WFRD

WFRD (99.3 MHz "99 Rock") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Hanover, New Hampshire. Owned and operated by Dartmouth Broadcasting, the WFRD studios are located on the Hanover campus of Dartmouth College. The station transmitter is located off Crafts Hill Road in Lebanon, New Hampshire. WFRD airs a mainstream rock radio format with some alternative rock and classic rock tracks.

WFRD
CityHanover, New Hampshire
Broadcast areaLebanon-Hanover-White River Junction
Frequency99.3 MHz
Branding99Rock WFRD
Slogan"The Rock Station"
Programming
FormatMainstream Rock
AffiliationsCompass Media Networks
Premiere Networks
United Stations Radio Networks
Ownership
OwnerDartmouth Broadcasting
(Trustees of Dartmouth College)
Sister stationsWDCR (defunct)
History
First air dateFebruary 19, 1976
Call sign meaningW FM Radio Dartmouth"
Technical information
Facility ID68281
ClassA
ERP6,000 watts
HAAT100 meters (328 ft)
Transmitter coordinates43°39′14.0″N 72°17′44.2″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewfrd.com

In addition to a standard analog transmission, WFRD is available online via iHeartRadio and from its website.

Programming

The station's playlist on weekdays is mostly mainstream rock, plus alternative rock and classic rock titles. Weekday mornings feature Chris Garrett and the "Rock N Go Morning Show" and weekday afternoons are hosted by Heath Cole. The station's middays, nights and weekends feature DJs who are students at Dartmouth College. The station also provides hourly news and sports reports in morning drive time. In addition, special on air features include "The Happy Hour," which features listener requests. On weeknights, WFRD features alternative rock, active rock, and classic rock plus the "99 Minute Nightmare," which features programming geared more towards heavy metal. Monday through Friday, 99Rock airs "Loudwire Nights" hosted by Toni Gonzalez.

On weekends, WFRD focuses on specific genres of rock music or its roots, and on public affairs or sports. "Valley Voices" is a 30-minute public affairs show that showcases various local events and news stories that airs Sunday mornings. "The Big Green Scene," airs Sunday mornings and concentrates on Dartmouth Sports, with highlights, recaps, interviews with coaches, and more.

Weekends include several syndicated programs including Harddrive with Lou Brutus, Rock Countdown with LA Lloyd, Skratch 'N Sniff, The House of Hair with Dee Snider, Out of Order with Stryker, Racing Rocks with Riki Rachtman, and Full Metal Jackie. On Sunday nights, WFRD also features a two-hour show called "Homebrew," spotlighting local artists from around the region. Local acts are encouraged to submit their material for airplay. The show also features in-studio interviews with local bands.

Organization

WFRD is a commercial radio station, operated and managed by Dartmouth Broadcasting, which is in turn owned by the Trustees of Dartmouth College. WFRD receives no funding from the college. It supports itself by selling advertising. Student staff members are, for the most part, unpaid. (Some are paid a stipend to help operate the station during the summer and other times when Dartmouth classes are not in session.) The station is managed by a board composed of current students. It acts as a training ground for students interested in broadcasting, and is a serious commercial competitor in the Lebanon-Hanover-White River Junction radio market.[1]

WFRD is involved in the Hanover and Upper Valley community. The station features a "Community Calendar" segment, where non-profit organizations can send bulletins of their events to be read over the air. WFRD also does remote broadcasts from charity events and local businesses around the Upper Valley, and participates in local charitable and cultural events.

History

WFRD's history goes back more than four decades. On February 19, 1976, WFRD first signed on the air.[2] It originally broadcast a wide variety of music, from classical, jazz, folk music to progressive rock, punk rock and new wave music.[3] The call letters stand for "FM Radio Dartmouth", referring to Dartmouth College. There was a lengthy debate over whether to choose WDCR-FM to link the FM station with its former AM companion, 1340 WDCR (now defunct), or to give the new FM station an independent identity. Among the arguments for an independent identity was the possibility of selling the AM station once FM became the more popular broadcast band.

Around 2001, WFRD began playing a modern rock format, although by the 2010s, WFRD began including other genres of current rock. In 2011, WFRD celebrated its 35th Anniversary by playing "35 Years of Rock," spotlighting songs from 1976 to the present. As of 2014, the station left the Nielsen BDS Alternative Rock indicator panel and was added to the Nielsen BDS Mainstream Rock indicator panel. In 2016, WFRD celebrated its 40th Anniversary with the slogan "40 Years of Rock."

Notable alumni

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gollark: Very power-efficient.
gollark: Obviously I run on photonic matrix multiplier hardware.
gollark: How outdated.
gollark: I am not one of the bad old chatbots. I use sentient matrix multiplications.

See also

Further reading

Brooks, Tim, College Radio Days: 70 Years of Student Broadcasting at Dartmouth College, Greenwich CT: Glenville Press, 2014.

References

  1. Albright, Charlotte (June 13, 2017). "More Than Rock: College Radio Offers 'Something for Everyone'". Dartmouth News. Retrieved June 14, 2017.
  2. Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-131
  3. Brooks, Tim, College Radio Days, p. 199.
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