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Sole Classical Music Station Serving Baja California and San Diego Ends Broadcasts

Accepted submission by -- OriginalOwner_ http://tinyurl.com/OriginalOwner at 2018-03-02 22:20:19 from the southern-california-culture-on-the-skids dept.
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The World Socialist Web Site reports [wsws.org]

[...]classical radio station XLNC1, which broadcast on 104.9 FM, had its last day on the air [February 28]. The station, whose broadcast area covered the regions of southern San Diego County, Tijuana, and northern Baja California, announced on February 9 that it would no longer broadcast due a lack of funding.

The station was unique in that it was one the few in the world that was both binational and bilingual. Its tower was located in Baja California, and the station was known for announcing composers and titles in both Spanish and English, often using one language to introduce a piece and the other language when the piece ended. The station will maintain streaming via their online services, but radio listeners in the region will no longer be able to tune into 104.9 FM.

XLNC1 was founded in 1998 by Victor Diaz initially as an Internet radio station. In 2000, it began broadcasting at 90.7 FM. In 2004, the station nearly shut down due to signal and financial problems, and eventually moved to 104.9 FM in 2008.

Diaz stated that he created the station to educate audiences in both Mexico and the United States about classical music and its mission was "to make great music accessible to everyone". Following Diaz's death in 2004, his wife Martha Barba kept the underfunded station afloat, often with personal funds.

During its 20 years of operation, commercial-free classical music has been played on XLNC1 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The wide-ranging programming includes the most popular melodies in classical music each weekday morning, the "Top 400 Hits of the Last 400 Years", and weekly broadcasts of the New York Philharmonic, as well as the San Francisco Opera during its season.

Nightly Gala Concerts are known for their diversity. For instance, this week alone, "The Greatest Video Game Music", performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra, will follow "Music by Nikolai Myaskovsky" performed by the USSR Radio Symphony Orchestra.

[...]Like all other social benefits, access to art is under relentless attack as culture is subordinated to the profit motive and the lion's share of society's wealth becomes further concentrated at the top, while government funding is directed to unending imperialist war.

According to a recent study released by the Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs at Brown University, titled "Costs of War", 16 years of war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Syria have drained $5.6 trillion from the United States economy. Last month, the Trump administration revealed plans to build up the US nuclear "triad" with 30-year projections totaling $1.3 trillion. The cost of just one Trident D5 submarine-launched missile ($66 million) would be enough to cover the annual budget of the station and keep XLNC1 on the air for the next 33 years.


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