Erie, Illinois
Broadcast area: Quad Cities
Branding: Vintage Radio
Frequency: 105.5 FM (MHz)
First air date: 2015
Format: Oldies, classic country
ERP: 6,000 watts
Owner: JMRW LLC
WQUD (105.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to Erie, Illinois, whose format is a hybrid of oldies and classic country.
The station is located at 910 Albany Road, Erie, and has a broadcast area covering eastern Iowa (including the Quad Cities) and northwestern Illinois.
The station was granted its license in August 2015, and went on the air shortly thereafter playing automated music with no live on-air talent or commercials. The station finally went “live” on January 7, 2016, with general manager Aaron Dail the first on-air disc jockey. The station was expected to have an initial playlist of more than 2,000 songs. More on-air talent and affiliation with Fox News Radio were expected in the coming weeks.
WQUD’s main competitor was, until September 2016, WYEC, an oldies station based in Kewanee, Illinois with studios in Bettendorf, Iowa, but with the latter station’s format switch to adult hits, WQUD would become the Quad City market’s only station programming pre-1970 pop music on a regular basis. (Another station in the Quad Cities market, KMXG, has programming blocks of music from past decades on the weekends (1980s and 1990s on Saturdays, 1970s on Sundays).
A new radio station recently launched in the Quad-Cities with “Vintage Radio,” a blend of oldies and classic country.
Based in Erie, Ill., WQUD-FM 105.5 offers a variety of programming including Fox Network News, local news and sports, and a format that plays everything from Johnny Cash to the Beatles to Elvis.
Station manager Aaron Dail said this week that Austin, Texas-based station owner Robert Walker bought the broadcasting license at auction, for the lower-frequency station.
Mr. Dail — who has been a sports correspondent for the Dispatch/Argus, and worked at WXLP, 97X, from 1996 to 2001 — is the first on-air staff for WQUD, handling 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. of the 24-hour station. It can be heard within a 35-40 mile radius of Erie, he said.
While WYEC 93.9 FM is another local oldies station in the area, Mr. Dail said they’re more pop and rock oriented, while WQUD leans more country — back to the ’50s, with old Hank Williams, Johnny Cash and Merle Haggard tunes, up to the ’80s.
“I think we’re the only ones specializing in classic country,” he said. “103.7 and 104.9 are more contemporary country.”
Now 37, Mr. Dail started as a WXLP intern for the morning show, and worked a number of years on the overnight shift. “It was great; I loved working there,” he said. “I wouldn’t be able to do this if hadn’t done that.”
For more information on the station, or to apply for a position, call 309-659-7608.
“Community Radio” was a term used several times by Robert Walker the new owner of radio station WQUD located at 105.5 on the FM dial in Erie. The new station went on the air several months ago playing automated music exclusively with no commercials. All that is about to change for the better. The station plans to go “live” on Monday morning at 7:00a.m. with local news and information including drawings and giveaways.
Erie resident Aaron Dail is the new general manager of the FM station. Dail has an eclectic background in media including stints writing sports for the Moline Dispatch and working as an overnight DJ on radio station 97 X in the Quad Cities as well as editing the Erie Tribune on Facebook. He also runs a small construction company in Erie. “This is something I have always wanted to do,” he said.
For now Dail will be a one-man-band as he will be the on-air host, sales manager, and do-everything guy. Initially Dail has the station promoting a fundraiser for the Veterans of Whiteside County. They are sponsoring an aluminum collection drive asking people to drop off items at a collection site located across from Casey’s on Route 2 in Erie.
When asked, “Why Erie?’, owner Robert Walker said it is an untapped radio market. Walker who is from Texas has an extensive background in broadcast ownership. At one time he was involved in 32 radio stations. He also had an interest in television including ownership of a station on the Texas – Mexican border.
Walker said the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) began a process in the early 2000’s to find areas in the United States were new radio signals could be transmitted without interfering with established signals. Walker likens it to a very complicated puzzle involving signal frequencies and strength in which the FCC finds space available and then auctions it off. Walker has made a living over the past several years buying such frequency space.
The station with its transmitter located at the corner of Star Road and Short Road just north of Erie will cover an area from Freeport to Kewanee and from Amboy to Durant, Iowa. That area includes almost 450,000 potential listeners.
The format of the station is called ”Vintage Radio” and includes music, ”That ranges from Johnny Cash to the Beatles.” The station currently is fully automated and run from a small studio located at 910 Albany Road in the Miller Real Estate Building on the triangle in downtown Erie. With today’s current technology the equipment needed to put a radio station on the air is surprisingly small and sparse. Walker says additional equipment will be installed this month and that all of it will be “First class.”
The station’s playlist includes over 2,000 songs compared to tightly formatted stations who use only a few hundred titles. ” The community side of it is what makes us unique,” said Walker. The new push in radio is to operate in smaller communities. “I am a big believer in community radio and the reward will come.”
The station can be contacted at wqudvintageradio@gmail.com for additional information and advertising information. “We are just going to have fun with it,” said Walker. Other additional future plans are undetermined, but Dail’s love of high school sports will probably lead to live local high school game broadcasts.
Source: www.saukvalley.com, Published: Tuesday, Aug. 23, 2016 8:43 p.m. CDT
ERIE – If you’ve been surfing the local airwaves at all, you might have run across some new voices on the radio dial.
One of those voices has had his eye on the mic for a long time – ever since he was a kid.
Meet Aaron Dail. He’s the general manager of WQUD 105.5 FM, which signed on Jan. 7. Since then, Dail and his fellow disc jockeys have brought their unique voices to the air, along with a mix of vintage rock ’n’ roll and country music.
While the station is getting good feedback from listeners, Dail, the host of “AD in the Morning,” is making the most of his chance to fulfill his lifelong dream.
“As a kid, I always wanted to be on a morning show.” Dail said. “I’m really happy, and it’s a lot of fun.”
The station reaches 444,000 potential listeners in a 35- to 40-mile broadcast radius that includes Sterling, Rock Falls, Dixon, Kewanee, and Clinton, Iowa. It hosts ticket giveaways, guest interviews, and helps businesses produce commercials for radio broadcast.
Dail has been interested in radio since he left high school. Along the way, he interned at 97X WXLP, wrote for the Moline Dispatch, was an editor for the Erie Tribune on Facebook, and learned how to DJ weddings from his fellow WQUD DJ, Bill Weeber. You might know Bill better as “Slick Willy,” the host of “Slick Willy’s All-Request Midday Show.”
He lived in Hawaii for 4 years before returning to Erie in 2011, where he lives with his wife and five kids and manages his own construction company.
He came in contact with the station’s owner, Robert Walker, through a Facebook posting, and that eventually lead to him being hired.
While he thinks of himself as more of a “sarcastic news guy kind of host,” Dail and the other DJs at WQUD strive to bring a refreshing, down-home and personal style of broadcast that sets them apart from many stations.
“People are excited to call a station with real people,” Weeber said. “We love the people, and they challenge us and keep us fresh.”
One such listener is Joe DeGeeter, who really started listening to the station and the morning a few months back after turning it on to try and drown out a rooster’s crowing.
“I love the variety of the station, and the DJs are so unique, and more like normal people,” DeGeeter said. “Aaron has a good voice over the radio, is quick-witted, and very friendly.”
With the station’s first full year almost under its belt, Dail is overjoyed with its popularity, and being able to fulfill a lifelong goal.
He plans to help the station grow in the years to come and said he truly appreciates how blessed he is to be given the chance to make his dream a reality.
“Fate has given me a chance to live a life that I had always dreamed of but forgot about,” said Dail, “It’s just surreal.”