WRMC-FM

Radio station at Middlebury College
  • Middlebury, Vermont
Broadcast areaSouthern Champlain Valley, Vermont and New YorkFrequency91.1 MHzProgrammingFormatCollegeOwnershipOwnerMiddlebury CollegeHistory
First air date
1949
Call sign meaning
"Radio Middlebury College"Technical informationClassAERP2,900 wattsHAAT−9 meters (−30 ft)LinksWebsitewrmc.middlebury.edu

WRMC-FM (91.1 FM) is the full power, student-volunteer-run radio station of Middlebury College. WRMC broadcasts a variety of content types, including talk, news, and radio drama, although the vast majority of the schedule is music of all genres. Shows are produced largely by student DJ's, although staff, faculty, and other members of the college and town community contribute content on occasion. Most shows last from one to two hours and generally air once a week. WRMC airs a reduced schedule during the summer, which includes shows produced by each of Middlebury College's summer language schools, broadcast entirely in the language of that school. The station also produces an annual music festival, called Sepomana.

History

WRMC debuted as a carrier current station on May 1, 1949 at 1:00 pm with the call sign "WMCRS" (Middlebury College Radio Services). This original station was founded by John Bowker, an undergraduate member of the College's class of 1952. Originally broadcasting at 3 watts from a chicken coop at 129 Adirondack View, the station played six hours daily of music and interviews on 750 AM. In 1950, WMCRS added the capability to broadcast play-by-play commentary of College hockey and basketball games. For a time, the station broadcast over the College's bell system into dorm rooms and fraternity houses. In 1967, WMCRS expanded to 10 watts and began broadcasting at 91.7 FM.[1] The following year the station first began 24-hour broadcasting, a first for any station in the Champlain Valley. In 1980, with the new call sign of "WRMC-FM" and broadcasting at 91.1 MHz, the station increased its power to 100 watts.

Sepomana Music Festival was first held in 1998 thanks to a loophole in the Student Government Association's financing rules. The name was invented and has no additional significance. The first festival was MC'd by an Elvis impersonator and featured a live pig as a mascot. For several years, Sepomana was held in Coltrane Lounge in the Adirondack House, but was relocated to larger spaces in future years due to overwhelming demand.

Location

WRMC is located on the Middlebury College campus in Middlebury, VT - approximately midway between Burlington and Rutland on Route 7. The station's studios are upstairs in Proctor, the dining hall behind Mead Chapel. The transmitter is mounted on the side of the smokestack at the Service Building.

WRMC boasts approximately 150 student DJs during each semester. All members of the College are welcome to participate in the station's General Board meetings, which have historically met in the station lounge weekly at 5:00 pm on Mondays when school is in session. With the assistance of the General Board, the Executive Board is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the station. The Executive Board, which is composed of the General Manager, Program Director, Business Director, Technical Director, Social Chair, and two Music Directors, is elected annually. The General Manager serves as the Chief Operator of the station for the President and Trustees of the College, who hold the station's license with the FCC.

Alumni of the radio station include award-winning journalist Frank Sesno, Vermont Governor Jim Douglas, writer Jeff Lindsay, musician Anaïs Mitchell, NYC Parks & Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe, and recording artist Jonathan Tristram.

Concerts

WRMC has brought a plethora of musical acts to the Middlebury campus over the years, including Rilo Kiley, Yo La Tengo, Animal Collective, The Decemberists, Ratatat, Versus, Mates of State, Smog, Tenacious D, The National, Clearlake, Josh Ritter, Future Islands, the Death Set, Tobacco, the Bran Flakes, the French Kicks, The Ruby Suns, Menomena, The Capstan Shafts, The French Kicks, Enon, The Books, Dan Deacon, Andrew Bird, Regina Spektor, Das Racist, Palms Out Sounds, Marcus Price, Boody B, Flipturn, and E-603 among others.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ "WMCRS Expands Broadcast Range," Middlebury Campus, 9 February 1950.
  2. ^ Ecclesine, Mary Claire (October 24, 2012). "Volleyball Posts 3-1 Run, Jarchow Earns NESCAC Player of the Week". The Middlebury Campus. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  3. ^ Graham-Jones, Pierce (September 12, 2002). "Indicted Tyco Executive to Remain Trustee Despite charges, Dennis Kozlowski stays in College's favor". The Middlebury Campus. Retrieved 10 July 2017.

External links

  • WRMC official website
  • WRMC 91.1 FM Blog
  • Middlebury Radio Theater of Thrills and Suspense
  • WRMC in the FCC FM station database
  • WRMC in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • v
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Radio stations in Burlington, Plattsburgh, and the Lake Champlain region (Vermont/New York)
By AM frequency
By FM frequency
LPFM
Translators
NOAA Weather Radio
frequency
Digital radio
by frequency & subchannel
By call sign
Defunct
Nearby regions –  U.S.
Bennington-Rutland
Lebanon-Hanover-White River Junction
Montpelier-Barre-Waterbury
North Country
Northeast Kingdom and Northern New Hampshire
Saratoga Springs-Glens Falls
 Canada
Montreal
See also
List of radio stations in New York
List of radio stations in Vermont

Notes
1. Station has a target audience in Canada.
  • v
  • t
  • e
  • WBTN (Southern Vermont College)
  • WIUV (Castleton University)
  • WJSC (Johnson State College)
  • WNUB (Norwich University)
  • WRMC (Middlebury College)
  • WRUV (University of Vermont)
  • WVTC (Vermont Technical College)
  • WWPV-LP (St. Michael's College)
See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
NPR
oldies
religious
rock
sports
top 40
urban
other radio stations in Vermont

44°00′25″N 73°10′37″W / 44.007°N 73.177°W / 44.007; -73.177