CHRE-FM

CHRE-FM is a radio station in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. Airing at 105.7 FM, the station broadcasts an adult contemporary format for the Niagara region, as well as Buffalo, New York (since 2010, CHRE's signal in Western New York has been diminished due to adjacent-channel interference from WGWE/Little Valley) branded as Move 105.7. CHRE's studios are located on Yates Street in downtown St. Catharines, while its transmitter is located near Thorold.

CHRE-FM
CitySt. Catharines, Ontario
Broadcast areaNiagara Region and Buffalo, New York
Frequency105.7 MHz (FM)
BrandingMove 105.7
SloganToday's Best Variety
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary
Ownership
OwnerBell Media
(Bell Media Radio)
History
First air date
March 20, 1967
Former call signs
CHSC-FM (1967-1979)
Call sign meaning
CH REdmond (former owner) or
St. CatHaRinEs (broadcast area)
Technical information
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT119.5 meters (392 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteiheartradio.ca/move/niagara

History

CHRE was launched on March 20, 1967 as CHSC-FM by Radio Station CHSC Ltd., the licensee of the city's CHSC AM 1220.

As CHSC-FM it simulcast much of its programming on CHSC AM. By 1970 the two stations were doing their own programming with CHSC-FM adopting the "Beautiful Music" format by 1978. During this time the station had a number of popular specialty programs. "A Starlight Concert" heard weeknights from 10 to 11pm features light classical music introduced by Francis Kirton who became the station's fine arts director. Kirton also hosted the Sunday morning programs "Variety Theatre" featuring condensations of popular operettas recorded by the Readers Digest Association, "Concert in the Park" featuring marches and brass band music, "Waltz Time", a half-hour of familiar music in 3/4 time and "At the Console" showcasing the world's great theatre organs.

Other specialty programs included "Ray Wickens' Broadway" hosted by British theatre aficionado Ray Wickens and featuring full original cast recordings; and "The Golden Age of Comedy" hosted by Armand Romagnoli and Mark Lawrence presenting classic comedy routines and old-time radio comedies. For a time in the late 1970s the station also carried the syndicated version of "The CBS Radio Mystery Theatre". The station's most popular program was "Howard Cable Presents" hosted by Howard Cable who was, at the time, the music director for the Imperial Room at the Fairmont Royal York hotel in Toronto. The program showcased many of the performers appearing at the Imperial Room as well as popular songs from shows and movies, Big Band favorites and Classical music.

On July 1, 1979, the callsign was changed to CHRE for station owner R.E. (Robert) Redmond. By 1985, Redmond determined that the "beautiful music" audience was rapidly aging and opted to switch to a soft rock/adult contemporary format geared to a younger crowd. At this time, all of the specialty programs were dropped.

The parent company became known as Redmond Communications in 1985 and was granted a license to open CJEZ-FM (now CHBM-FM) in Toronto. The station was subsequently sold to Affinity Radio Group in 1999.

Affinity was acquired by Telemedia the following year, and Telemedia was itself bought out by Standard Broadcasting in 2002.

In October 2007, Astral Media acquired Standard Broadcasting's terrestrial radio and television assets, including CHRE.

On July 5, 2013, Bell Media officially took ownership of Astral Media, and as a result, CHRE became a part of Bell Media's radio station group.

Former "EZ Rock" logo until 2020

In January 2015, CHRE-FM's first home, the former CHSC studios at 36 Queenston Street in St. Catharines, was demolished; its land will be used for a four-storey apartment building.[1]

On December 27, 2020, as part of a mass format reorganization by Bell Media, CHRE rebranded as Move 105.7. While the station would run jockless for the first week of the format, they are promoting the jocks' return on January 4, 2021; otherwise, no other changes are expected at this time.[2] CHRE was the last radio station in Ontario under the "EZ Rock" branding, while the branding still exists at a number of radio stations owned by Bell Media in British Columbia.

References

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