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KANW (89.1 FM) is a non-commercial public radio station in Albuquerque, New Mexico.KANW is owned and operated by the Albuquerque Public Schools.On weekdays it airs New Mexico music and local public radio programming afternoons and nights, with NPR news programming in the morning, including Morning Edition, Fresh Air, On Point and 1A.
Southern New Mexico Radio Foundation: Gospel KHQT: 103.1 FM: Las Cruces: ARG of Las Cruces LLC: Rhythmic contemporary KIDS: 88.1 FM: Grants: Board of Education of the City of Albuquerque, N.M. New Mexico Music/Public radio KIDX: 101.5 FM: Ruidoso: MTD Inc. Classic rock KINN: 1270 AM: Alamogordo: Burt Broadcasting: News/Talk KIOT: 102.5 FM: Los ...
The following radio stations broadcast on FM frequency 89.1 MHz: ... KANW in Albuquerque, New Mexico; KAUR in Sioux Falls, ... KEOS in College Station, Texas; KFAE-FM ...
K251AU began broadcasting in January 2007 with programming from KBNM-LP (98.7 FM), a low-powered radio station based in Belen, New Mexico offering a non-commercial oldies music format. At the time, the translator was running at just 10 watts, and often encountered interference problems with the full-powered KBAC out of Las Vegas, New Mexico .
Pulse 95 Radio 95.0 - Acoustic, Talk, Tech - Sharjah's first English radio station. Sharjah Broadcasting Authority; Classic FM 91.6 - Classic, Jazz and Chill Out - Abu Dhabi Media. Radio Classical Opera Dubai 88.6 - The First Classical and Opera Radio station in UAE
KBAC first signed on in November 1989 as "98.1 The Wave" with a satellite-delivered format that featured a blend of soft rock, light jazz, and new-age music. [2] The station would add a local morning show with a shift in programming in September 1990, as well as translator K288CX at 105.5 to cover the Albuquerque area. [3]
KDSK-FM (92.7 MHz) is a radio station based in Grants, New Mexico, (population about 10,000), the county seat of Cibola County in western New Mexico. KD Radio Incorporated (KD Radio) purchased KDSK-FM in January 2001. Having had much success with kdradio.com in California, it was decided to put the massive KD Radio oldies format of 7000 songs ...
As KHTL, the station aired a "Hot Talk" format. [12] LifeTalk Radio acquired the station in 2000, in a station swap with Citadel Communications, in which LifeTalk Radio received this station and $5 million in cash, in exchange for Albuquerque's AM 610. [13] On April 17, 2000, the station's callsign was changed to KSVA. [11]