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WFMT (98.7 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station in Chicago, Illinois, featuring a classical music radio format. It is managed by Chicago's Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member station WTTW's owner, Window to the World Communications, Inc. WFMT seeks donations on the air and on its website.
Donald H. Tait (July 31, 1941 [1] – December 2023), was an American classical music radio host and producer. From 1972 until his retirement in 2007, he was a program host for WFMT in Chicago. Biography
Radio stations in the United States broadcasting classical music — either entirely or primarily in their programming. Some are part of the Classical Public Radio Network and are Public radio stations in the United States .
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]
Great Lakes Radio-Chicago, LLC: Gospel WBGZ: 1570 AM: ... Classical; Public radio WILP: ... Good News Radio, Inc. Christian talk and music
Van de Graaff began his radio career in 1984 at KBYU-FM in Utah, then moved to WFMT in Chicago as a staff announcer in 1988. Beginning in 1989 he became a program host for the Beethoven Satellite Network, a nationally syndicated classical music program service that is now carried on over 150 stations (he became Program Director of the Beethoven Satellite Network in 1996).
Starting May 20, WHAD-FM (90.7), the Wisconsin Public Radio station licensed to the Milwaukee area, will switch from its news-talk format known as The Ideas Network to WPR Music, a classical music ...
Simeone began her radio career as a classical music host at WBJC in Baltimore, moving on to WETA in Washington, D.C., and then to WJHU in Baltimore. In 1996, after ten years at WJHU, where her programming included classical, folk, and jazz music, plus a wide variety of reports, interviews, and call-in programs on intriguing topics, [2] she left to pursue a graduate degree in writing.