Nostalgie Wallonie

This article is about the Walloon radio station. For the French station, see Nostalgie. For the Flemish version, see Nostalgie Vlaanderen.
City Brussels, Evere
Broadcast area French Community of Belgium
Slogan La légende
Frequency 100.0 MHz (Charleroi)
95.0 MHz (Liège)
100.0 MHz (Brussels)
Full list of other frequencies on Nostalgie.be
First air date 1988
Format Oldies
Language(s) French
Owner Corelio
NRJ Group
Sister stations Chérie FM Belgique (defunct)
Nostalgie Vlaanderen
NRJ Wallonie
Website nostalgie.be

Nostalgie Wallonie is a private Belgian radio station broadcasting in Wallonia and Brussels, and is dedicated to mainly French and American music of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. Nostalgie Wallonia was created in Namur by the group Les Éditions de l'Avenir. It is owned by the NRJ Group and Corelio (previously Médiabel SA).[1]

History

In September 1983, Nostalgie starts broadcasting in France.

In 1987, the first broadcast of Nostalgie was in Brussels, then known as Radio Microclimat. But the official date of the appearance of Nostalgie in Wallonia was on 9 May 1989, when the French company Pro Public, bought the old SiS frequencies , whose bankruptcy was declared in 1988. The French manager of the company, who already broadcast Nostalgie in Lille, decided to implement the station in Belgium.

A year later in 1989, Pro Public disbanded, and the four frequencies of Nostalgie are bought by the NRJ Group.

On the night from 4 on 5 February 1993, Nostalgie starts broadcasting in Brussels on the frequency of the defunct station Top FM on 100.0 MHz, and is today still broadcasting there on this frequency.

In 2008, Nostalgie started broadcasting in Flanders as Nostalgie Vlaanderen.

Frequencies

Nostalgie Wallonie broadcasts on FM throughout Wallonia including Brussels, but can also be heard in parts of Flanders on the following frequencies:

Brussels

Hainaut

Liège

Luxembourg

Namur

Walloon Brabant

See also

References

  1. "Conseil supérieur de l'audiovisuel : Nostalgie SA". www.csa.be. Retrieved 2016-10-19.


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