- WARQ
Infobox Radio Station
name = WARQ
airdate = February 6th, 1971
frequency = 93.5 (MHz)
city = Columbia
area =South Carolina
format =Modern Rock
callsign_meaning = We Are RQck (Rock) 93.5
owner =Inner City Broadcasting
erp = 3,000watt s
branding = Rock 93.5
slogan = New Rock Now
class = A
website = [http://www.warq.com/ www.warq.com]
sister_stations =WARQ ,WHXT ,WZMJ ,WMFX ,WOIC ,WWDM WARQ is a commercial
radio station located inColumbia, South Carolina , broadcasting on 93.5 FM. WARQ airs amodern rock music format branded as "Rock 93.5".Station History
WARQ signed on the air as WXRY on February 6th, 1971 in mono with a Beautiful/Easy Listening music format. Later, the station converted to FM stereo, still with a Beautiful/Easy Listening music format supplied on reel to reel tape by Shulke.
In 1983, the station adopted the call letters WCEZ and maintained the Beautiful/Easy Listening format, with the slogan "The Beautiful Place to Be" and "Easy 93 WCEZ."
Shortly after the sale of then WCEZ (along with sister WVOC AM 560) to Ridgley Communications, the station abandoned the automated reel-to-reel Beautiful/Easy Listening format to a light rock format that incorporated more vocals and less traditional instrumentals. WCEZ then adopted the moniker "Lite 93.5" and began broadcasting a satellite-delivered light rock format supplied by Westwood One networks known internally as "Format 41."
Ridgley Communications later filed for bankruptcy protection and a private ownership group in the Fall of 1989 purchased WCEZ/WVOC out of bankruptcy. The group of owners, which included Olympia Networks Steve Bunyard and broadcast veteran Rick Dames, organized and operated the stations under the Clayton Radio name.
In January 1990, Clayton Radio replaced the satellite-delivered Westwood One Format 41 with a Gold-based WARM AC format developed by McVay Media. The station adopted the moniker Star 93.5 and the call letters WAAS. As unfortunate as the transpositions were, the call letters were designed to put the station at the top of the Arbitron rating service list of stations and stood for "We Are Always Shining." The jingles used by WAAS were customized versions of JAM's "Q-Cuts" package.
By 1992, WAAS was at a crossroads. The station was experiencing financial difficulties as well as a ratings battle with 2 other ACs in the market,
WTCB and WSCQ (now known asWXBT ). That August the station, in a rather bold move, dropped AC forActive Rock (with selectClassic rock cuts) under the "Rock 93.5" handle. The new call letters became WARQ and the station set out to battle established AOR/Classic rock hybridWMFX for the rock audience.In early 1995, WARQ was sold to new owners and the studios were moved with new sister station
WWDM . When the move was completed, a brief stunt was done on April Fools Day when WARQ dropped Album Rock forHip hop as "93 Jamz" for about an hour. After the stunting was done, Rock 93-5 was relaunched with a new on-air slogan "Real Rock". At that point, the station segued toward a more Active/Alternative Rock hybrid, but would eventually become a full Alternative station by early 1996 dropping the "Real Rock" slogan in the process for "Columbia's Rock Alternative".In 1999, a new handle known as "Channel 93-5" was adopted. This lasted until 2004, when the "Rock 93-5" moniker was reclaimed.
The station is owned by
Inner City Broadcasting , which also ownsUrban Contemporary WHXT , Urban ACWWDM ,Classic rock WMFX ,ESPN Radio outletWZMJ andAir America Radio outletWOIC in the Columbia radio market.External links
* [http://www.warq.com Official Website]
*fmq|WARQ
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