CILQ-FM

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CILQ-FM
City of license Toronto, Ontario
Broadcast area Greater Toronto Area
Branding Q107; "The Mighty Q"
Frequency 107.1 MHz FM
First air date May 22, 1977
Format Classic rock
Power 40 KW
Owner Corus Entertainment
Sister stations Talk Radio AM640, 102.1 The Edge
Webcast Listen Live
Website Q107

CILQ-FM is a radio station, broadcasting at 107.1 FM in Toronto, Ontario. The station broadcasts a classic rock format branded as Q107 and is also available through streaming audio and on Bell TV channel 954.

The station is owned by Corus Entertainment, and now broadcasts from the Corus Quay building.

History

Q107 signed on the air on May 22, 1977. The first song played on the station was "Hard Rock Town" by Murray McLauchlan, although the station was officially signed on with Deodato's "Also Sprach Zarathustra".

Q107 debuted with an album rock format, part of the numerous Q formatted stations developed by Lee Abrams in the US, one in each major radio market. Roughly 1000 songs revolved in a playlist in a revolving card category system based on media sales data. Platinum albums were category B1 or B2. Golden oldies were D1 or D2. Canadian content was another. Most of the music library was locked in the back and not accessible to anyone except the music director and his assistant. Announcers would pull albums from a shelf in the control room limited to about 1000.

The original lineup for announcers was John Rode 6-10 mornings, Murray Smith, 10-2, the station Program Director Dave Charles 12-2pm, John Donabie, the afternoon drive, Mary-Ann Carpentier until midnight and Scott Marwood on the all-night show midnights-6am. At 2 am, Scott Marwood featured "Odds & Ends" a full album played in its entirety from his personal collection.

CILQ's original owner was CFGM Broadcasting, a division of J. Allan Slaight's Slaight Communications. The station was acquired by Western International Communications in 1985 when Slaight bought Standard Broadcasting, and became part of Corus Entertainment in 2000 when WIC's assets were divided between Corus and Canwest Global.

Although ostensibly in a mainstream rock format as of 1996, Q107 reconverted to a classic rock format on September 1, 2000.

Programming

Notable personalities associated with the station have included John Donabie, the duo of Jesse Dylan and Gene Valaitis, Scruff Connors, Joey Vendetta, John Derringer, Bill Carroll, Andy Frost, Alice Cooper, and (Canadian rocker) Kim Mitchell. In September 1997, Q107 (along with CHOM in Montreal) became the first Canadian radio stations to air The Howard Stern Show, syndicated from New York City. Stern was taken off Q107 in November of 2001.

Each weekend there is a theme (such as a band or a top 107 hits as voted by the listeners). They play songs that fall within the theme at least once each hour. This begins each weekend at 3:00 p.m. EST on Friday night and goes through to Sunday at 9:00 p.m. EST.

Each Sunday from 9am to 9pm Q107 airs the popular Psychedelic Psunday, in which the DJs play classic rock songs from the psychedelic era of 1965 through 1975. The program is hosted by Andy Frost, who anchors the bulk of the show between 12 noon and 6pm. A variety of other station jocks have hosted the first three and last three hours of the show over the years.

Sundays at 9pm, Jeff Woods hosts a show called Legends of Classic Rock to give listeners the background stories to some of their favorite music.

On August 10, 2005, the station sparked controversy when it aired a recording of a Rolling Stones concert from 2002. The Stones were appearing in concert in Toronto the same evening, and many listeners had interpreted advance promotion for the broadcast as implying that Q107 would in fact be airing live from that evening's concert. Although he denied that the station intended to give that impression, station manager JJ Johnston apologized to listeners two days later.[1]

In early 2009, the station introduced Nights with Alice Cooper, airing from 9pm to 2am on Saturday nights.

On-air feud with CHUM-FM

During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the on-air personalities maintained a feud with CHUM-FM, referring to it as "SCUM FM", a holorime wordplay on its rival station's oft-pronounced call letters.

References

External links

Coordinates: 43°38′33″N 79°23′14″W / 43.64250°N 79.38722°W / 43.64250; -79.38722

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