WSM-FM
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| WSM-FM | |
| City of license | Nashville, Tennessee |
|---|---|
| Branding | 95.5 The Wolf |
| Slogan | Nashville Country |
| Frequency | 95.5 MHz |
| First air date | 1940s; 1968 (current frequency) |
| Format | Country |
| ERP | 100,000 watts |
| Class | C |
| Callsign meaning | We Shield Millions (slogan of former owner, National Life & Accident Insurance Company) |
| Owner | Cumulus Broadcasting |
| Sister stations | WNFN, WQQK, WRQQ, WSM-FM, WWTN |
| Website | http://www.955thewolf.com |
WSM-FM is an FM radio station in Nashville, Tennessee, known on the air as 95.5 The Wolf. The station broadcasts at 95.5 MHz and is one of three country music stations in the Nashville Area. The others being The Big 98 and Real Country FM 98.9.
Sister of the legendary clear-channel WSM-AM, the FM began in the late 1940s on an experimental license with callsign W47NV, and was the first commercial FM radio station to be granted an FCC license in the U.S.
This initial license was later divested; the current FM station (located on the dial at 95.5 MHz) dates only from 1968 and its country format only from 1983. It is now owned by Cumulus Media, which also operates the sales department of sister station WSM (AM), but (as of 2007) does not own it.
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[edit] History
[edit] WLWM-FM
The present-day FM was founded originally in the early 1960s as WLWM-FM, owned by Webber Parrish, a local Nashville businessman. National Life and Accident Insurance Company, licensee of WSM-AM and owners of the Grand Ole Opry, purchased the station from Parrish in 1968, and after a short period of simulcasting the AM, programmed an easy listening format on it from 1969 until early 1976.
[edit] SM95
Afterward, NL&AI allowed a change (despite some management misgivings) to a soft-rock playlist that was very broad by today's standards; during those years, the station adopted the branding "SM95". In demographics, the station went after an audience of people in their twenties and thirties who, obviously enough, wanted something more musically interesting than easy listening but disliked the harder and louder rock (or disco) that was becoming popular among teenagers then. SM95 was one of the few outlets in the nation for upcoming singer-songwriters to get airplay without having a smash record elsewhere; some of the artists were in fact Nashville-based, reflecting the growth in non-country artists recording there. One might consider the moderately eclectic format a forerunner of the "adult alternative" playlists that achieved some success years later, in the 1990s and early 2000s.
On Live365, listeners could hear a re-creation of the SM-95 sound from 1976-1983, including station IDs and jingles. This streaming station was put together and operated by former SM95 DJ Nick Archer. This station streamed from November 2001 until February 2008, almost longer than the original station was in format.
[edit] Nashville 95/The Wolf
The appeal of SM95, however, began to decline (and thus advertiser appeal) as its audience began aging in the early 1980s. By 1983, some four years after the conversion of the AM to a full-time country format and after the sale of WSM, Inc. to Gaylord Broadcasting, management decided to bring the FM in line with the AM, and brought in country (with an emphasis on current hits, instead of the AM's emphasis on oldies) full-time. For most of the 1980s and 1990s, 95.5 FM was a highly-competitive, yet usually #2 (behind rival WSIX-FM), country station. For much of the 1980s and 1990s, the station was branded as "Nashville 95".
However, upon the arrival of a fourth country station in the market in 1999 (the legendary FM rocker WKDF, which shocked longtime Nashvillians by changing formats), WSM-FM fell to a distant third place, and sometimes fell to fourth behind WSM-AM. In September 2004, the station adopted a revised country format, referred to as "The Wolf," in an attempt to again become competitive in Nashville's highly-competitive country radio market; early indications are that it is boosting Arbitron ratings considerably, and the station is approaching the #1 spot, held in recent times by WSIX.
[edit] Grand Ole Opry
When WSM-AM had the rights to broadcast Vanderbilt Commodore American football and basketball games, it had WSM-FM air them whenever they took place on Saturday nights, in order not to preempt the live Grand Ole Opry shows on AM 650. WSM did this during most of the 1970s and again from the mid-1990s through the mid-2000s. Currently, WSM-FM occasionally airs NASCAR broadcasts under the same circumstances.
[edit] Airstaff
The current lineup (as of May 2008) is as follows
- Mornings: Frank Seres
- Mid-Days: Kelly Ann Monahan
- Afternoon Drive: TBA
- Nighttime: TBA
- Weekends - Bama & Josh Conner
- Program Director - Charley Connelley
- Music Director - Frank Seres
In February 2008, WSM-FM terminated midday host Kerri D., nighttime host Su-Anna, and Program Director Kevin King. In March 2008, midday host Frank Seres shifted to the morning drive, while morning drive man Jim Day moved to afternoons. Weekender Kelly Ann Monahan became the permanent midday host. In April 2008, the station let go weekend hosts Karen Keely and Britt Savage. In May 2008, WSM-FM seemed to clean house once again, this time letting go afternoon drive jock Jim Day. In a span of three months, the station has fired airstaff members, and has not announced a replacement for any of those five, as of late May.
[edit] External links
[edit] See also
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