Losing Classical Ground in Illinois/Missouri

Radio-Info.com reports that WQUB in Quincy, IL is going to become part of the St. Louis Public Radio group.  It acquires the name Quincy Public Radio.  Unfortunately for us classical geeks, they plan to replace the midday and evening classical programming with more talkedy-talk.  They have been running Classical 24 in the midday hours but will replace those music hours with national talk programming. St. Louis Public Radio is licensed to the University of Missouri. St. Louis lost its own classical station KFUO to a religious broadcaster in 2009 after 61 years on the air.  KWMU picked up … Continue Reading

On-Air Job Opening in Sacramento

Classical Host Posted: Wednesday, May 9, 2012 Permalink JOB ANNOUNCEMENT Title:    Classical Host Department:    Programming Status: Full Time, Non-Exempt Posting Date: April 27, 2012 End Date: Open Until Filled Summary Classical Host announces and engineers weekday music shift; produces content for automated classical programs; participates in on-air fundraising; station appearances and other fundraising and promotional events; assists in music programming and scheduling (MusicMaster); and responds to emails, calls and correspondence from listeners. Qualifications Prior professional broadcast experience required.  Applicants must have a relaxed and engaging on-air presence, a familiarity with foreign language … Continue Reading

WUIS Going All News in July

From Brian M. in Illinois.  I moved this from the comments to a post because I thought it would be of general interest. I am not sure how to contact Marty directly so I will write here as this is news you will want to report. I got an email about an hour ago from WUIS 91.9 my local NPR station in Springfield, IL saying that that they going all news on weekdays starting July 1, 2012. They already aired no Classical music on the weekends and that does not change. I … Continue Reading

Mobile Classical Radio – Apple vs. Android

The mobile phone radio app TuneIn has more than 30 million users in 230 countries.  A new app released today makes it even more user-accessible.  Connie Guglielmo writes about it in Forbes. They’ve added features that recommend new stations and music based on what listeners are tuned into (pun intended) and present a list of stations “Now Playing” the kind of music or talk radio you’re interested in. (In addition to letting you search by station or genre, or seeking out what station is playing a song by your favorite artist right now). … Continue Reading

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