Wasn't 95.7 The Ride technically an Oldies station when it signed on? I remember reading somewhere it was 60s/70s rock hits or something, which could technically be Oldies. I remember they used to play The Supremes sometimes.
A brief history of WXRC 95.7 FM...
In the 70s it was called "Channel X Country" and used TM Communications 10" reels for programming.
In 1978, the station flipped to top 40 and adopted the monicker "X-rock 96". Used TM's "Stereo Rock" services on 10" reels and ran totally automated and jockless.
Late 1984/early 1985, they began adding some live jocks and, by the summer of '85 had a full airstaff, still using automtion with live assist.
September 1985, the format flipped to classic rock/AOR and was called "The Rock". This was about the time I went to work there. They continued using the automation/cart carousels for spots. Music was played from LPs and CDs. What made the use of vinyl so blatantly obvious was the fact that the station was right next to the Norfolk Southern Railroad track. Anytime a train went by, it shook the building to the point that it would cause a very noticeable wow-and-flutter. It still surprises me that those trains never caused the records to skip.
Late 1987/early 88 the station moved into the old WSPF building on Tate Blvd. Later, the studios were moved to Charlotte but remained there little more than a year. By this time Dave Lingafeldt had acquired it and moved WXRC into the same building with WNNC and WIRC in Newton.
The station went through several name changes including "Rock 95-7", "95-7 The Panther" and "Charlotte's Deep Cuts 95.7".
The current format (The Ride) was launched in early or mid 2002. Its focus still remains primarily classic rock but with some other stuff that wasn't considered AOR back when, like Marvin Gaye, the Supremes, James Taylor, etc. It's definitely the most eclectic and unique mix on commercial radio around here. I kinda like it, but I wish Dave would actually put some live jocks on and loosen the restrictions on them. With very little effort, he could make the station sound like 95Q (WROQ) did in its heyday as "The Album Station", which would be quite enjoyable.