Jun. 13th, 2011

defrog: (Default)
The last good radio station in Nashville, TN is off the air.

The spectrum license for WRVU – a.k.a. 91 Rock, a.k.a. the radio station of Vanderbilt University, a.k.a. the best radio station in town – has been sold to Nashville Public Radio for $3.35 million and is now an all-classical music station called WFCL.

Damn.

I get all nostalgic in this part ... )

The good news – such as it is – is that it’s not the end of WRVU as such. It will still exist online, and starting this September, will broadcast on one of WPLN’s HD radio channels. That does mean fans will have to splurge on a new radio in order to tune in. Chalk it up to the trade-off of technological progress – online radio and HD radio mean more space for more broadcast voices. But it’ll cost you something. (At least $40 in the case of a new HD radio.)

It’s also only fair to say that while I’m not happy that Nashville Public Radio bought them (ostensibly because they wanted to run separate stations for classical music and the NPR talk programs), better them than, say, Clear Channel or Bott Radio Network. Because the last thing Nashville needs is ANOTHER country music station (there are something like 12 of them now) or Christian station (17!).

On the other hand, they could have handled it better. A lot of WRVU DJs had no idea about the change until they showed up for their next shift and found themselves locked out of the building.

Also, WRVU isn’t the first college radio frequency an NPR affiliate has bought in recent times, and by the looks of things won’t be the last. Which suggests the heyday of college radio as we know it is just about over.

But then that’s true of radio in general, in a way. The industry won’t die, but I’m one of those old farts who grew up with the concept of broadcast radio as a companion – for me, radio was a magic box tuning into the ether to see what and who was there. And as the broadcasting business has morphed horribly into clusters of identikit formats run by the same handful of conglomerates, it was good to have at least one slot on the dial where you could find something unusual.

Those days are ending. That’s a damn shame, Jim. And while it’s nice that HD radio and the Interweb will at least make it possible for the likes of WRVU to continue, it ain’t the same.

Off the air,

This is dF

Profile

defrog: (Default)
defrog

July 2025

S M T W T F S
  123 45
6789101112
13141516171819
20 212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 28th, 2025 10:47 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios