Tag: Philadelphia Radio

  • WFLN Philadelphia Airchecks Jill Pasternak & More

    WFLN Philadelphia Airchecks Jill Pasternak & More

    My recent posts about Jill Pasternak have prompted me to go back and search out a few air checks of WFLN that I’d been able to find online. WFLN served as Philadelphia’s only full-time classical music radio station since 1949. Pasternak, who was hired in 1986, was the one tasked with bidding farewell, before the frequency’s changeover to a contemporary pop format, on September 5, 1997.

    At the link below, you’ll find her in happier times, sitting in for Bill Shedden and hosting “Evening Concert” on August 20, 1989. Jill introduces music by Balakirev, Tchaikovsky, and Rachmaninoff. (The audio cuts off shortly after she announces Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Scheherazade.”)

    On the same page, there’s a sound file of Frank Kastner hosting on October 22, 1989. Kaster was the announcer who signed on the station on March 14, 1949 (his 25th birthday), playing Brahms’ “Academic Festival Overture,” Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, and Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2 from 78 rpm records. The playlist here consists of Léo Delibes’ “Coppélia” (in progress) and Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Partita for String Orchestra (sadly, cutting off before the end).

    WFLN (Philadelphia) Evening Concert

    PHOTO: Representatives of the WFLN crew in 1997, Jill Pasternak kneeling in front. I also recognize Mark Pinto (left), Dave Conant (obscured), Frank Kastner (with mustache), Charles Lee (white hair), Jack Moore (white jacket), Bill Shedden (blue shirt). Anyone know the others?

  • Remembering WFLN Philadelphia’s Lost Classical Station

    Remembering WFLN Philadelphia’s Lost Classical Station

    My post on July 28 about the passing of WRTI radio host Jill Pasternak stimulated some interesting reader comments and a lot of personal memories about Jill’s former employer, the late, great WFLN, Philadelphia’s full-time classical music station for nearly 50 years. I am a nostalgic person by nature, so it’s easy for me to get lost for hours sometimes obsessively googling favorite subjects from the past. WFLN flourished largely in the days before the internet, so every nugget is hard-won and savored to the fullest. I wish there were more out there. But I am always digging.

    Yesterday, David Nethermark Carson left a message on the Pasternak post. He was WFLN’s chief engineer for a time in the 1950s. That reminded me of this blog I stumbled across a few years ago by former WFLN host Gordon Spencer, who also goes way back. It occurs to me, I may never have mentioned it or shared the link. There’s not much to it, only a few entries, but it offers some valued glimpses of the Wild West days of Philadelphia’s now-lamented classical music station. Since WFLN was sold in 1997 (28 years ago???), the sixth largest city in the United States has been without a full-time classical music broadcast outlet.

    WRTI, as Temple University’s former full-time jazz station, now divides its schedule between jazz and classical. Interestingly, I learn from Spencer’s reminiscences that at one time WFLN offered jazz as well.

    Spencer died in 2018 at the age of 84. His entries are prefaced with a remembrance by his wife.

    https://stationbreaks2bygordonspencer.umkc.edu/

  • Remembering Jill Pasternak & WFLN’s Golden Age

    Remembering Jill Pasternak & WFLN’s Golden Age

    Whenever one of the old WFLN roster dies, it makes me horribly nostalgic for the better days of classical radio. Signed on by Frank Kastner in 1949 (the two-hour inaugural program, he told me, included Brahms’ “Academic Festival Overture,” Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, and Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2), WFLN was Philadelphia’s classical music radio station for nearly 50 years. Over time, Kastner, Henry Varlack, Taylor Green, Bill Shedden, and Ralph Collier all passed into the beyond. Now, I’m sorry to learn, they are joined by Jill Pasternak, who died on Saturday at the age of 91.

    Although I met her several times while working at WRTI, I don’t have any good Jill Pasternak stories. I only really knew her, like most people, as a listener. In house, I followed her at the microphone on a few occasions, as the station transitioned from classical to jazz at 6 p.m. But we really didn’t get to too much chit-chat. I defer to some of her other colleagues for their colorful reminiscences, which you’ll find at one of the links below. I found especially amusing Mark Pinto’s recollection of Jill’s penchant for Michel Legrand’s music for “The Go-Between” and what that led to behind the scenes.

    From time to time, I’ll google WFLN and its hosts to see if I can come up with any fresh information. Last night, I came across a report from 1986 that bore out what I had always heard about the station: WFLN was one of a dwindling number of commercial classical music stations that always turned a profit. (Nowadays, with few exceptions, if you hear classical music on the radio, it is usually from a public or community source.)

    Unfortunately, when the license was sold, that wasn’t good enough. You know how it is. It’s not enough to make money. You have to make a LOT of money. As in, squeeze it for as much as you possibly can.

    What followed is painful to remember, as the new owners gave this longstanding cultural oasis an ultimatum to pull bigger numbers, or else. The strategy? Bust up all those symphonies and concertos into bite-sized pieces to be spoon-fed to the populace. No more complete Brahms symphonies. Certainly no more Bruckner. Just individual movements of old favorites.

    This was especially painful when someone tried to program an excerpt from a piece like Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1, which has an innovative structure, intended to be played through without break. On such occasions, the music would stop, jarringly, interrupted like clicking an “off” button in the middle. It did not make for good radio.

    Again, WFLN proved profitable, but I think everyone knew, once the ultimatum had been issued, that its fate was inescapable. The station was merely being put through the motions to demonstrate, “Well, we tried.”

    Finally, on September 5, 1997 (with only 24-hours’ public notice), WFLN’s classical music format was replaced, again jarringly – both from a programming but also an emotional standpoint – with modern “adult contemporary hits,” as WXXM. Reflecting the kind of world we now live in, the “new” station shifted format every few years, in contrast to the anchor WFLN had been. (Its current call letters are WBEN-FM.) The last voice heard before the transition was that of Jill Pasternak, who bid farewell to a half-century of excellence with Fritz Kreisler’s “Schön Rosmarin.” Her humanity was never more evident. Audibly choked-up, she reflected what we all felt. It was loss. You could hear it in her voice. Just like that, five decades had come to an end.

    For months after, there was no classical music programming being broadcast from Philadelphia. Temple University stepped up with an imperfect solution: WRTI, which had built its own following as a 24-hour jazz station, would divide its schedule, with classical music during the daytime hours hosted by a handful of WFLN exiles. Jill was one of these.

    With all respect to WRTI, it never has been a substitute for WFLN. You could turn on 95.7 at any time during the day or night and find the consolation of Haydn or Grieg or Fauré. Now, after 6:00, you’re out of luck. Nearly 30 years later, America’s sixth largest city is still without a full-time classical music station.

    Of course, times have changed, and classical music can be found elsewhere, especially via internet streaming. But that kind of old-school classical music radio, with playlists of complete recordings of great performances, introduced by knowledgeable, friendly-without-being-inane hosts is increasingly rare.

    How many times have I had on a classical music station and been transported by the music, only to be slapped awake at the end of a movement by some vacuous chit-chat. What happened to the rest of the piece? It’s jarring, and very upsetting, and I doubt very much it does anything to build listenership beyond the music-as-wallpaper crowd. I can’t even deal with it as wallpaper. There’s too much talk to be able to use it as background. You can’t even get lost in the fantasy of the music.

    It’s happening all across the country. Increasingly, local hosts are falling away as owners, general managers, and even universities that run these stations find that it’s more economical to drop community-connected voices, who over time have become like family for local listeners, to become, essentially, affiliates for larger, syndicated, satellite-distributed behemoths like Classical 24, a service out of Minnesota that’s now being carried by classical music stations across the U.S., so that as a listener, when you drive for great distances, you jump from frequency to frequency, and it’s the same soul-deadening slop.

    WFLN was as solid as the Rock of Gibraltar. As a kid, I was able to learn the entire standard repertoire by listening to the radio.

    The greatest investment I made in the last several years was that for my internet radio. Yeah, you can get decent speakers and you can stream anything on your computer; but the internet radio allows me to continue to live in a world in which I can turn on a tabletop console and enjoy beautiful music with hosts who are real people who say relevant things without getting bogged down in chat or being so didactic that you start to wonder what kind of station you’re even listening to. In short, classical radio the way it used to be.

    The one thing that shatters the illusion is when I have to step outside the bubble and drive someplace and again I am at the mercy of “local” radio. Of course, there’s a workaround for that too, but I haven’t progressed to the point where I’m plugging in my phone in the car. It’s easier for me just to carry a few CDs.

    I realize this isn’t an awful lot about Jill, but there are some nice remembrances to be gleaned in reading from the WRTI website. (See the links below.) Already, I’d forgotten her warm greeting: “How ARE you today?”

    I keep hoping to uncover more airchecks from WFLN broadcasts from those pre-internet days. If you’ve got any, please consider sharing them. I would love to hear them! Over the years, I’ve only been able to find a few online, and one of them is morning drive-time, not really representative of the rest of the day’s programming.

    It’s astonishing to me that I had the opportunity to actually work with so many of these voices that were unwitting mentors to me over the years. Dave Conant, Bill Shedden, Ralph Collier, Jack Moore, Michael Carter, Jill. I talked to Henry Varlack on the telephone during his air shift in the middle of the night, many, many times. I met Terry Peyton and Taylor Green when I visited the WFLN studios in Roxborough (an hour’s bus-ride from Center City), when I auditioned to get on the air there when I was still in college. I did not succeed, although Dave Conant was very kind, recording my voice as I read copy and offering critiques (“You sound like you’re announcing the races!”) and inviting me to come back and try again. Which I did. Years later, as he neared retirement, I finally did wind up working with him, as an on-call classical host mostly doing overnight jazz at WRTI.

    Jill, a regular presence and a beloved one, retired from WRTI in 2015. I am grateful to her for helping to make life a little more pleasant. She shared a lot of beautiful music and always kept it human.

    R.I.P.


    Bruce Hodges’ obituary on the WRTI website

    https://www.wrti.org/wrti-spotlight/2025-07-27/jill-pasternak-longtime-classical-host-at-wrti-has-died-at-91

    WRTI staff memories of Jill

    https://www.wrti.org/wrti-spotlight/2025-07-27/here-are-our-memories-of-jill-pasternak-what-are-yours

    1986 radio report, affirming the solidity of WFLN’s finances and revenue

    https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-Mediatrix/Mediatrix-Philadelphia-1986.pdf

    Philadelphia Inquirer article on the last gasp of WFLN

    https://www1.udel.edu/nero/Radio/readings/Classical/lastclass.html

  • Remembering Philadelphia’s WFLN

    Remembering Philadelphia’s WFLN

    Anybody else remember this?

    I found it yesterday in a secondhand shop, and I had to pick up, because of my fond memories of WFLN, Philadelphia’s classical music station for 48 years.

    So much did I love that station that I still remember useless bits of trivia about it, such as the fact that it was Frank Kastner who signed on for the first time in 1949 and hosted the first two hours, which included recordings (on 78 rpm) of Brahms’ “Academic Festival Overture,” Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2, and Sibelius’ Symphony No. 2.

    Frank was a piece of living history. He returned to WFLN years later, and I had the opportunity to meet and converse with him several times. I remember discussing neglected music with him, and our talking about Giuseppe Martucci. I also remember once Frank hilariously playing Peter Maxwell Davies “Eight Songs for a Mad King” at around 9:00 on a weekend morning. Definitely NOT music authorized by the program director!

    For a number of years, the station would host a joint fundraiser with the Philadelphia Orchestra. These were frequently broadcast with WFLN announcers and celebrity guests (such as Celeste Holm) appearing in a public location, so that you could drop by and pick up your “thank you” premium. These were often in the form of a mug or an autographed CD.

    Apparently, there was a Bach’s Mug, a Mozart’s Mug, a Beethoven’s Mug, a Brahms’s Mug, and a Tutti Per Muti Mug (a reference to then-Philadelphia Orchestra music director Riccardo Muti). These all came up in the course of my Google searches this morning.

    The one pictured, of course, is Handel’s Mug. 3-1/2 inches tall. 3-1/2 inches wide. I’ll add it to my collection of broadcast trophies and memorabilia, including a Metropolitan Opera mug, once owned by WCLV’s Robert Conrad, and Ralph Collier’s briefcase, debossed with his birth initials. (He was born Ralph Kisch.) I also own a number of Collier’s neckties, including his Abraham Lincoln tie from the Union League of Philadelphia.

    Needless to say, I hung on to a selection of the old WFLN program guides. I’ve got one from October 1982 on my bedside table right now. I especially treasure those from around the holidays. That’s back when classical music Christmas was really classical music Christmas, hardcore! And I’ve got a few of the station’s annual limited-edition posters.

    In my memory, the programming was not the most adventurous, but it was cozy. I’m always saying I learned the entire standard repertoire from listening to WFLN. However, revisiting the October 1982 program guide reveals plenty of surprises, with, for instance, Witold Lutoslawski’s Cello Concerto scheduled for around 3:00 on a weekday afternoon. I also remember hanging around one day waiting to start a cassette tape because I saw they would be playing Roy Harris’ “Folk Song Symphony.” I heard Olivier Messiaen’s “Turangalîla Symphony” for the first time on a New York Philharmonic broadcast, with Leonard Bernstein conducting. So clearly, this was an invaluable resource that presented more than just the three B’s.

    The announcers were familiar without ever coming across as fake, and nobody blathered on about inanities – except in the mornings, when Dave Conant would needle Dick James from Schuylkill Valley Nature Center about the weather.

    Each day part was capped by a signature tune, drawn from Haydn (the last movement of the Symphony No. 6 “Le matin”), Fauré (“Masques et bergamasques” and “Pavane”), Sibelius (the “Entr’acte” from “Pelleas and Melisande”), and Johann Ernst Altenburg (the Concerto for 7 Trumpets). I have so many happy memories associated with that music. Truly, this station was like home. So much of it was entwined with my youth.

    Here’s a biography of Frank Kastner in his own words:

    https://www.broadcastpioneers.com/frankkastner.html

    And a preserved aircheck from 1990, opening with Ralph Collier doing an ad for Jack Kellmer Jewelers; then Dave Conant, host of the drivetime show “Morning Potpourri” (also the station’s GM); with Dick James banter starting around 39 minutes in:

    Wish I could find more like this, especially from the early ‘80s.

    Almost too painful to listen to: the format change in 1997. Philadelphia has not had a full-time classical music station since.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oV4unQHkqgI

    Some of the WFLN staff was picked up by WRTI at Temple University. The rest drifted away to other stations around the country or changed careers.

    I actually interviewed with Conant a few times at WFLN, back in the 1980s, while I was still in college. He was very nice man, very patient. He put me in a booth, and recorded me onto reel-to-reel tape, and then he’d critique it and tell me I could come back. I did, three times – it was an hour bus ride from center city to the studios in Roxborough – but eventually I gave up.

    I found my own way into radio, as a community broadcaster for nine years, before getting hired at WWFM in 1995.

    Interestingly, Conant and I finally did work together, during his twilight years as general manager and early morning host at WRTI. I was hired at WRTI in 2014 as an on-call classical announcer. I wound up doing regular jazz overnights on the weekends, but when I was called in on a weekday, either to do 12-6 a.m. jazz or the 10 a.m. classical shift, Conant and I would switch chairs.

    Even having done radio for nearly 40 years, I will never be as good as he was. I’ll never have the pipes, for one thing. I’m stuck with a frustratingly high voice, so that listeners are often surprised to find that I stand well over six feet. But Conant just exuded radio. He had that resonant voice, and he’s just one of those people who is one with the mic.

    I probably should have added more cigarettes and bourbon to my regimen. Those WFLN announcers were old-school.

    A brief history of WFLN (since I know this has already been a lot to Handel):

    https://phillyradioarchives.com/history/wben

  • Ross Amico WRTI Philadelphia Radio 90.1 FM

    Ross Amico WRTI Philadelphia Radio 90.1 FM

    I’ve received the signal. Classic Ross Amico on WRTI, today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. ET. Listen in the Philadelphia area at 90.1 FM or online at wrti.org. A complete list of frequencies can be found here: http://wrti.org/wrti-frequencies-and-coverage-map

    To the Batpole!

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