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mahatmakanejeeves

(68,362 posts)
Wed Jan 14, 2026, 12:43 PM Yesterday

On January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM."

WHFS Sells Out the Deejay

7/5/2018 in DC, Maryland, Virginia by Dominic Charles



WHFS deejays Damian Einstein (far right) and Weasel (front) pose with musician Jesse Colin Young (second from right) and an {unidentified} record executive (far left) at WHFS headquarters in Annapolis, MD in 1983. (Photo source: Handout photo/Steve King).

On June 11, 1989, 8,000 people crowded into a Wheaton parking lot in front of Joe’s Record Paradise for what the Washington Post described as, “a grass-roots rebellion,” to protest the removal of beloved WHFS FM 99.1 deejay, Damian Einstein, from the airways. Attendees of what store owner Joe Lee dubbed “Damianfest,” included die-hard fans who fell in love with Damian’s expansive musical tastes which he revealed to listeners on his daily 9am-Noon slot, WHFS colleagues, and artists who owed some of their success to Damian’s ear for talent. Technically, according to new WHFS general manager, Alan Hay, Damian had not been fired so much as a “promoted” to an off-air role. However, to the horde gathered in Wheaton – and to thousands of dedicated listeners across the DMV – the move suggested something more ominous.

{snip}



Print found on t-shirts given out at Damianfest. Damianfest was held on June 11, 1989 in the Joe’s Record Paradise’s parking-lot in Wheaton, Maryland on June 11, 1989. The t-shirt was provided to Boundary Stones by Dick Bangham who was one of many fans who organized Damianfest. He is also currently coproducing a WHFS documentary with Jay Schlossberg titled “Feast Your Ears.” Check out the trailer for the documentary here: https://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/movies/bs-fe-whfs-20180110-story.html

{snip}

The next decade would be a roller-coaster ride for the station and its listeners. Catching the wave of suddenly-mainstream grunge music, WHFS took off in popularity. Ratings soared as deejays began jamming the repeat button more frequently than ever, playing the same Pearl Jam, Cranberries, Nirvana, and other alternative tracks over and over again. Ironically, grunge was the sort of hidden sound which WHFS deejays like Damian might have prided themselves in introducing to listeners in an earlier time. However, with the explosion of Nirvana’s Nevermind album in 1992, once proudly alternative music started to be played with regularity on more mainstream radio stations.

{snip}

On January 12, 2005, WHFS – which, by then was owned by Infinity Broadcasting, a branch of Viacom and the largest radio conglomerate in the country – departed from the Washington, D.C. airways. The end came abruptly. At noon, after the final chords of Jeff Buckley’s 1995 hit, “Last Goodbye,” faded, listeners heard an energetic greeting in Spanish:

Transmitiendo desde la ciudad capital de America: "Esta! Es! Tu! Nueva! Radio!"

"Transmitting from America's Capital City: This! Is! Your! New! Radio!"

{snip the rest, including the footnotes, which are worth looking at}

JAN 12, 2005, 2:19 PM

WHFS, R.I.P.
Kyle Gustafson

Just under two hours ago, venerable alternative radio flagship station WHFS, 99.1 on your FM dial, was taken off the air and replaced by “El Sol” which will play “a mixture of Salsa, Merengue and Bachata, targeting adults 25-54.” Ack! The move took many area radio listeners by surprise. Billboard Radio Monitor called the format change “a shocking move.”

“We have made clear our desire to expand into this burgeoning market and believe this move marks an important step in our commitment to Spanish radio,” Infinity president/CEO Joel Hollander said in statement. “There exists a tremendous opportunity for Infinity to launch a Spanish-language format in Washington, D.C. where almost 10% of the population is not being directly served. El Zol will be the most powerful Spanish radio station in the area and will provide listeners with the music, entertainment and information relevant to the many segments of the Latino culture.”

Color DCist shocked. Yes, the station played too much Good Charlotte (even playing an influential role in breaking the band nationally), other mall-ternative punk bands and mid 90’s grunge, but they peppered that with the occasional tune by Franz Ferdinand, The Killers and their indie rock peers. Savvy DCist readers have pointed out We have, at this moment, no alternative station, no college rock station, no AAA station, no indie station, nothing, nada. True indeed, but we’ll always have our iPods.

Worst of all? No more HFStival!

Mon Jan 13, 2025: On January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM."

Fri Jan 12, 2024, 08:51 AM: On this day, January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM."

Fri Jan 12, 2024, 08:48 AM: On this day, January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM."

Fri Jan 12, 2024, 08:44 AM: On this day, January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM."

Thu Jan 12, 2023: On this day, January 12, 2005, WHFS departed from the Washington, D.C. airways.

Wed Jan 12, 2022: On this day, January 12, 2005, WHFS departed from the Washington, D.C. airways.
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On January 12, 2005, WHFS dropped its alternative programming and became "El Zol 99.1 FM." (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Yesterday OP
we still grieve mike_c Yesterday #1
Tell me about it. mahatmakanejeeves Yesterday #3
Most of the radio stations where I live mwmisses4289 Yesterday #2
Online radio is your friend. mahatmakanejeeves Yesterday #4

mahatmakanejeeves

(68,362 posts)
3. Tell me about it.
Wed Jan 14, 2026, 02:23 PM
Yesterday

Last edited Thu Jan 15, 2026, 06:45 AM - Edit history (6)

I've never heard anything else like them, though some over-the-air and online sources make me think, temporarily, that I'm listening to WHFS.

Try WTMD, at Towson University in Towson MD. It's where Weasel (Jonathan Gilbert) ended up.

I'm in Alexandria VA. I'm experimenting with antennas to see if can get WTMD over the air on a Technics receiver. It's touch and go. Several Baltimore stations come in with a strong signal, sufficient for listening in stereo -- WYPR, the classical station at 88.1 MHz; WBJC; WIYY; and so on. Towson, though, is just over that magic horizon. Some days (with rabbit ears) it comes in great; other days, not much at all.

On a TEAC HD-1 HD radio -- I have it on now in the next room -- I am rarely able to coax WTMD into going into the HD mode. Most of the time, it comes in in analog, with no bars. Those other three stations I mentioned, all in Baltimore, come in with five bars.

Also try WTOP HD3, The Gamut. It's probably as close to WHFS as you're going to get. WTMD has two HD subchannels; both can be found online. WTOP's HD3 sub channel does not show up online.

What you can do to listen to The Gamut is to listen to it via its Frederick MD outlet's HD sub channel. The base station, so to speak, is WSHE, at 820kHz. The programming of its digital subchannel is a duplicate of what you'd hear on WTOP HD3.

How does an AM station send out an HD signal? That is a really long story. The Wikipedia article says that "The Gamut began as an eclectic hobby Internet radio station run by WTOP-FM engineer Dave Kolesar." Online, WSHE is known as WWFD. Again from Wikipedia:

As WWFD, [WSHE] was the first licensed radio station in the United States to discontinue its traditional AM analog signal and operate solely in digital-only HD Radio MA3 mode, which it began under experimental authorization from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 2018. WWFD's experiments with digital-only operation led to the FCC authorizing it on a voluntary basis for AM band stations nationwide in 2020.

Dave's efforts have won him recognition:


NAB TO AWARD DAVE KOLESAR THE 2024 RADIO ENGINEERING AWARD

by Lance Venta March 11, 2024
Mar 12, 2024 Updated Mar 12, 2024

Frederick MD is much too far for me to get WSHE/WWFD over the air, especially with the Catoctin Mountains in the way. With WTOP right across the river, there's not point. When I want to listen to The Gamut through my Technics receiver though, I do so via WWFD online.

Let me know if you need any help finding those stations. They are well worth the effort to track down.

I wish I could hear "My Three Songs" one more time. Let's end with this:


Joe King Carrasco - Party Weekend HD

andrew91118

36.3K subscribers

71,623 views Sep 5, 2014
Joe King Carrasco, who is known as the king of Tex-Mex Rock n Roll,[citation needed] mixes Nuevo Wavo rock and Latin rhythms. In the 7th grade he started playing in garage bands in the west Texas town of Dumas, Texas. He was often found on the beaches of Mexico, falling in love with the Mexican music. Back in Texas he formed the band Joe King Carrasco and El Molino, which included many of the future members of the Texas Tornados. He released “Tex-Mex Rock & Roll”, his first LP in 1979.

Carrasco was interviewed in Rolling Stone Magazine and appeared on Saturday Night Live. His song Party Weekend was re-recorded by MTV as Party Christmas, and that video is still a popular "share" every Christmas among Facebook fans.

Wikipedia

mwmisses4289

(3,318 posts)
2. Most of the radio stations where I live
Wed Jan 14, 2026, 02:22 PM
Yesterday

are rwnj talk, sports, fundies, cw, or spanish. There are a couple of oldies stations that seem to play mostly Beatles, Grateful Dead or Jefferson Airplane with the occasional Beyonce or Cyndi Lauper thrown in. We used to have a jazz station and a classical station, but one became fundie, and one became spanish.
Listen mostly to NPR, and even that is mostly only in the car.

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