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WKLL

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Radio station in Frankfort, New York
K-Rock (WKLL, WKRL-FM, WKRH)
  • United States
Broadcast areaUtica–Rome metropolitan area, Syracuse metropolitan area, Oswego-Fulton, New York
Programming
FormatActive rock
AffiliationsUtica Comets, Syracuse Orange (in Utica only)
Ownership
OwnerGalaxy Media Partners
Sister stations
History
Founded1973, with the start of WKRL-FM as WEZG-FM
First air dateOctober 25, 1993, as a simulcast
Links
Webcast
Website

WKLL, WKRL-FM, and WKRH, known together as K-Rock, are radio stations broadcasting an active rock radio format to Central New York and the Mohawk Valley. Owned by Galaxy Media Partners, the stations provide coverage of Utica-Rome area, the Syracuse metropolitan area, and the Oswego-Fulton area, respectively. Galaxy has studios and offices in Utica and Syracuse.

The oldest of the three stations is WKRL-FM (100.9 MHz), licensed to North Syracuse, which began as WSOQ-FM but was WEZG-FM from 1972 to 1993. It mostly ran an easy listening format before slowly shifting to adult contemporary in the 1980s. In 1990, Galaxy (then known as The Radio Corporation) put WKLL (94.9 MHz), licensed to Frankfort, on the air to broadcast a classic rock format to the Utica area; it soon switched to an alternative format. The Radio Corporation acquired WEZG-FM in 1993 and began the K-Rock simulcast into Syracuse. WKRH (106.5 MHz) debuted in 1996. Aside from a brief period in 2004, stemming from an abortive sale, the simulcast has retained its name and general rock orientation since then. The Central New York K-Rock stations sponsored the annual K-Rockathon music festival.

History

WEZG-FM

WSOQ-FM, adjunct to WSOQ (1220 AM), began broadcasting in early 1972. On June 6, 1972, WSOQ-FM adopted a separate call sign from its AM sister and became WEZG-FM, reflecting its easy listening format.

In 1983, after a vote among listeners over whether to switch to album-oriented rock was closely divided, WEZG-FM flipped to that format, while WSOQ became WEZG on the AM band and continued with easy listening. The WEZG stations later changed to WSCY on AM and FM. The flip was not a success, and owner Sky Corp. elected to undo the flip and switch both stations back to their former easy listening format—which had been higher-rated—and WEZG call letters on February 28, 1984. Sky sold the stations in 1985 to Lorenz Broadcasting Company of Buffalo, who split them into separate formats; WEZG-FM continued with a more upbeat, soft adult contemporary sound. In 1990, the WEZG stations were purchased by Larry Levite, owner of WBEN in Buffalo.

WKLL

WKLL began broadcasting to the Utica area on February 12, 1990. It was owned by Robert Raide and Ed Levine and originally was a classic rock–formatted station known as "Classic 94.9". The LL in the call sign represented Ed Levine's daughter Lauren. The station switched to a harder rock format after being unable to top WOUR in the ratings.

As the K-Rock simulcast

Raide, Levine, and Frank Toce bought WEZG-FM and WNSS (the former WEZG AM) in 1993 and immediately assumed control under a time brokerage agreement. On October 15, the stations left the air. On October 25, WEZG-FM became WKRL-FM and began simulcasting WKLL as K-Rock, touting itself as "the station 95X"—WAQX-FM, which Levine had helped build in the late 1970s—"used to be". The K-Rock format distinguished itself from WAQX by playing harder rock geared toward a younger audience. The Utica and Syracuse stations shared programming but had separate advertising for the Utica and Syracuse areas. Levine touted the fact that costs increased 20 percent with WKRL-FM in the fold but the revenue base tripled. In 1996, K-Rock shifted to a modern rock (alternative) format.

The K-Rock simulcast was broken between March and April 2004 after Levine agreed to sell WKLL to Route 76 Radio, a subsidiary of Route 81 Radio of West Chester, Pennsylvania. Route 76, operating WKLL under a time brokerage agreement, installed an adult standards format which was to be simulcast with WTLB. Galaxy Communications was unsatisfied with Route 76's decision to change formats on the stations without consulting Galaxy, and the deal failed to close. On April 26, 2004, Galaxy reassumed control of WKLL and reinstated K-Rock.

HD2 subchannel of WKLL

On September 8, 2016, WKLL signed on a new HD2 subchannel broadcasting a variety hits format as "Tony FM". The subchannel also broadcasts in Utica on low-power W256AJ at 99.1, which formerly served as a translator station for WRNY/WTLB/WIXT. An AM simulcast of the station was added on March 23, 2018 on WIXT in Little Falls.

Technical information

The three K-Rock transmitters serve an area running from Utica in the east to Oswego in the west, with Syracuse in the middle.

K-Rock transmitters
Call sign Frequency City of license Facility ID ERP (W) HAAT Class Transmitter coordinates Founded Former call signs
WKLL 94.9 FM (HD Radio) Frankfort 54959 34,000 173 m (568 ft) B 43°8′40.2″N 75°10′30.5″W / 43.144500°N 75.175139°W / 43.144500; -75.175139 (WKLL) February 12, 1990
WKRL-FM 100.9 FM North Syracuse 2876 6,000 50 m (164 ft) A 43°9′6.2″N 76°7′56.7″W / 43.151722°N 76.132417°W / 43.151722; -76.132417 (WKRL-FM) 1972
  • WSOQ-FM (1972)
  • WEZG-FM (1972–1983, 1984-1993)
  • WSCY-FM (1983–1984)
WKRH 106.5 FM Fair Haven 20591 5,000 100 m (328 ft) A 43°24′30.2″N 76°33′22.8″W / 43.408389°N 76.556333°W / 43.408389; -76.556333 (WKRH) April 1, 1996

References

  1. "New Call Letters For FM Station". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. June 7, 1972. p. 29. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. LaRue, William (August 11, 1993). "The creation of call letters". Syracuse Herald-Journal. Syracuse, New York. pp. D1, D3. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. "Tuned in". Star-Gazette. Elmira, New York. Associated Press. January 27, 1983. p. 3A. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. Starner, Tom (February 27, 1984). "WSCY abandoning its rock format". Syracuse Herald-Journal. Syracuse, New York. p. B1. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. "WEZG-FM sold". Syracuse Herald-Journal. Syracuse, New York. March 13, 1985. p. B9. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. "WURS-AM on the Air". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. September 28, 1985. p. A-11. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. Pergament, Alan (October 3, 1990). "Channel 4 winning no friends by ignoring 'America Tonight'". The Buffalo News. Buffalo, New York. p. B-10. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. Dudajek, Dave (February 13, 1990). "New FM station debuts with classic rock menu". Utica Observer-Dispatch. p. 1C.
  9. Vanno, Philip (February 8, 2015). "Galaxy Communications keeping up with the times". Utica Observer-Dispatch. Retrieved February 9, 2015.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. Houston, Mike (June 14, 1994). "WRCK playing classics of rock". Utica Observer-Dispatch. p. 1B.
  11. LaRue, William (October 16, 1993). "WEZG-FM, WNNS-AM leave air in wake of sale". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. p. C5. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. LaRue, William (October 26, 1993). "Station takes shot at rivals". The Post-Standard. Syracuse, New York. p. C5. Retrieved December 31, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. Houston, Mike (February 13, 1990). "WKLL, 94.9, broadens market with secondary station". Utica Observer-Dispatch. p. 1B.
  14. Challenger, Donald (April 6, 1996). "Wall-to-wall 'modern rock' now the story at 94 K-Rock". p. 2C.
  15. Ryen, Jessica (March 6, 2004). "Radio station changing its tune Monday: K-Rock switching to adult standards music". pp. 1A, 2A.
  16. Ingersoll, Kari (April 27, 2004). "Modern rock back on K-Rock: Radio station owner brings original format back to 94.9 FM". p. 1B.
  17. Venta, Lance (September 8, 2016). "Galaxy Launches 99.1 Tony-FM Utica". RadioInsight.com.
  18. "The New Tony FM can now also be heard on 1230AM in Little Falls!". 99.1 Utica's Tony FM, Facebook. March 23, 2018.

External links

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Notes
1. Audio from channel 6 TV station
Active rock radio stations in the state of New York
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See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
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oldies
religious
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other radio stations in New York
See also
active rock
classic rock
mainstream rock
modern rock
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