DWKX

For the radio station of the same name in Baguio City, see DWSK. For the radio station of the same name in Olongapo City, see DWSL.
DWKX (103.5 K-Lite)
City Mandaluyong City
Broadcast area Mega Manila, surrounding areas
Worldwide (online)
Branding 103.5 K-Lite
Slogan The Hits and Lite Favorites
The Hits From Back in The Day, Played Today (every Wednesday during Past Forward)
Frequency 103.5 MHz
First air date October 23, 1995 as the 1st iteration of K-Lite
January 1, 2007 as Heart FM
June 20, 2007 as Max FM
August 23, 2010 as Wow FM
July 22, 2013 as the 2nd iteration of K-Lite
Format Adult Contemporary
Power 25,000 watts
ERP 100,000 watts
Former callsigns DWIM (1970s)
DWCS (1986–1995)
Owner Advanced Media Broadcasting System, Inc.
Website klite1035.fm

DWKX (103.5 FM), branded as 103.5 K-Lite, is a radio station, airing an Adult contemporary format. It is owned and operated by Advanced Media Broadcasting System, Inc. Its studio and transmitter are located at Unit 906A, Paragon Plaza Building, EDSA corner Reliance street, Mandaluyong City.

History

1970s-1985: DPI Radio 1

The station started in the 1970s as DPI Radio 1, which was owned and operated by the government of the Philippines through Department of Public Information, under the call letters of DWIM-FM. It was then a simulcast station of DPI Radio 1 710 kHz with its callsign DZFM (later moved at 918 kHz in 1977 (now known as Sports Radio 918 AM under the callsign DZSR), and now known as DZRB-AM which is now at 738 kHz), which aired music, news and weather. It then lasted until 1986 when DPI Radio 1 moved its frequency to 104.3 MHz, which it changed its callsign to DWBR after the People Power Revolution of 1986, and later known as "104.3 Business Radio", while the 103.5 frequency was sold to Global Broadcasting System, Inc. (which would later acquire Radio Veritas 5 years later) via a government-sponsored bidding and changed its call letters to DWCS.

1985-1995: DWCS

Main article: DWCS

103.5 CS played the Standards genre, ranging from World War II up to the Early 80's. It was sold in 1995 to Advanced Media Broadcasting System through the efforts of Jinji Buhain, a relative of the head of the Global Broadcasting System.

1995–2006: The First K-Lite

K-Lite logo from 2005 to 2006.

Seven of Manila's best disc jockeys (Joe Schmoe, Paul Reno, Jay Latin, Dick Reese, Joshua, Martin Gill and Little David) set out to form a radio station that would be best in the much-established and well-known old hands of the industry. The new station occupied the frequency, studios and equipment formerly handled by the defunct standards music station DWCS (103.5 CS, then owned by Global Broadcasting System) and changed its call sign to DWKX. K-Lite started airing on October 23, 1995. The first DJ to go on air was Joe Schmoe; his first song was "Pride (In the Name of Love)" by U2. Within a few months, it became one of the favorite radio stations of the young professionals and more outspoken listeners.

Offering the best of adult contemporary music and spicing everyday music fare with daring, thought provoking talk, Manila's "First Interactive Radio Station" became a reality. Through the years, K-Lite aired quality talk shows including the groundbreaking program, 'Talk Back' with Joshua (replaced by Vince Faner in 1999) and Jinji, as well as 'Nitelite' with Li'l David, Monica and The Blade, 'Girl Talk' with Monica and Jinji, 'Sportslite' with Anthony Suntay (now with DWIZ) and 'Twisted' with Jessica Zafra and Li'l David. K-Lite made radio talk shows a staple in the FM band.

The station changed its format to attract more audiences from different demographics. From "The Right Kind of Lite" format in the late 1990s to "Best Music of the 80s, 90s & Today" in the turn of the century to "Manila's Lite Alternative" in 2003 to 2006. K-Lite began playing alternative rock and sometimes hard rock music on a more frequent basis.

103.5 K-Lite made promotional events that meant more than just parties. The station brought their loyal listeners to get front row seats to the Grammy Awards, international concert tours and celebrity events, and later on, serving free Starbucks Coffee to the call centre agents in the past few years. K-Lite also made its milestone as the very first radio station that covered The Dodgeball Cup on The Morning Brew.

Disc jockeys of K-Lite made their final broadcast all together on November 30, 2006 to give thanks to their beloved listeners.

Its lite alternative format has since been carried over to sister station Jam 88.3.

2007: Heart FM

On January 1, 2007, Heart 103.5 debuted on the airwaves as "Easy Listening the Way it Should Be. The format was easy listening (a mix of contemporary alternative & R&B). They later switched their slogan to "Easy Listening. Redefined."

Heart 1035 had a number of promotional events in the span of six months (Heart Cinemania Premieres, Drives & Jives Stickering, Heart on Air & Ice, Voices for Albay, and others). But in May 2007, Heart 1035 sponsored "The Best Damn Thing" Contest where they sent one of their loyal listeners to Hong Kong to meet Avril Lavigne in person for a special Asian Launch of her album "The Best Damn Thing" at the Hong Kong Convention Center.

Also in May 2005, Heart 1035 won the award for Caltex Fastbreak to the NBA Promo as "The Best Radio Station in Execution of a Promo" beating out other competing radio stations (Jam 88.3, Wave 89.1, Magic 89.9, Monster RX 93.1, Hit 99.5 (now 99.5 Play FM), and 105.1 Crossover).

On June 18, 2007, the Heart personalities made their final broadcast as a group.

2007–2010: Max FM

At exactly 9:00pm of June 19, 2007 (originally planned 12:00am July 2, 2007), 103.5 presented a new format that sounded more mature akin to adult contemporary. The music covers both old and new hits with a new station name: 103.5 (initially read on air as one-oh-three and-a-half) MAX FM. Their slogan was "In Tune with Manila". The format resembles of the first iteration of 99.5 RT, which at that time was known as 99.5 Hit FM.

Max FM logo from 2009 to 2010.

In mid-2009, the station's sound shifted to a predominantly dance format, with new slogans "Move To It!" and "Manila's Leading Dance Source", introduced to emphasize as such. DWKX's flip to dance put them in competition with DZUR, whose direction focuses mostly on pure underground club content, as opposed to DWKX's straight-ahead broader approach. In addition, DWKX also became the first fully licensed commercial dance radio outlet to cover Metro Manila since the demise of 89 DMZ, whose frequency is currently occupied by rhythmic contemporary sister station Wave 891.

On June 19, 2010, right on the third anniversary of the station, and prior to that, it underwent some minor changes, among others the line-up of DJs and their shows, the revision of how they identify themselves on-air (they dropped the "one-oh-three and-a-half Max FM" in favor of "one-oh-three point five Max FM", as the former is said to be not that much suitable for radio), and the dropping of some of its long-running local programs and foreign syndicated dance programs.

On August 5, 2010, the jocks of Maxville made their final broadcast to give thanks to their listeners. Max FM resurfaced as an Internet radio station now called Global Max Radio, which was launched last October 1, 2010.

2010–2013: Wow FM

Wow FM logo from 2010 to 2013.

On August 23, 2010 at 5:00am which the day saw the 2010 Manila hostage crisis, DWKX relaunched as a mass-based station branded 103.5 Wow FM. Laila Chikadora was the first DJ to go on board that morning, followed by Mister Fu & other top-rated DJs.[1] The station's tagline is "Lahveet!", which is the Tagalog bastardization of "Love it!". This is TRPI's (and now Tiger 22's) first venture into the mainstream, mass-based market. And to provide a wider coverage to its target market, the station also upgraded its transmitting power to 45 kW making it the most powerful FM station in Metro Manila at that time.

Following the resignation of Mr. Fu (who returned to his originating radio station Energy FM), who was preceded by that of Francine Prieto, the remaining DJs had their final broadcast on July 17, to make way for a new branding come July 22, though the station will still use the Wow FM moniker until the end.

2013–Present: The Second K-Lite

K-Lite's 2nd Iteration logo from 2013 to 2016

On July 22, 2013 at 6:00am, after its absence for almost 7 years, 103.5 was relaunched as the second iteration of 103.5 K-Lite with the new slogan, "The Hits and Lite Favorites", and as an adult contemporary station. EJ Electric was the first DJ to go on board, followed by other jocks, mostly from the Max FM/Wow FM roster & other stations. The official launch was made on August 1, 2013. During its first weeks of operation, the stations studios remained inside the Jollibee Plaza building, before it was transferred back to Paragon Plaza.[2] Since the relaunch, the station's transmitter power reduced back to 25,000 watts.

On April 21, 2014, 103.5 K-Lite was reformatted as a CHR station, with the slogan The Beat of Manila (similar to the summer slogan of sister station, Magic 89.9), with slightly vacated timeslots. This format is the same as 99.5 Play FM, but the playlist is from the mid-90s up to present.

On August 18, 2014, following the launch of rival oldies stations beginning with Retro 105.9 DCG FM last March and Wish 1075 eight days earlier, the station had been reformatted to its Adult Hits format, this time by introducing new DJs. K-Lite changed its slogan to "Metro Manila's Official Take Me Back Station" as its playlist now focuses on playing the classic hits from the 1990s to mid 2000s.

On November 24, 2014, following the resignation of Jude Rocha, the station had been reformatted back to its AC format with its 1st slogan as "The Hits and Lite Favorites".

Compilation CDs

As 103.5 Max FM

As Wow FM

Advanced Media Radio Network

Branding Callsign Frequency Location
103.5 K-Lite DWKX 103.5 MHz Metro Manila
One Radio 91.3 DWKN 91.3 MHz Tabaco City
Radio Boracay RB106 DYJV 106.1 MHz Boracay

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.