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WCHI-FM (95.5 MHz) is a mainstream rock formatted radio station located in Chicago, Illinois, owned and operated by iHeartMedia.WCHI-FM has studios located at the Illinois Center complex on Michigan Avenue in Downtown Chicago, and it broadcasts from a 5.3 kW transmitter based atop John Hancock Center.
Worship music WAXR: 88.1 FM: Geneseo: American Family Association: ... Country WKKC: 89.3 FM: Chicago: Board of Trustees Community College Dist. Urban contemporary
Chicago. WKQX – 101.1 – Alternative rock ... WDUZ — 1400/95.5 — Sports ... Nash FM — national country music branding used by many Cumulus stations since 2013;
The station's initial country music competitors in Chicago were 670 WMAQ, 104.3 WJEZ, and 1160 WJJD, which switched to the adult standards Music of Your Life format within weeks of "US-99"'s debut. [38] In years when the station lacked major local competition, it has ranked as the nation's most-listened-to country station. [44] [45]
WFYR (97.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a country music format [2] and licensed for Elmwood, Illinois, United States, in the Peoria area. The station is owned by Cumulus Media , [ 3 ] which purchased the station from Townsquare Media .
WFMS (95.5 FM) is a commercial country music radio station. It is owned by Cumulus Media and is licensed to Fishers, Indiana, while serving the Indianapolis metropolitan area. Its studios and offices are located on North Shadeland Avenue in Indianapolis, and its transmitter is off Burk Road. [2]
The WIIL Rock Fest is an annual music festival produced and sponsored by FM Entertainment, 95 WIIL Rock and Route 20 Outhouse in Sturtevant, Wisconsin. The 2012 WIIL Rock Fest was held on August 11 and featured performances by All That Remains , Saving Abel , 10 Years , Fear Factory , Static-X , Black Stone Cherry, and Shadows Fall and others.
For a short time in 1987–1988, Chicago actually had two such stations, as the "Wave" network was also heard on WTWV-FM, licensed to suburban Des Plaines (now WPPN). In the late 1980s, research firm Cody/Leach conducted a study for WNUA–Chicago; it was through the verbatim responses from listeners that the name "Smooth Jazz" was identified.