CHFI-FM

For the radio station that began as CHFI, see CFTR (AM).
CHFI-FM
City Toronto, Ontario
Branding 98.1 CHFI
Slogan "Toronto's Perfect Music Mix"
Frequency 98.1 MHz
First air date February 1, 1957
Format adult contemporary
ERP 44,000 watts
HAAT 420.5 meters (1,380 ft)
Class C1
Callsign meaning Canada Hi-FIdelity
Owner Rogers Media, a division of Rogers Communications
(Rogers Radio)
Sister stations Radio: CFTR, CJCL, CKIS-FM
TV: CFMT, CITY, CJMT
Website www.chfi.com

CHFI-FM is a Canadian radio station, which broadcasts an adult contemporary format at 98.1 on the FM dial in Toronto, Ontario. CHFI's studios are located at the Rogers Building at Bloor and Jarvis at the northeastern corner of downtown Toronto, while its transmitter is located atop the CN Tower.

CHFI is currently the second most listened to station in the Toronto market after Newcap Radio-owned Classic Hits station CHBM-FM according to the Numeris ratings.[1] CHFI-FM is one of three AC stations in Toronto, along with CKDX-FM in York Region and CKLH-FM in Hamilton.

History

The station was launched on February 1, 1957, and was the first commercial FM outlet in Toronto to provide its own distinct programming rather than simulcasting an AM station. CHFI also initially provided a special Muzak-like background music service for offices and retail outlets in the city.

The station was acquired in 1960 by Aldred-Rogers Broadcasting Ltd., the company now known as Rogers Radio. In 1962, an AM counterpart, CHFI, which later became highly successful Top 40 music station CFTR, was added.

CHFI-FM pioneered the "beautiful music" format. The main programming heard from dawn until midnight was traditional easy listening fare. Music director Michael Compeau created a number of the station's much-imitated programs. The most famous was the popular and long running Candlelight and Wine heard evenings from 6 to 11 pm. The program, hosted by Don Parrish, mixed soothing instrumentals, soft vocals and occasional light classical pieces in "pop" arrangements. The program spun off a series of best-selling record albums, many of which are now highly prized collectors' items.

Compeau also created the popular Classics 'til Dawn, an overnight program of popular classical music. (In 1984, Compeau would become program director of CFMX-FM and use this same format for their overnight program.)

Another of Compeau's innovations was Front Row Centre, heard Sunday afternoons at 2 PM. This one-hour program featured full original cast recordings of popular Broadway musicals, with host Don Parish explaining the story between songs.

In the 1970s, Todd Russell began hosting a late evening program called Reminiscing featuring modern recordings of popular songs from the 1920s, 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. In 1973, Compeau decided to add some spice to the program by sprinkling in a few original period recordings. Since very few had been reissued on LP at this time, a call went out to collectors who loaned their original 78-rpm records to the radio station. The records were cleaned, repaired and brushed with distilled water before being transcribed to tape. Dubbed the "new library of old 78's", these antique rarities were showcased each weeknight. (In 1974, host Todd Russell died and was replaced by Sandy Hoyt.) CHFI soon amassed a collection of over 3,500 period recordings and the reminiscing program became one of the station's biggest successes. As time went on, the modern recordings were phased out and the program featured mainly the period recordings.

A format change in the mid-1980s led to the elimination of these programs, and CHFI began moving towards a soft rock/adult contemporary sound, making the station one of the longest-running English-language adult contemporary stations in Canada.[2] In 1987, Don Daynard became CHFI's new morning show host, a position he would hold until his retirement on December 10, 1999. Bob Magee would take over mornings on December 13.[3][4][5]

A new logo was unveiled in 2000, when Rogers rebranded the station from CHFI FM98 and the Toronto's Perfect Music Mix slogan, to 98.1 CHFI, moving away from soft adult contemporary to mainstream adult contemporary under the Toronto's Soft Rock slogan.

In June 2003, CHFI, competing closely with fellow Toronto adult contemporary station CJEZ-FM (now adult hits CHBM-FM), attempted to popularize a younger morning show. Firing longtime CHFI morning show personality Erin Davis (who had been with the station since September 1988) and moving Bob Magee to afternoons, the station named Mad Dog and Billie, later known as Jay and Billie, to host the morning show, beginning June 23. Jay and Billie hosted mornings on co-owned Toronto station KISS 92 FM before it flipped to adult hits earlier that month. The station began IDing as 98-1 CHFI (no point) instead, and unveiled the Today's Lite Music slogan.[6][7]

Bringing Jay and Billie on for mornings backfired on CHFI, as the station's ratings declined. In September 2004, Erin Davis was hired by CJEZ as a fill-in co-host, working alongside Mike Cooper. This brought CJEZ's ratings up dramatically, beating CHFI in several books. In June 2005, CHFI management fired Jay and Billie, rehired Davis for mornings (who returned on September 6), and also hired Mike Cooper as her co-host on October 26 after his contract with CJEZ expired.[8][9] (Cooper has since retired, with Darren B. Lamb (formerly of CHUM-FM) joining as Davis' co-host in February 2016.) At the same time, the station returned to using the point on the station's ID, returned to their old soft AC sound and switched to the "Toronto's Lite Favourites" slogan.[10][11] This turned around CHFI's ratings, as the station reclaimed the top spot in Toronto ratings, while CJEZ's ratings fell, prompting that station to flip to adult hits in December 2009.

As of 2009, the station would return to mainstream AC, but retained the Toronto's Lite Favourites slogan (which has since reverted to the Toronto's Perfect Music Mix slogan as of February 2013) and decimal point from the station ID. In addition, newer jingles were unveiled, along with an opening bumper for newer music (which the station has largely increased the amount of). As well, harder-edged content is largely reappearing on the station, which is mostly upbeat, rhythmic material, such as The Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling". At the same time, artists such as Michael Bolton, Air Supply and Jewel were largely dropped from the station's playlist. On December 26, 2009, long-time competitor CJEZ-FM switched from an adult contemporary format to an adult hits format, leaving CHFI as the only adult contemporary station in the Toronto radio market, although rimshot stations CKDX-FM in Newmarket, CKLH-FM in Hamilton and CHRE-FM in St. Catharines are de facto Toronto radio stations due to the stations' stronger signals.

With the tweak in CHFI's format, Rogers owned AC stations CHYM-FM in Kitchener, CKY-FM in Winnipeg, CFLT-FM in Halifax (which has since flipped to adult hits as "Jack FM"), and CHFM-FM in Calgary started following this pattern beginning in mid-to-late 2010. However, most of the 1970s songs were retained by CHFI, while the other stations dropped them entirely. (CHFI would remove the 1970s songs in 2012.)

On November 9, 2016, Erin Davis announced she would be retiring from mornings on December 15th, for personal reasons. Darren B. Lamb will continue to host mornings, along with a yet-to-be-announced co-host.[12]

Competition

CHFI competes heavily with Hot AC station CHUM-FM, older-skewing AC CKDX-FM, CKLH-FM, and CHRE-FM, as well as, to a lesser extent, Buffalo-based WMSX and WTSS.

Morning show hosts

Other personalities

Rebroadcasters

CHFI-FM can also be heard on these low-power transmitters:

British Columbia

Rebroadcasters of CHFI-FM
City of license Identifier Frequency RECNet CRTC Decision
Granisle VF2350 99.9 FM Query 99-36
McBride VF2305 105.1 Query

Newfoundland and Labrador

City of license Identifier Frequency RECNet CRTC Decision
Labrador City/Wabush VF2050 99.1 FM Query 87-864

See also

References

External links

Coordinates: 43°40′14″N 79°22′47″W / 43.67054°N 79.37962°W / 43.67054; -79.37962

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.