WMAD
WMAD (96.3 Star Country) is a radio station serving the Madison, Wisconsin metropolitan area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia and has been running a country music format since December 23, 2005.
City | Cross Plains, Wisconsin |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Madison and South Central Wisconsin |
Frequency | 96.3 MHz FM (HD Radio) |
Branding | 96-3 Star Country |
Slogan | #1 For New Country |
Programming | |
Format | 96.3: Country music 96.3-HD2: Coffee shop radio (Acoustic rock) |
Ownership | |
Owner | iHeartMedia (Capstar TX LLC) |
Sister stations | WIBA (AM), WIBA-FM, WTSO, WXXM, WZEE |
History | |
Former call signs | WVLR WSEY (9/1987-11/1987) WMLI (11/1987-6/1994 and 2/1996-3/2002) WMXF (6/1994-2/1996) WCJZ (3/2002-12/2003) |
Call sign meaning | MADison |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 50055 |
Class | B1 |
ERP | 5,100 watts |
HAAT | 213 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 43° 12' 44.00" N 89° 35' 59.00" W |
Links | |
Webcast | Star Country live stream Coffee Shop Radio live stream |
Website | 963StarCountry.com |
History
WMAD call sign history
The call letters WMAD originally were on AM 1550 and later simulcast with 106.3 WMAD-FM Middleton (now WWQM-FM). That version of WMAD started as a country format and remained country until 1977 when the call letters on 1550 were dropped (WWQM "15Q" oldies replaced country). WMAD-FM continued as WMAD-Middleton/Madison until early 1978 when the calls were dropped from 106.3. The WMAD calls would resurface in 1979 on the station at 92.1 FM (licensed to Sun Prairie and current home to WXXM).
Early 96.3 music history
The 96.3 FM frequency in Madison has had a varied format history. In the 1970s the station was WVLR. In the mid-1990s the station played 1970s music as Mix96.3 WMXF. Following this format, the station returned to a soft rock format as WMLI, which eventually morphed into adult contemporary "Star 96.3." In March 2002, the station shifted to a smooth jazz format as "Smooth Jazz 96.3 WCJZ," filling a niche in the Madison market filled only by the "Magic Sunday Morning" smooth jazz program on WMGN (Magic 98).
"MAD Radio 96.3"
WCJZ and its smooth jazz format never made any inroads among Madison radio listeners, which led management to make another change in format. At 12 Noon on December 31, 2003, WCJZ began a 6-hour stunt with a ticking clock and synthesized voice announcing station ID and jokes.[1] This stunting ended promptly at 6:00 PM that night, with an announcement heralding the return of the alternative rock-formatted "MAD Radio".[2] Fourteen months earlier, iHeartMedia (then known as Clear Channel Communications) replaced alternative rock on 92.1 WMAD in favor of a Hot AC station, "Mix 92.1." Fans of that "MAD Radio" incarnation were left disappointed by the change. Acknowledging the outcry, management resurrected "MAD Radio" at the 96.3 frequency. With this change, the WMAD call letters were moved to 96.3, while 92.1 changed their call letters to WXXM.
Despite an early peak in interest from Madison radio listeners, the new "MAD Radio" did not build as strong a following as the old version had. An increase of older alternative hits in the playlist (highlighted by the "Sunday Morning Resurrection" program) and the addition of the syndicated Rover's Morning Glory failed to bump up the station's fortunes. With WMAD's Arbitron ratings near the bottom of the Madison market, Clear Channel would make yet another change on the frequency, ending "MAD Radio 96.3" on the night of December 22, 2005,[3] after 2 hours of songs with a "goodbye" or "end" theme, ending with "Last Goodbye" by Jeff Buckley and the Jimi Hendrix version of "The Star-Spangled Banner." "MAD Radio" would resurface once again in 2007, airing a commercial-free alternative format on a HD Radio subchannel of sister station WIBA-FM.
"Star Country"
At 12AM on December 23, 2005, WMAD launched a new contemporary country format under the branding, "96.3 Star Country," beginning with a montage of its liners and jingles followed by Gretchen Wilson's "All Jacked Up," the first of 10,000 songs played without interruption for commercials or DJs on "Star Country."[4]
Originally using the tag line "Now you have a choice," Clear Channel took an aggressive approach in promoting "Star Country" and in targeting the long-time country station in Madison, WWQM-FM. The aggressiveness included luring away the WWQM-FM morning team of John Flint and Tammy Lee, who would helm "Star Country's" morning shift from November 2006 until June 2011, when they departed for San Diego's KSON.[5] The following September, WMAD tapped Tracy Dixon and Mike Heller as their new morning team; Dixon came from Clear Channel-owned KMFX-FM in Rochester, Minnesota, Heller from sister sports station WTSO (where he continued as afternoon host). "Tracy & Mike" remained paired in mornings until they were replaced by the Premiere Networks-syndicated Bobby Bones Show in February 2013.[6]
HD Radio
WMAD broadcasts a multiplexed HD Radio signal. The station's HD2 sidechannel originally aired a classic country format ("Star Country Classics") to complement the contemporary country music heard on WMAD's main channel. "Star Country Classics" was dropped in Fall 2013 in favor of a rotating succession of streams from Clear Channel's IHeartRadio platform; among the channels have been "Global Citizen Radio" (variety hits), "Nashville" (modern country), and, as of November 2014, "Coffee Shop Radio" (acoustic rock).[7]
References
- http://wisconsinbroadcasting.com/Format%20Change%20Files/WCJZ_Stunt.m3u
- http://wisconsinbroadcasting.com/Format%20Change%20Files/WMAD_Debut.m3u
- http://www.wisconsinbroadcasting.com/Goodbye%20Message.mp3
- http://www.wisconsinbroadcasting.com/FlipWMAD.mp3
- "'John & Tammy' Sign Off In Madison," from WISC-TV/Channel 3000, 6/25/2011
- "Clear Channel replaces local morning show," from WISC-TV, 2/25/2013
- http://hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?id=95 HD Radio Guide for Madison, Wisconsin
External links
- WMAD in the FCC's FM station database
- WMAD on Radio-Locator
- WMAD in Nielsen Audio's FM station database