, and the transmitter site is in the city's Midtown district.
WOAD – Gospel 1300 AM & 103.5 FM - Urban contemporary gospel; WJSU-FM – FM 88 – Jazz. WJSU-HD2 - JSU Tigers The Sipp - Urban Alternative; WMPR – WMPR 90.1 FM - Urban contemporary, Blues, Urban Gospel, Variety; WHLH – 95.5 Hallelujah FM – Urban contemporary gospel; WRBJ-FM – 97.7 FM – Urban contemporary; WJMI – 99 Jams ...
Worship music WIWT-LP: 100.1 FM: Jackson: ... Storm Alert Station WQST-FM: 92.5 FM: ... Country/Southern gospel WRBJ-FM:
In September 2002, it again changed its name, this time to "Power 105.9", focusing even more on hip hop, rap and youthful R&B. None of these formats worked, so it switched to urban gospel as "Hallelujah 105.9 FM" on February 1, 2003. It copied an urban gospel station that Clear Channel had introduced in Memphis the previous year, WHAL-FM. This ...
WBHJ (95.7 FM) is an urban-leaning rhythmic-formatted radio station that serves Birmingham, Alabama.In 2005, it also began broadcasting in IBOC digital radio, using the HD Radio system from iBiquity.
The station first signed on in 1994 as KGDP-FM with a rhythmic oldies format. By the end of the 1990s, KGDP-FM featured Southern gospel music. [2] On March 24, 1999, KGDP-FM changed its call sign to KPAT. (Previously, the KPAT call letters belonged to a station in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, now known as KKRC-FM, from 1973 to 1994.)
Gospel Opportunities Radio Network is a group of non-commercial Christian FM radio stations based in Marquette, Michigan, with stations throughout Michigan's Upper Peninsula, along with a translator in Mackinaw City, Michigan. Gospel Opportunities, Inc. was formed in 1975. Its first station WHWL went on air in April 1976.
The station shortens its call sign to WLGA on November 30, 1981, and became a full adult contemporary format station which remains to this day. WLGA was Valdosta and southern Georgia's dominant affiliate for Rick Dees Weekly Top 40 in the 1980s, listeners in the area can also listen to the program on Tallahassee's WGLF in a Grade B signal.