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WLVU (FM)

WLVU (97.1 MHz) is an FM radio station licensed to the city of Belle Meade, Tennessee, but serving the Nashville market as a whole. It is currently branded as K-LOVE, repeating a satellite-delivered contemporary Christian format. The station is owned by Educational Media Foundation and is the flagship of the K-Love and Air1 brands based in nearby Franklin, Tennessee. It is Nashville's most recent full-power FM station to take the air.

WLVU
Broadcast areaNashville, Tennessee
Frequency97.1 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingK-Love
Programming
FormatChristian contemporary
Subchannels
Ownership
OwnerEducational Media Foundation
WKTH, WLFM
History
First air date
2000; 24 years ago (2000)
Former call signs
WRQQ (1999-2012)
Call sign meaning
Interpolation of K-Love
Technical information
Facility ID26689
ClassC2
ERP44,370 watts
HAAT157.6 meters
Translator(s)100.3 W262CN (Hendersonville)
HD2: 92.5 W223BV (Brentwood)
HD4: 89.9 W210CD (Hendersonville)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteklove.com

Ownership edit

The original construction permit was granted in 1999 to Mid-TN Broadcasters, LLC, a consortium of former applicants for the permit. In 2000, control of Mid-TN Broadcasters, LLC was transferred from the original owners to the privately owned Dickey Brothers Broadcasting in exchange for WVOL(AM) and cash (BTCH-19991223ABT). Dickey Brothers later brought the station to air using the call letters WRQQ, at which point it became a sister station to WNPL (106.7 FM) and WQQK (92.1 FM).

In 2002, Dickey Brothers Broadcasting sold the three-station Nashville cluster to Cumulus Media, a publicly traded company in which members of the Dickey family served (at that time) as major shareholders, directors, and executives. In 2003, the station moved to a new state-of-the-art studio and welcomed WSM-FM and WWTN as sister stations after Cumulus purchased them from Gaylord Entertainment Company.

On September 16, 2011, WRQQ and sister station WNFN were placed into an independent trust (Volt Radio, LLC) while Cumulus sought a buyer. The move was forced by FCC ownership limits following Cumulus' acquisition of Citadel Broadcasting, which resulted locally in WKDF and WGFX joining the Cumulus cluster. The FCC, as of 2011, allows a single company to own a maximum of five FM stations and two AM stations in any given market. To meet these guidelines in Nashville, Cumulus was forced to spin off two of its seven FM stations, and the company chose WRQQ and WNFN, traditionally its two lowest-performing stations.

On November 14, 2011, Cumulus announced it was removing WRQQ from the Volt Radio trust, replacing it with WQQK.[1] Following the sale of WRQQ, Cumulus reacquired WQQK from the trust.

On July 10, 2012, Cumulus announced it would be selling WRQQ to Educational Media Foundation, as part of a larger deal that resulted in a facility swap in Mobile, Alabama.[2] On July 15, 2012, EMF took control of the station, began airing K-LOVE programming, and changed the call letters to WLVU. Cumulus operated the station on behalf of EMF until the sale was complete on April 16, 2013.

As of August 2014, EMF owns and operates the station outright.

History edit

Stunting edit

Once the station's transmitter was up and running, WRQQ, preparing for its official launch, began stunting with jukebox sound effects and clips from songs from all genres of music with the promise that "an all-new radio station is coming to 97.1 FM". This stunt was broadcast for a few days in early 2000.

Star 97 edit

WRQQ officially signed on the air in early 2000 (its license was granted on November 24, 1999) as "Star 97", a station broadcasting hot adult contemporary music. In 2002, the station shifted to an all-1980s music format but kept its "Star 97" name. The station would eventually migrate back to hot AC in 2003, again keeping the "Star 97" brand. Notable air talent on Star 97 included Hollywood Hendrix, Billy Brown, Steve Wall, Scott Chase, Jack Shell, JT Daniels, Mark Allen, and Scotty O'Brien.

Though the name stayed the same through the various changes, the station used four different taglines/slogans:

  • A Better Variety of Music!
  • The Best of the 80s, 90s, and Today!
  • The Best 80s and More!
  • Real Music Variety!

Oldies 97.1 edit

On May 13, 2005, Star 97 began running liners to listen at 5PM for a "major announcement". At 5 PM that day, after playing Closing Time by Semisonic, the station made a drastic change by flipping its format to oldies, as Oldies 97.1, with the first song on Oldies 97.1 being Listen to the Music by The Doobie Brothers. The day before, 96.3 WMAK (now WCJK), which had broadcast the oldies format in Nashville for over a decade, suddenly changed formats to "Jack FM". Sensing a void, Cumulus management reacted by changing the underperforming Star 97 to the newly abandoned oldies format.

The new format, put together literally overnight, mimicked the template that WMAK had set forth. The logo and jingle package were nearly identical to the ones WMAK used, the same slogan ("Good Times & Great Oldies") was incorporated, and the major components of WMAK's airstaff, including Nashville radio legends Coyote McCloud and Cathy Martindale, were hired.

97.1 WRQQ edit

On September 1, 2006, WRQQ transitioned its format from oldies to classic hits and abandoned the "Oldies" moniker as well. The station was reimaged, and for the first time (aside from legal identifications) used the call letters in its on-air imaging. The station became known as "97.1 WRQQ, Rock N' Roll Hits of the ’60s and ’70s". While the staff initially remained intact, Coyote and Cathy were released in November, and the station replaced them with The Bob & Tom Show during morning drive in December. In doing so, Cumulus secured the rights to Bob & Tom from WBUZ ("102.9 The Buzz"), which had been the duo's Nashville affiliate since 1997. Midday air personality Bobby Knight was also released as part of the change. As the station matured, its music selection became more and more male-oriented, and the station began to compete more directly with WNRQ ("105.9 The Rock"), after being initially positioned to compete with WCJK ("96.3 Jack-FM").

Classic Hits 97.1/97.1 The Tower edit

As its music selection was further focused, the station shifted its branding in February 2007 to "Classic Hits 97.1", all but abandoning the call letters in its on-air imaging. Its logo style was left the same, but the wordmarks were altered to reflect the change. The station was later rebranded itself as "97.1 The Tower" in September 2007, and featured a different logo. The classic hits format remained the same.

97-1 RQQ edit

On March 21, 2008, at 10 a.m. CDT, WRQQ underwent another format change. The station began running liners the day before that pointed to a "major announcement" that would be made on the 21st following The Bob & Tom Show. At 10 a.m., the station played a couple of instrumental versions of popular classic rock songs. A montage featuring sound bites from prominent rock artists was then played, after which the station launched its new format and branding. The new format was mainstream rock, and branded as "97-1 RQQ." The first song played on "97-1 RQQ" was Rock! Rock! (Till You Drop) by Def Leppard. The format overall found "RQQ" positioning itself as "Nashville's Rock Station," playing Classic Rock artists such as Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith to more current artist like Nickelback and Green Day. Additionally, the station would play new songs from established artists not getting much airplay, such as Mudcrutch's (Tom Petty's first band) "Scare Easy", and "Saints Of Los Angeles" by Mötley Crüe. This new version of WRQQ featured new talents Karen Keeley doing middays and Mac in the afternoon. The Bob and Tom show remained in place. On May 18, 2009, WRQQ further focused its rock format into an adult album alternative format.

Classic Hits 97.1 RQQ edit

On July 16, 2010, WRQQ changed its format to classic hits once again, branded as "Classic Hits 97.1 RQQ". Along with this change, WRQQ became the flagship station for Vanderbilt University football and men's basketball.

K-LOVE edit

At the stroke of midnight on July 15, 2012, WRQQ began airing the national K-LOVE radio feed without explanation, following the implementation of a local marketing agreement between Cumulus and Educational Media Foundation. Simultaneously, the call letters were changed to WLVU. The LMA was in place while the sale of the station from Cumulus to EMF was pending. The sale was consummated effective April 16, 2013, as the station was reclassified as non-commercial educational.

HD Radio edit

HD1: K-LOVE (Christian Contemporary)
HD2: Air1 (Contemporary worship music)
HD3: K-LOVE 90s (formerly K-Love Classics) (90s Christian Hits)
HD4: WAY-FM Network (WAYM simulcast)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Cumulus Takes Two Out of Trusts, Puts One in".
  2. ^ "Cumulus-EMF Mobile Swap Includes Nashville Deal, Too".

External links edit

  • Official website
  • WLVU in the FCC FM station database
  • WLVU in Nielsen Audio's FM station database

36°17′49″N 86°45′11″W / 36.297°N 86.753°W / 36.297; -86.753

wlvu, other, uses, wlvu, disambiguation, wlvu, radio, station, licensed, city, belle, meade, tennessee, serving, nashville, market, whole, currently, branded, love, repeating, satellite, delivered, contemporary, christian, format, station, owned, educational, . For other uses see WLVU disambiguation WLVU 97 1 MHz is an FM radio station licensed to the city of Belle Meade Tennessee but serving the Nashville market as a whole It is currently branded as K LOVE repeating a satellite delivered contemporary Christian format The station is owned by Educational Media Foundation and is the flagship of the K Love and Air1 brands based in nearby Franklin Tennessee It is Nashville s most recent full power FM station to take the air WLVUBelle Meade TennesseeBroadcast areaNashville TennesseeFrequency97 1 MHz HD Radio BrandingK LoveProgrammingFormatChristian contemporarySubchannelsHD2 Air1 Contemporary worship music HD3 K Love 90s 90s Christian hits HD4 WAY FM Network WAYM simulcast OwnershipOwnerEducational Media FoundationSister stationsWKTH WLFMHistoryFirst air date2000 24 years ago 2000 Former call signsWRQQ 1999 2012 Call sign meaningInterpolation of K LoveTechnical informationFacility ID26689ClassC2ERP44 370 wattsHAAT157 6 metersTranslator s 100 3 W262CN Hendersonville HD2 92 5 W223BV Brentwood HD4 89 9 W210CD Hendersonville LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsiteklove com Contents 1 Ownership 2 History 2 1 Stunting 2 2 Star 97 2 3 Oldies 97 1 2 4 97 1 WRQQ 2 5 Classic Hits 97 1 97 1 The Tower 2 6 97 1 RQQ 2 7 Classic Hits 97 1 RQQ 2 8 K LOVE 3 HD Radio 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOwnership editThe original construction permit was granted in 1999 to Mid TN Broadcasters LLC a consortium of former applicants for the permit In 2000 control of Mid TN Broadcasters LLC was transferred from the original owners to the privately owned Dickey Brothers Broadcasting in exchange for WVOL AM and cash BTCH 19991223ABT Dickey Brothers later brought the station to air using the call letters WRQQ at which point it became a sister station to WNPL 106 7 FM and WQQK 92 1 FM In 2002 Dickey Brothers Broadcasting sold the three station Nashville cluster to Cumulus Media a publicly traded company in which members of the Dickey family served at that time as major shareholders directors and executives In 2003 the station moved to a new state of the art studio and welcomed WSM FM and WWTN as sister stations after Cumulus purchased them from Gaylord Entertainment Company On September 16 2011 WRQQ and sister station WNFN were placed into an independent trust Volt Radio LLC while Cumulus sought a buyer The move was forced by FCC ownership limits following Cumulus acquisition of Citadel Broadcasting which resulted locally in WKDF and WGFX joining the Cumulus cluster The FCC as of 2011 allows a single company to own a maximum of five FM stations and two AM stations in any given market To meet these guidelines in Nashville Cumulus was forced to spin off two of its seven FM stations and the company chose WRQQ and WNFN traditionally its two lowest performing stations On November 14 2011 Cumulus announced it was removing WRQQ from the Volt Radio trust replacing it with WQQK 1 Following the sale of WRQQ Cumulus reacquired WQQK from the trust On July 10 2012 Cumulus announced it would be selling WRQQ to Educational Media Foundation as part of a larger deal that resulted in a facility swap in Mobile Alabama 2 On July 15 2012 EMF took control of the station began airing K LOVE programming and changed the call letters to WLVU Cumulus operated the station on behalf of EMF until the sale was complete on April 16 2013 As of August 2014 update EMF owns and operates the station outright History editStunting edit Once the station s transmitter was up and running WRQQ preparing for its official launch began stunting with jukebox sound effects and clips from songs from all genres of music with the promise that an all new radio station is coming to 97 1 FM This stunt was broadcast for a few days in early 2000 Star 97 edit WRQQ officially signed on the air in early 2000 its license was granted on November 24 1999 as Star 97 a station broadcasting hot adult contemporary music In 2002 the station shifted to an all 1980s music format but kept its Star 97 name The station would eventually migrate back to hot AC in 2003 again keeping the Star 97 brand Notable air talent on Star 97 included Hollywood Hendrix Billy Brown Steve Wall Scott Chase Jack Shell JT Daniels Mark Allen and Scotty O Brien Though the name stayed the same through the various changes the station used four different taglines slogans A Better Variety of Music The Best of the 80s 90s and Today The Best 80s and More Real Music Variety Oldies 97 1 edit On May 13 2005 Star 97 began running liners to listen at 5PM for a major announcement At 5 PM that day after playing Closing Time by Semisonic the station made a drastic change by flipping its format to oldies as Oldies 97 1 with the first song on Oldies 97 1 being Listen to the Music by The Doobie Brothers The day before 96 3 WMAK now WCJK which had broadcast the oldies format in Nashville for over a decade suddenly changed formats to Jack FM Sensing a void Cumulus management reacted by changing the underperforming Star 97 to the newly abandoned oldies format The new format put together literally overnight mimicked the template that WMAK had set forth The logo and jingle package were nearly identical to the ones WMAK used the same slogan Good Times amp Great Oldies was incorporated and the major components of WMAK s airstaff including Nashville radio legends Coyote McCloud and Cathy Martindale were hired 97 1 WRQQ edit On September 1 2006 WRQQ transitioned its format from oldies to classic hits and abandoned the Oldies moniker as well The station was reimaged and for the first time aside from legal identifications used the call letters in its on air imaging The station became known as 97 1 WRQQ Rock N Roll Hits of the 60s and 70s While the staff initially remained intact Coyote and Cathy were released in November and the station replaced them with The Bob amp Tom Show during morning drive in December In doing so Cumulus secured the rights to Bob amp Tom from WBUZ 102 9 The Buzz which had been the duo s Nashville affiliate since 1997 Midday air personality Bobby Knight was also released as part of the change As the station matured its music selection became more and more male oriented and the station began to compete more directly with WNRQ 105 9 The Rock after being initially positioned to compete with WCJK 96 3 Jack FM Classic Hits 97 1 97 1 The Tower edit As its music selection was further focused the station shifted its branding in February 2007 to Classic Hits 97 1 all but abandoning the call letters in its on air imaging Its logo style was left the same but the wordmarks were altered to reflect the change The station was later rebranded itself as 97 1 The Tower in September 2007 and featured a different logo The classic hits format remained the same 97 1 RQQ edit On March 21 2008 at 10 a m CDT WRQQ underwent another format change The station began running liners the day before that pointed to a major announcement that would be made on the 21st following The Bob amp Tom Show At 10 a m the station played a couple of instrumental versions of popular classic rock songs A montage featuring sound bites from prominent rock artists was then played after which the station launched its new format and branding The new format was mainstream rock and branded as 97 1 RQQ The first song played on 97 1 RQQ was Rock Rock Till You Drop by Def Leppard The format overall found RQQ positioning itself as Nashville s Rock Station playing Classic Rock artists such as Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith to more current artist like Nickelback and Green Day Additionally the station would play new songs from established artists not getting much airplay such as Mudcrutch s Tom Petty s first band Scare Easy and Saints Of Los Angeles by Motley Crue This new version of WRQQ featured new talents Karen Keeley doing middays and Mac in the afternoon The Bob and Tom show remained in place On May 18 2009 WRQQ further focused its rock format into an adult album alternative format Classic Hits 97 1 RQQ edit On July 16 2010 WRQQ changed its format to classic hits once again branded as Classic Hits 97 1 RQQ Along with this change WRQQ became the flagship station for Vanderbilt University football and men s basketball K LOVE edit At the stroke of midnight on July 15 2012 WRQQ began airing the national K LOVE radio feed without explanation following the implementation of a local marketing agreement between Cumulus and Educational Media Foundation Simultaneously the call letters were changed to WLVU The LMA was in place while the sale of the station from Cumulus to EMF was pending The sale was consummated effective April 16 2013 as the station was reclassified as non commercial educational HD Radio editHD1 K LOVE Christian Contemporary HD2 Air1 Contemporary worship music HD3 K LOVE 90s formerly K Love Classics 90s Christian Hits HD4 WAY FM Network WAYM simulcast See also editList of Nashville mediaReferences edit Cumulus Takes Two Out of Trusts Puts One in Cumulus EMF Mobile Swap Includes Nashville Deal Too External links editOfficial website WLVU in the FCC FM station database WLVU in Nielsen Audio s FM station database 36 17 49 N 86 45 11 W 36 297 N 86 753 W 36 297 86 753 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WLVU FM amp oldid 1182904555, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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