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XEVOZ-AM

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
XEVOZ-AM
Simulcast of XEUR-AM 1530
Broadcast areaGreater Mexico City
Frequency1590 AM
BrandingBuenisiima
Programming
FormatTropical music
Ownership
Owner
  • Grupo Audiorama Comunicaciones
  • (Radio Publicidad Latinoamericana, S.A. de C.V.)
XEWF-AM, XECO-AM, XEUR-AM
History
First air date
1944
Former call signs
XEMC-AM
Call sign meaning
Station was known as "Radio Voz"
Technical information
ClassB
Power20 kW day
0.900 kW night[1]
Transmitter coordinates
19°40′33.76″N 99°06′31.51″W / 19.6760444°N 99.1087528°W / 19.6760444; -99.1087528[2]
Links
WebcastListen live
Websiteaudiorama.mx

XEVOZ-AM (1590 AM) is a radio station serving Mexico City, with its transmitter in San Pablo de las Salinas, Tultitlan Municipality, State of Mexico.

History

[edit]
XEVOZ logo from 2010-16 as "La Mexicana"

The first concession for 1590 AM was made in 1944 for XEMC-AM, made to Dolores G. Estrada de Ferreiro.[3] During its early years, it broadcast Spanish music.

In 1963, Grupo ACIR bought the station and changed its calls to XEVOZ-AM. Under ACIR it became "Radio Voz" and broadcast tropical music. The format remained until 1989, when the station became "Radio ACIR", a format moved to XEL-AM not long after. XEVOZ in turn received the name "Capital Radio" and a rock format; the station was soon renamed "Capital Heavy Radio". The next 15 years would be marked by a carousel of formats: "Radio Capital" with tropical and norteña music (1995–1996); the short-lived "Óxido" rock format that was moved to XEFR-AM months later; ranchera music as "Bonita 1590" (1996–2004): "Radio Reloj", news with time announcements every minute (2004–06, during the brief window that XEQK-AM was not on its similar format); "Radio Tráfico", traffic conditions for Mexico City (2006–08); and "Luz 1590" with Christian pop (2008–09, being the first station in Mexico City with that format).

In 2009 ACIR shed many of its stations, with Radiorama buying all of them. Under Radiorama XEVOZ had five different formats and names in 2010: "Radio 1590" with Spanish rock (January); "Radio Fiesta", a name used formerly on XEUR-AM (January–May); "Vida 1590" with contemporary music in Spanish and English; and finally, regional Mexican as "Radio Mexicana 1590" from June 1, 2010, changed to "La Mexicana 1590" in October.[4]

In mid-2016, XEVOZ flipped from Regional Mexican to pop as "@1590". On November 12, 2021, XEVOZ switched back to the tropical music format as Buenisiima, a brand belonging to Grupo Audiorama Comunicaciones.


References

[edit]
  1. ^ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2014-12-22. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  2. ^ "#066564 Modificación al Título de Concesión" (PDF). Public Registry of Concessions (in Spanish). Federal Telecommunications Institute. August 15, 2018.
  3. ^ 1944 concession for XEMC-AM
  4. ^ XEVOZ History