| End
of an Era: WLIR 92.7 "Long Island Radio" says
goodbye
February
1, 2004
by Michael Walls
Say
the names Malibu Sue, Donna Donna or Larry the Duck –
and use them in the same phrase as, The Jesus and Mary
Chain, Echo and the Bunnymen, or Souixsie and the Banshees
– and any hip person living on Long Island between
1980 and 1995 would know what you’re talking about.
For
those not fortunate enough to spend their defining years
in the shopping malls, nightclubs and on the beaches of
the country’s most populous island – I’m
talking about 92.7 FM, WLIR. “Long Island Radio”
– or “Low Income Radio” as many DJs
joked back in the early days.
WLIR
(or WDRE as it was called for a brief stint before turning
back) was the pinnacle of modern music, new wave, alternative
– whatever it was called – and was the launching
pad for many of the gigantic artists we still listen to
today. Bands like R.E.M., U2, INXS, The Red Hot Chili
Peppers, and Blur. Or for those youngsters not born until
the 80s – bands like Nirvana, Stone Temple Pilots,
Soundgarden, even Dave Matthews – all owe a debt
of gratitude to LIR for embracing the new styles and sounds
of music over the past 20 years.
But
2004 marks the end of an era, maybe even the end of radio
itself.
As
of January 9, 2004, WLIR, owned by Jarad Broadcasting
was sold to Univision, the biggest Spanish-language radio
company in America. And now, when you tune your dial to
92.7, anywhere in the New York City, New Jersey, or Connecticut
areas, you get to listen to the finest “Latino Mix”
this side of Tijuana.
What
a shame.
Back
in the 80s, WLIR was doing things usually reserved for
college radio. Playing stuff that no one else played.
They took risks, broke rules, experimented, and most of
all – had fun. But they were doing it on a commercial
stage with a wide frequency and a growing audience. And
it paid off. I don’t have exact numbers, but I’m
fairly certain for several years WLIR/WDRE was leading
the ratings in listeners. You couldn’t go anywhere
in the Tri-state areas without hearing LIR. The mall,
the beach, the gas station, all played LIR. Every bar
and every club on Long Island was vying for “WLIR
nights” or WLIR live broadcasts.
I
remember the “WLIR Ladies Nights” at J. Sprats
in Westbury on Thursday nights, with their free buffet
and $2 Rolling Rocks. Or the “WLIR Malibu Dance
Parties” at the Malibu night club on Malibu beach
– where you and ten friends could get in for free
if it was your birthday (plus a free bottle of champagne).
Shrieks
and Screamers-of-the-Week would be the subjects of conversation,
as LIR would select the best new song each week. Many
now famous artists and many one-hit wonders were born
as Shrieks-of-the-Week on LIR. Songs like “Melt
With You” by Modern English, “Come on Eileen”
from Dexy’s Midnight Runners, and “She Blinded
Me With Science” from Thomas Dolby.
Throughout
the late 80s and into the mid-90s, WLIR continued to play
music that no other station carried. Bands like The Cure,
New Order, Pet Shop Boys, Roxy Music, The Pixies, Love
& Rockets – you could only hear in the night
clubs or on LIR. Then around 1992, the grunge scene started
to heat up – with bands like Nirvana and Soundgarden.
WLIR saw the wave of change first and grabbed the music.
Of course, grunge became bigger than LIR could contain,
and other stations ditched their Van Halen and George
Thorogood formats and jumped on board.
And
that was the beginning of the end, as LIR slowly began
to lose its edge (and its listeners, as per the folks
at Arbitron) over the next several years. But I suppose
it was inevitable, as nothing good lasts forever. They
adjusted their format a few times, trying to catch whatever
it was they lost, but the truth is, the industry simply
caught up with them. The alternative music movement had
gone mainstream – progressive radio was dead.
So,
the question is – where are we going to hear “Melt
With You” from Modern English? Certainly no one
actually owns that album. We depended on LIR to play that
song at least once a week. While we’re at it, what
about The Smiths? Depeche Mode? The Soup Dragons? Flock
of Seagulls? Okay, I could probably go the rest of my
life without the Gulls, but there are so many of those
other bands that I might have on cassette tape somewhere,
but sound so much better in an 80s mixed environment on
the radio.
WLIR
played its last song at noon on January 9, 2004. It was
“Forever Young” by Alphaville. Which, in my
opinion, was kind of a sappy way to go out. I’m
sure it crossed the minds of at least a few DJs that the
last song played on LIR, before handing over the reins
to Univision’s Spanish radio team, should have been
Wall of Voodoo’s “Mexican Radio.”
(Michael
Walls is a volunteer staff writer for 2 Walls Webzine.)
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