Rosemary Welsch
HostRosemary Welsch has been the Afternoon Host, Program Director, and Senior Producer for 91.3 WYEP. Welsch is the longest-tenured employee at WYEP, having just celebrated her 30th anniversary as a full-time employee. She began as a volunteer D.J. during the station’s salad years in 1981.
Welsch’s impact on WYEP cannot be understated. As a pioneer in the field and genre, she played a pivotal role in the station becoming one of the United States’ most prominent community-supported AAA radio stations. She started producing and hosting programs focusing on women musicians and became the first woman named solo host of a morning drive program in Pittsburgh’s history.
Most Notable interview: Among her many talks with artists such as Patti Smith, David Byrne, Chrissy Hynde and Phillip Glass, this Live & Direct Session with Rhiannon Giddens is a favorite.
Read all about her: She Became Pittsburgh Radio Royalty by Making Music Matter, Pittsburgh Magazine
Over the years, Welsch has helped the station become the nationally recognized industry leader that it is today. Her significant career with WYEP began in 1981 when the station was young, small and struggling. Welsch came aboard as a volunteer and later sat on the Board of Directors, working to create a new WYEP that would thrive and grow. She started producing and hosting programs focusing on women musicians and became the first woman named solo host of a morning drive program in Pittsburgh’s history.
In the 1990s, Welsch helped create the current format of WYEP, and also its mission. In 1995, Welsch was named Program Director, a position held by few women in the industry. She held the position for 11 years, earning several nominations for Program Director of the Year at the non-commercial radio conference. She was named one of the 50 Most Culturally Significant Pittsburghers by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, two years running. In the mid-2000s, Welsch became the host of the Afternoon Mix and Senior Producer for WYEP, conducting interviews with locally and nationally recognized musicians, artists, and representatives of non-profit organizations, including Bonnie Raitt, Harry Belafonte, Mavis Staples, Burt Bacharach and many more. She also acts as a host for many non-profit events in the area. In 2013, she was honored by The Women and Girls Foundation as a pioneering woman in media in Pittsburgh. In 2016 Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto declared September 28th “Rosemary Welsch Day” in honor of her 35th Anniversary at WYEP.
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In March of 2016, Bonnie Raitt performed in Pittsburgh at the Benedum Center, and WYEP's Rosemary Welsch was lucky enough to go backstage and record an interview.
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SHEROES Radio host Carmel Holt joined WYEP’s Rosemary Welsch to talk about “The Road to Joni,” a 10-week series exploring the legacy and renaissance of Joni Mitchell. Carmel is traveling the country and speaking to artists and radio hosts about Joni's impact on their lives and careers.
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Chris Franz and Tina Weymouth were the rhythm section of The Talking Heads and founded the Tom Tom Club. When they stopped by WYEP on Oct. 5, 2001 they were promoting an art show and Tom Tom Club concert to benefit citizens of Haiti.
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Norah Jones was three weeks away from her 23rd birthday when she performed on WYEP March 3, 2002. This interview, conducted by WYEP’s then-Music Director, Chris Griffin, captures an intimate moment in the career of a budding star.
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Glass was in Pittsburgh with his ensemble in 2002 to play music with film — “a real time live music event,” as he called it. Glass sat with Rosemary Welsch to talk about the event, his musical adventures, and his work scoring films for Martin Scorsese and Peter Weir.
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In the early 2000s, WYEP was producing “The CD Live Concert Series.” On March 9, 2004, we presented The Mavericks, a band that we had been championing, beginning with their first album. The band had recently returned following a hiatus and a change in line-up.
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The critically acclaimed singer-songwriter visited the station to chat with Rosemary Welsch and perform live on the air.
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1974 was the year a U.S. President resigned, and the country was led by a president and vice president who had not won a national election. Television debuted “Happy Days” and “Good Times,” perhaps as an antidote to the political miasma.
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Matthew Houck from the band Phosphorescent joined us for a special live session during our open house in January.
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