WMUH broadcasts from MUHlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania. The station began at 640 AM in 1950 before switching to 89.7 FM in 1964. In 1979 they moved to 91.7 FM while increasing their power to 440 watts. WMUH carries a block-programmed Freeform format.
I saw this sticker on a car heading north on Interstate 75 yesterday. WDEO is a Religious station licensed to Ypsilanti, Michigan. In 1998 Domino's Pizza owner Tom Monaghan sold his chain of restaurants and used part of the fortune to buy WWCM which was then a Contemporary Christian station. Monaghan flipped it to WDEO and changed the format to a Catholic-based teaching/talk station.
"Big 105.5 FM" CHUB is a Hot Adult Contemporary station licensed to Red Deer, Alberta. The station moved to the FM dial in 2000 after having been at 700 AM with the call letters CKRD. It's unclear if there's a connection between the CHUB call letters and the "Big" branding or if they just love their fat listeners. Two more obese stickers can be seen here.
WRKF is a public radio station from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. They carry large amounts of National Public Radio programming as well as Classical music and a few locally produced shows. Their call letters stand for Richard Kilbourne Family who let the station's founders erect an antenna on family land and later donated the land to the station. WRKF celebrated their 30th anniversary in January of this year.
WLKE was an Oldies station from Oshkosh, Wisconsin. AM 690 is now one of about two dozen stations and translators in the VCY America network of religious broadcasters.
A buddy and I went to see Rush at Nationwide Arena in Columbus Sunday night. I saw them about 15 years ago at Riverbend in Cincinnati but was really looking forward to seeing them again because they'd be playing their best album in its entirety. Moving Pictures came out in 1981 right about the time I started paying attention to music (I was 10.) It contains their best known song, "Tom Sawyer," heavy use of synthesizer as well as Neil Peart's impeccable drumming. When it was released, Moving Pictures was all over the radio where I lived in western New York--probably because of its proximity to the band's hometown of Toronto. The show was fantastic and the band played for about three hours. No pictures because I forgot the camera in my car...what an idiot.
A Rush sticker from KSHE, a Rock station licensed to Crestwood, Missouri. This was to promote the band's 1996 Halloween-night show on the Test for Echo Tour in St. Louis. The piled rocks are the Inukshuk from the Test for Echo album cover but also features Sweet Meat, the pig which has been KSHE's mascot for decades.
The first song played Sunday night was "Spirit of Radio" which was written about Toronto's CFNY and uses their former slogan as the song's title. Here are the lyrics:
Begin the day With a friendly voice, A companion unobtrusive Plays the song that's so elusive And the magic music makes your morning mood.
Off on your way Hit the open road, There's magic at your fingers For the Spirit ever lingers, Undemanding contact In your happy solitude.
Invisible airwaves crackle with life Bright antenna bristle with the energy Emotional feedback On a timeless wavelength Bearing a gift beyond price Almost free
All this machinery making modern music Can still be open-hearted Not so coldly charted, It's really just a question Of your honesty
One likes to believe in the freedom of music, But glittering prizes And endless compromises Shatter the illusion Of integrity.
For the words of the profits Are written on the studio wall, Concert hall -- Echoes with the sounds... Of salesmen.
CFNY was a Progressive/Alternative/Freeform/New Wave station in Toronto starting in the late 1970s. The above "sticker" is actually a giant, three foot long car sunshield. I had to take a picture of it because it's too large to scan.
Today, CFNY is a much less adventurous Modern Rock station known as "102.1 The Edge."
My son modelling a vintage early-80s(?) jersey shirt from 99.3 FM CFOX.
CFOX is an Active Rock station from Vancouver, British Columbia. They became Canada's first full-time FM Rock station in 1968 when their call letters were CKLG. They've been CFOX since 1979. More CFOX decals can be seen here.
Berkeley, California's KPFA (K PaciFicA) is a left-leaning Talk station and the first listener supported radio station in the United States. They were founded by pacifist Lewis Hill in 1946 and went on the air in 1949. KPFA is the flagship of the Pacifica Network which oversees 5 stations and provides programming to over 100 affiliates. Pacifica's mission is "to promote peace and justice through communication between all races, nationalities and cultures."
1450 AM KNOT is a Classic Country station from Prescott, Arizona. KNOT FM was an Adult Contemporary station at 99.1 FM which is now AC KTMG. The FM side of the shirt shows KNOT was once located at 98.3. This sticker resembles the style of license plate Arizona used from 1980 until 1996.
A paper-thin shirt--you can even see the duplicate logo on the back bleeding through--from WLIR (W Long Island Radio) licensed to Garden City, New York.
This sticker resembles New York's license plate design used between 1973 and 1985.
WLIR switched from Beautiful Music to a freeform Rock format in 1970. By the late 1970s they were mixing music from traditional album rock acts along with early "new wave" artists like Blondie, Television and the Talking Heads. In 1982 WLIR fully embraced this new era of music becoming one of the first Modern Rock stations in the country. They switched call letters to WDRE in 1987 but regained the WLIR calls in 1996 while shifting to an Adult Album Alternative format. In 2004 the station was sold and currently carries a Regional Mexican format as "La Que Buena 92.7" WQBU.
Click here for an excellent WLIR tribute site with lots of photos, playlists and a brief history of the station.