WBOS
WBOS is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Brookline, Massachusetts, and serving Greater Boston. WBOS is owned and operated by Beasley Broadcast Group. The studios and offices are in Dorchester. WBOS airs a classic rock radio format, which it calls "the next generation of classic rock." While rival 100.7 WZLX's playlist extends from the 1960s and 70s into the 80s and 90s, WBOS concentrates on the 1990s and early 2000s, with some 1980s titles. "Dave and Chuck the Freak," syndicated from co-owned WRIF Detroit, are heard weekday mornings on WBOS.
WBOS has an effective radiated power of 18,500 watts. The transmitter is on the top of the Prudential Tower in Boston's Back Bay. WBOS broadcasts in the HD Radio hybrid format. The HD-2 subchannel simulcasts WRCA 1130 AM Watertown, which carries business news programming from Bloomberg Radio.
History
The early years
On April 1, 1960, WBOS-FM signed-on, simulcasting most of the programming of its sister station WBOS AM 1600. WBOS-AM-FM were owned by the Champion Broadcasting System with studios at 790 Commonwealth Avenue.Most of the AM station's programming was beautiful music, but when the AM side began to broadcast ethnic programming, the FM side continued to play beautiful music, which was branded on both AM and FM as "Boston's Music Theatre". In 1975, WBOS-FM changed to a hodgepodge format which did not gain much of an audience.
Disco format
In 1978, Boston radio personality Ron Robin, disappointed that the airtime for his weekly disco music show on 105.7 WVBF had been cut back, left WVBF and began doing a four-hour Sunday-night disco show for WBOS-FM. Initially, Robin bought the airtime and sold commercials for the show.The success of that show led to WBOS-FM hiring Robin, and a rapid expansion of the disco programming, first to seven nights a week from 8 p.m. to midnight, and then to 24/7 in September 1978. For a brief time in late 1978 and early 1979, WBOS-FM was one of Boston's most popular radio stations. But when 107.9 WXKS-FM came on the scene with a highly promoted disco format, including big promotions and hiring away some WBOS disc jockeys, WBOS' ratings suffered.
WRKO midday legend J.J. Wright was one of the original disco DJs for WBOS when the station went round-the-clock disco in 1978. Longtime, sought-after producer Jack King created, wrote and engineered most of the station's disco specials at the time. King was there at the beginning of the station's format change to disco and worked closely with Robin to 'keep the beat going' into the late 1970s and early 1980s. When WBOS changed to Adult Contemporary music, the duo went to WBZ Radio for a long, successful stint there.
Adult contemporary, AOR and Country
In January 1980, the station flipped to an adult contemporary format which was a little less "adult" and a little more "contemporary", but that format would only run for two years. In January 1982, WBOS flipped to a short-lived attempt at an album-oriented rock format, programmed for some of that time by legendary Boston rock personalities Jerry Goodwin and Maxanne Satori.But the rock format didn't make any inroads against established rockers like 104.1 WBCN, 94.5 WCOZ, and 107.3 WAAF. On July 14, 1983, WBOS' format was abruptly changed to country music, and was moderately successful for several years. It was the only FM country station in the Boston market at the time.
Program Director and morning personality Dean James, along with General Sales Manager Dave DiGregorio, worked to bring country to the mainstream in Boston, a city with little history as a country music stronghold. The country format ran for six years.
Adult Album Alternative
On April 27, 1989 at 3:00 p.m., WBOS dropped country and adopted an adult album alternative format, initially with a bit more of an eclectic focus than most triple-A stations at the time, incorporating classic rock, soul, R&B, and singer-songwriter cuts into the playlist, along with new releases. Eventually, the station gravitated more toward current material and new releases. At that time, when CDs were just starting to be used in radio, WBOS promoted itself as the first all-compact disc radio station, eliminating vinyl, and very sparingly using carts for some songs. Unusually, the vinyl themed retro show "The Lost 45s" with Barry Scott aired on Sunday nights after leaving 100.7 WZLX.In April 2005, WBOS made changes to play more music and decrease the amount of talk. The station's morning show, hosted by Bill Abbate and Kristin Lessard, was abruptly cancelled to make way for the jockless "All Music Mornings". "It's putting the station somewhat back to where it started in terms of its ideals. Listener perception is that radio plays too many commercials and that DJs can be boring and irrelevant," said Buzz Knight, operations manager for WBOS. Knight said that WBOS will be "the cool station for people over 30."
In September 2007, George Knight began hosting morning drive on the station, but that would be short lived. That same month, owner Greater Media registered domains that showed that the station was possibly flipping to sports talk as 92.9 The Ticket, complete with a logo and a slogan, "Boston's Only FM Sports Station". The station was rumored to flip on October 1 of that year, but never materialized. WBMX and WMKK eventually flipped to the sports format over the next five years.
Alternative Rock
On February 1, 2008 at 5:00 p.m., the station saw its biggest change since flipping to AAA in 1989, as the format switched to alternative rock and the station rebranded as "Radio 92-9." While George Knight continued to host his popular "Sunday Morning Over Easy" program, and music director Dana Marshall was promoted to Program Director, the rest of the station's airstaff was let go. Since WBCN's demise in 2010, WBOS has adopted a mainstream rock direction, but continues to report on Mediabase and Nielsen BDS on the alternative panel. This was due to the addition of Def Leppard on the playlist, and the move left WFNX once again as Boston's only pure alternative rock station. However, in 2011 or 2012, the station reverted to playing mostly alternative tracks, while playing some classic hard rock tracks, usually from artists/bands such as Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, Aerosmith, AC/DC, Metallica, Pink Floyd, Billy Idol, and Guns N' Roses. By July 2012, WBOS became Boston's only alternative rock station following the closure of WFNX.On July 13, 2016, WBOS rebranded as "Alt 92.9."
In July 2017, WBOS began carrying the Dave and Chuck The Freak morning show out of sister station WRIF. That same year, the station began broadcasting Boston Bruins hockey games that conflict with New England Patriots games, the arrangement followed Beasley's acquisition of WBZ-FM, the flagship station for both teams.
Classic Rock
On April 11, 2019 at 10:30 a.m., following the "Dave & Chuck the Freak Morning Show", WBOS flipped to classic rock, branded as "Rock 92.9." The first song on Rock 92.9 was "For Those About to Rock " by AC/DC.The change followed a transition from a classic rock-classic hits hybrid to a more conventional classic hits format at sister station 105.7 WROR-FM, leaving space for a competitor to market powerhouse 100.7 WZLX.
Owners
WBOS was originally owned by Boston businessman Herbert Hoffman. In the 1980s, he sold it to Sconnix, which later sold it to Ackerley Media in 1988. The station was sold to Granum Communications in 1992, which merged with Infinity Broadcasting in 1996. In 1997, the station was traded to Greater Media.On July 19, 2016, Beasley Media Group announced it would acquire Greater Media and its 21 stations for $240 million. The FCC approved the sale on October 6, 2016 and the sale closed on November 1, 2016.
HD Radio
WBOS broadcasts using the iBiquity HD Radio digital broadcasting system, and had an HD secondary channel called "The Coffee House", which launched in early 2006. This format consisted of "the acoustic, unplugged side of triple A" by using the "station’s archive of live and in-studio performances", and emphasized "singer-songwriters, folk music and unplugged versions of songs by core WBOS artists."The "Coffee House" format was later replaced with Radio You Boston, featuring content programmed by college-aged residents of the Boston area. It was later re-branded as Local 92.9, and featured local music artists from the Boston area.
On July 3, 2017, Beasley announced that Bloomberg Radio programming would be moved from AM 1200 WXKS to sister 1330 WRCA, simulcast on a new FM translator W291CZ, and also carried on WBOS-HD2.
Past Personalities
- J. J. Wright
- Ron Robin
- Jack King
- Neal Robert
- Charles Laquidara
- Barry Scott of The Lost 45s
- Dick Pleasants
- Maria Morgan
- Carolyn Morrell
- Liz Solar
- Bill Smith
- Cliff Nash
- Kevin Malvey
- Bill Abbate
- Kristin Lessard
- Amy Brooks
- Melissa Gaudette
- Gerrie Burke
- John Laurenti
- Eduardo Nash
- Joanne Doody
- PD-George Taylor Morris
- Robin Young
- Julie Devereaux
- Dave DiGregorio
- Keith Murray
- David O'Leary
- Hutch
- Dominic Lewis
- PD-Chris Hermann
- PD-Shirley Moldanado
- PD-Jim Herron
- Matt Phipps
- George Knight
- Bob Bayne
- Kevin Collins
- Bobby V - Bob Vartanian
Trivia
- WBOS was also the call sign of a shortwave radio station operated by Westinghouse's WBZ affiliate during the 1940s.
- Arnie Ginsburg was the nighttime host on WBOS, one of Boston's first rock-and-roll DJs. However, by the time the FM station signed on, his show had moved to WMEX 1510 AM.
- Charles Laquidara hosted a show from Maui entitled WBOS Backspin during the Spring of 2006. The show aired commercial-free on weekdays, from 9:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m., live.
- Studio 7 is the recording area where common heard artists on the station record and play some of their songs live. Since 1992, John Mellencamp, Sarah McLachlan, John Mayer, Lionel Richie, Barenaked Ladies, Alanis Morissette, and others have performed here while on tour in a major venue in Boston, including Boston Garden, Tweeter Center, etc.
- Mellencamp's Jack and Diane live version has been recorded at Studio 7.