WAMB

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WAMB is an AM radio station in Nashville, Tennessee that broadcasts on a frequency of 1200 kHz. In previous years, it has also broadcast on the frequencies of 1190 and 1160 kHz.

WAMB was the brainchild of longtime Nashville broadcaster Bill Barry. Barry realized in the late 1960s that the switch of most popular radio stations to the rock music format was alienating many older listeners, a large segment of whom were nostalgic for the big band sound of 1930s and 1940s popular music and a station which would play it. In August 1971, Barry started such a station, licensed to the Nashville suburb of Donelson. Calling the format "The Music of Your Life", it was a pioneer of this format, which was eventually franchised and which at one point numbered hundreds of such stations throughout North America. Today, the format is heard on approximately 175 stations.

From a small start, Barry began to attract advertisers whose products appealed largely to older listeners – Cadillac automobiles, retirement homes, prepaid funeral plans, and medical services (once the FCC started allowing those providers to advertise). Barry eventually was able to raise the station's daytime power to the maximum 50,000 watts allowed by law; nighttime power was severely limited by the fact that WAMB was not a Class A clear channel station. A low-powered (100 watt) FM station simulcasting the AM broadcast was added later as well.

Barry's station and its programming attracted a small (by mass-market radio standards) but exceptionally loyal listening audience, with many, perhaps most, listeners seldom if ever touching the dial to move to other stations. Barry served his listeners with hourly news, which began disappearing from many music-format stations once the FCC stopped requiring radio broadcasters to deliver at least five minutes of it each broadcast hour. Barry nonetheless knew that news was very important to much of his mature audience, as well as investment news (market research revealing that his audience had a far larger-than-average net worth).

The primary threat to Barry and WAMB remained the passage of time – each year a certain percentage of his targeted audience died and for the most part was not replaced by younger listeners. In recognition of this fact, some newer music from the "easy-listening" category of artists such as the Ames Brothers, Roger Whittaker, and, eventually, even Harry Connick, Jr. was admitted to the playlist, but the station's audience continued to skew far older than any other major Nashville station. In recognition of this fact, and the fact that fewer AM stations anywhere were programming music of any sort than previously, Barry sold WAMB in late 2005 to religious radio broadcaster Bott Communications. Bott took over the frequency in early 2006 and changed the format to a Christian one, with a standard emphasis on evangelical/fundamentalist preaching and conservative talk shows. To reflect the new identity, Bott had the callsign of 1160 kHz changed to WCRT. Barry continued the big band format on a new frequency (with power greatly reduced), 1200 kHz; he had the WAMB callsign moved there also.

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WAMB was the last Nashville radio station to carry local broadcasting legend Teddy Bart's "Roundtable" morning discussion program. Bart and co-host Karlen Evins interviewed newsmakers involved in Tennessee politics on the two-hour show, which began originally on WLAC in 1985 and had been heard on several other stations in the 1990s. The non-profit organization founded by Bart and Evins to produce the program discontinued production in the summer of 2005, due to increasing debts and declining listenership. Elsewhere in the state, cable television systems and Martin's (west Tennessee) WLJT, a PBS affiliate, carried a video version of "Roundtable," with a camera positioned inside the radio control room.

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Nashville AM radio stations (Arbitron #44)

 WNSR 560 | WSM 650 | WENO 760 | WNSG 880 | WKDA 900 | WYFN 980 | WCRT 1160 | WAMB 1200 | WNQM 1300 | WPLN 1430 | WVOL 1470 | WCOR 1490 | WLAC 1510