Country music On December 25, 1967, the station
signed on as WWCO-FM. It was the
sister station to
WWCO (1240 AM), and carried a
country music format. Most radios at the time did not receive FM signals, so the station was largely
automated, with pre-recorded announcements. It was acquired by entertainer and TV host
Merv Griffin in 1972, changing its
call letters to WIOF (standing for "1-0-Four", its dial position). The country music sound was branded as "
Nashville Connecticut, W-104".
Magic 104 In 1978, the station dropped country to become
soft adult contemporary-formatted "Magic 104" using the syndicated "TM Beautiful Rock" service. During the switch to "Magic", WIOF upgraded its signal by moving its transmitter from near its studios in
Prospect to West Peak in
Meriden. Lou Terri was the program director and midday host until his death in an automobile accident in 1989. Steve Wiersman later became Program Director until 1994. Morning announcers included Bill Cleveland, Greg O'Brien and Ray Petraca. Jack Carney, who was also the voice of
WVIT at the time, hosted the afternoon show. Jim Scott did nights, followed by Joe Dufrat who did the Mid-6 am shift. Rick O'Connor did middays, later replaced by Ron O'Brien (also known as Ron O, who later went to
WZMX). Weekend DJs included Greg LaPorta and Don Clark.
Star 104.1 In 1992, the station rebranded as "Star 104.1", WYSR, with a more uptempo
adult contemporary sound. DJs on "Star" included Brett Provo in mornings, then afternoons (later becoming afternoon drive/production director at
WMAS in
Springfield); Paul DeFrancisco in afternoons; Jay Hanson (later at
WFMX in
Skowhegan, Maine) and Long John on weekends; Jim Severine; Rich Kilbourne (also known as Big Rich Baker) on news; Cathy Foxx in middays; Neil Jackson in mornings; Lee Gordon as Production Director; Annette Grella as Promotions Director; and Race Bannon, who later stayed on the station after the flip to
modern rock. Ron O became WYSR's PD after Steve Wiersman departed in August of 1994 (after being hired as the new PD at
WBUF in
Buffalo, New York) Star 104.1 was competing with other AC stations in the Hartford
radio market and was unable to capture a sizable audience. In October 1994 all programming staff and disc jockeys were released.
Radio 104 On October 31, 1994, at midnight, the format flipped to
modern rock as WMRQ "Radio104". Personalities such as "Jake & Beth", "Nick the Intern", "Mudbone",
Dee Snider and
Bubba the Love Sponge were on the station in the mornings at various points during the station's history, with
Wilcow, Chaz, "Darkside Dave", The Carlito Show, and Logan following after the mornings. The station also hosted popular annual events such as "The Big Day Off" and "104fest". Lee Gordon remained as production director, and Bud Fisher became WMRQ's first sales manager. (Bud had appeared on "Magic 104" as "Gary Hunter".)
Power 104 Due to struggling ratings, the station flipped to WPHH, "Power 104.1", at 5:00 p.m. on September 15, 2003. As a station playing
hip hop music and
rhythmic contemporary hits, WPHH solidified its position as the only mainstream urban station in the Hartford and New Haven market. Its main competitor was urban-leaning
rhythmic CHR WZMX. Nicole Siedman served as program director for a short period until 2004. Mychal Maguire assumed the Program Director position thereafter. Spank Buda served as Assistant Program Director and night host for the entire duration of WPHH. Popular events included the "Hoop It Up" basketball tournament and the "Legends of Hip Hop" concert. Other DJs on "Power" were Mia Mendez, DJ Showtime, TT Torrez, DJ Londonn, and PJ.
Return to alternative rock On October 25, 2007, at 10:00 am, WPHH flipped back to
modern rock. The station was programmed similar to
WRFF in
Philadelphia. On December 20, 2007, WPHH changed its call letters to WURH. In May 2008, almost six months after
Clear Channel launched "FM 104-One", the station named a program director, Becky Pohotsky, who had been the station's APD/MD and de facto PD for most of its existence. On August 4, 2008, Clear Channel placed the station's assets into an entity called the
Aloha Station Trust to sell off the station. This was due to Clear Channel being above the ownership limits set by the
Federal Communications Commission. These limits were imposed when Clear Channel was officially taken private by
Bain Capital Partners on July 30, 2008.
Full Power Radio On February 19, 2009,
Ledyard-based Red Wolf Broadcasting Corp. (
doing business as Full Power Radio) who owns
WBMW and
WWRX in the
New London area, announced that it had agreed to buy WURH for $8,000,000. On May 14, 2009, Red Wolf Broadcasting took over control of the station. The first action was to change the station's callsign to WMRQ-FM, and restore the "Radio 104.1" moniker. == Bomba HD radio and translators ==