WZBA

WZBA
City Westminster, Maryland
Broadcast area Baltimore/Westminster, Maryland
Branding 100.7 The Bay
Slogan Baltimore's Classic Rock Station
Frequency 100.7 (MHz)
Translator(s) 100.1 W261CD (downtown Baltimore)
Format Classic rock
ERP 25,000 watts
HAAT 210 meters
Class B
Facility ID 59985
Callsign meaning W Z BAy
Former callsigns WTTR-FM (?-1984)
WGRX (1984-1999)
Owner Times-Shamrock Communications
Webcast Listen Live
Website thebayonline.com

WZBA ("100.7 The Bay") is a radio station serving Baltimore, Maryland. The station broadcasts on 100.7 MHz and translator W261CD 100.1 MHz in downtown Baltimore, and markets itself as the only station in the Baltimore market dedicated to the classic rock format. The station's city of license is Westminster, Maryland. Its studios are in Hunt Valley and the transmitter is in Owings Mills.

History

Originally known as WTTR-FM, after its move to Baltimore and the World Trade Center at the Inner Harbor, the station operated under the call letters WGRX (initially branded as "100.7 WGRX"). WGRX began in 1984 with a mellow variant of Album Oriented Rock known as "Eclectic Oriented Rock" (created by John Sebastian Inc. and also referred to as "New AC") until early 1986, when it shifted to classic rock as "100 GRX."

After broadcasting in a classic rock format for many years, the station moved over to a modern rock format for a time in the mid-1990s. While in its modern rock format, it was known as "The X", and featured the popular "M&M" morning show.

In April 1996, the station started broadcasting its modern rock format DJ-free in a repetitive 10-song loop for a few days, which led into an unannounced weekend-long stunt of disco music as "Polyester 101", before eventually switching to a country music format dubbed "Froggy 100.7" on May 6.[1] It later rebranded as "New Country 100.7".

On December 1, 1999, due to declining ratings, the station switched its call letters to WZBA and became known as "The Bay", advertising its format as "Rock Without the Hard Edge". The station played mostly classic rock at this time, but only songs without heavy guitar, making the station a "Rock AC", similar to WMMO in Orlando. Occasional forays into mixing more modern "rock without the hard edge" in with the classic rock of that variety were attempted, but abandoned quickly, as they did not seem to have support from the station's listeners.

Just hours after classic rock station WOCT switched to a smooth jazz format on September 3, 2003, WZBA abandoned its theme and switched to its current straightforward classic rock format. The station hired Mike Brillhart from WOCT for the 7-midnight shift and the popular Sunday morning "Acoustic Cafe".

The current On Air Announcer schedule on WZBA is:

References

External links

Coordinates: 39°26′49″N 76°46′48″W / 39.447°N 76.780°W / 39.447; -76.780

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