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Robert
Conrad
Vice
President and Program Manager, WCLV
It
is doubtful that any classical music station in the country is as
vital a part of its cultural community as Cleveland's WCLV 104.9-FM.
That achievement is due to the extraordinary vision and unflagging
dedication of Robert Conrad, its founder and guiding spirit. Not
only has Bob Conrad kept classical music on the Cleveland airwaves
for four decades-and guaranteed it in perpetuity-but he and his
station have also raised millions for area arts organizations, promoted
appreciation and support of our cultural assets, and served as our
cultural ambassador to the nation. Indeed, WCLV has brought Cleveland
to the nation with its regular broadcasts of Cleveland Orchestra
concerts and the weekly City Club Forum, which the station has carried
live since 1970.
Conrad,
now president of WCLV, and his late partner, C. K. Pat
Patrick, established WCLV in 1962. By the early 1970s they had brought
it to national prominence as one of the most successfully operated
classical music stations in the United States. Cleveland's fine
arts radio station was barely a decade old when Robert Conrad was
honored by the Cleveland Arts Prize in 1973 with a Special Citation
for Distinguished Service to the Arts.
In
1970, Conrad conceived and produced the first of the annual WCLV/Cleveland
Orchestra Marathons, which through the spring of 1997 had raised
more than $4 million for the orchestra. He has participated in more
than 130 similar fund-raising events for other orchestras, arts
groups, and public radio stations.
As
other longtime classical stations around the country capitulated
to lucrative buyout offers in an era of station ownership consolidation
aimed at creating more attractive advertising buys,
Conrad once again proved himself a visionary. In an extraordinarily
generous and civic-minded gesture on the part of Conrad and his
partners, in 2001 WCLV was donated to a newly created, nonprofit
WCLV Foundation, which will preserve its classical music format
and role as champion of Greater Cleveland's cultural institutions,
while using profits generated by the station to help support several
of the area's beloved arts organizations.
Classical
music lovers across the country know Conrad best as the producer
and commentator for the weekly Cleveland Orchestra broadcasts heard
on more than 250 outlets. Indeed, he is considered the dean
of radio commentators, having been an orchestra announcer continuously
since 1965, the longest tenure of any national orchestra commentator
in the history of American radio. (Conrad is a past president of
the Concert Music Broadcasters Association and holds an appointment
as adjunct professor of broadcasting at the Cleveland Institute
of Music.) His Weekend Radio, a popular variety program of
classical music and comedy, is carried by over 150 outlets.
Under
his direction, WCLV has won many honors-including, in 1995, both
the One World Medal for Best Classical Format World Wide from the
New York International Radio Festival and the Marconi Award for
Classical Station of the Year from the National Association of Broadcasters.
Conrad himself has been awarded honorary doctorates by Baldwin-Wallace
College and the Cleveland Institute of Music, and by Oberlin College.
In 2000, he was named to the City Club of Cleveland's Hall of Fame.
text by
Dennis
Dooley
1986 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Fall 2002
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