Northern Indiana Classical Stations For Sale

Radio Online reports that Classical WBNI 94.1 in Roanoke IN is on the auction block.  It’s being offered for $2.5 million. The owner is Northeast Indiana Public Radio.  The station itself is actually classified as a commercial station even though it is treated mostly like a public station.  WBNI is a sister station to the NPR affiliate WBOI, which is NOT for sale, and WBNI’s classical programming is also carried on the non-commercial frequency 91.3 WCKZ in Orland.  It’s all a little confusing.  Both WBNI and WCKZ are for sale, as is … Continue Reading

Update on KFUO

Last week came and went, and St. Louis’s KFUO-FM is still a classical station — at least for now. The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, which owns the commercial station, has decided that it will continue pursuing “multiple negotiations” regarding the station’s future. Local media has already reported that the prospective buyer is Gateway Creative Broadcasting, a Christian broadcaster. (Does “multiple negotiations” mean others are interested?) The board gave a committee full authority to approve a sale. For more details, you can read the full press release on the LCMS website. We’ll keep you … Continue Reading

Station Beat: St. Louis’s KFUO still in play; KCRW plans new stream

It’s the end of the week and still no word on the fate of KFUO-FM, the commercial classical station in St. Louis that might be sold by the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod. This even-handed editorial in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch said the synod’s board was expected to decide yesterday, but I don’t see any updates online. In a poll tallied up this week, a majority of Post-Dispatch readers opposed the sale of the station.

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Music Writing and Classical Radio

The death of classical music is not only an old topic, but broad as well. Looking at a few recent posts on classical music blogs, the discussion appears to be focusing more on specific aspects of classical music’s supposed morbidity.

Anne Midgette (blogging at the Washington Post’s Classical Beat) wonders whether the classical CD business is dying, and in response British music commentator Norman Lebrecht wrote that ways of communicating about classical music are disappearing.

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