Some 37 years after WSGN-AM left Birmingham, the WSGN radio brand was revived Sunday at 98.3 FM in the city’s southeastern suburbs.
As Birmingham’s second radio station in 1926 and the magic city’s first Top 40 station beginning in 1955, what became WSGN-AM was a market leader for decades and one of the top rock and roll stations in the country. Sold to the Birmingham News in 1934, its later call letters stood for “South’s Greatest Newspaper”.
The 98.3 FM signal blankets much of east central Alabama including Chelsea, Sylacauga-Childersburg-Talladega, Alexander City-Dadeville-Lake Martin, Pell City, and Clanton. A rich, fast-paced music mix true to the original WSGN’s legacy will celebrate the best music of the mid-1960s through the 1970s and also stream through new WSGN smartphone apps, an Amazon Alexa smartspeaker skill, and WSGNradio.com.
“When the WSGN call letters became available again, we jumped at the opportunity to preserve them for future use closer to their first home,” said Lee Perryman, President & CEO of RadioAlabama. “We are also targeting an older, affluent, and influential demographic group that is otherwise underserved and underappreciated, while also building on multigenerational popularity from the station’s most impactful period. Almost 62% of adults in the vast coverage area are ages 45+.”
The 98.3 FM frequency, which originated in nearby Sylacauga in 1959, moved out of the market in 1983 and returned in 2017 as WFXO-FM, tripling power in a new C3 station class in 2019.
Lending help to the relaunch is award-winning programmer Michael St. John, music director and afternoon personality from 1973- 1976 at competitor WERC AM/FM, the first station in America under the legendary Scott Shannon to go “from worst to first”. “We found and carefully reviewed 254 of the weekly top 40, top 30, and top 20 WSGN music surveys and playlists from over a 16-year period,” Perryman added, “making sure we were recreating something instantly familiar with frequent opportunities for listeners to say ‘wow’.”
98.3 FM (9 Kw) |
Many of the station’s most memorable and powerful jingles were recreated by SonoJingles in the United Kingdom and singers in Dallas. The new WSGN logo is based on a xylophone key version from the 1960s.
Key to WSGN-AM’s signature sound was a subtle concert-like reverb effect introduced in 1963. That distinction will also be part of WSGN-FM’s on-air signal thanks to custom stereo reverb processing equipment designed and built by local radio engineer Frank Giardina, who was WERC’s program director in the 1970s.
WSGN is one of 11 stations in the RadioAlabama brand family. Others are KiX 100.3 (WYEA), MIX 106.5 (WSGN-HD2), 105.1 WRFS (WRFS), KiX 96.3 (WFXO), AU100 (WAUE), Tiger Country 104.5 (WAUE-HD2), Wings 94.3 (WGZZ), NewsTalk WANI (WANI/WGZZ-HD2), ESPN 106.7 (WGZZ-HD3), and 96.3 WLEE (WGZZ-HD4).
Key to WSGN-AM’s signature sound was a subtle concert-like reverb effect introduced in 1963. That distinction will also be part of WSGN-FM’s on-air signal thanks to custom stereo reverb processing equipment designed and built by local radio engineer Frank Giardina, who was WERC’s program director in the 1970s.
WSGN is one of 11 stations in the RadioAlabama brand family. Others are KiX 100.3 (WYEA), MIX 106.5 (WSGN-HD2), 105.1 WRFS (WRFS), KiX 96.3 (WFXO), AU100 (WAUE), Tiger Country 104.5 (WAUE-HD2), Wings 94.3 (WGZZ), NewsTalk WANI (WANI/WGZZ-HD2), ESPN 106.7 (WGZZ-HD3), and 96.3 WLEE (WGZZ-HD4).
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