I loved The Wave; but then, I worked there on the air.Agreed, if I remember correctly 95.7 has always had good sound. Back when I was in High School and worked part time in a hospital my boss would always have 95.7 The Wave playing. I disliked it so much 😂 but sounded great even in the basement of the hospital . When it because HOT 95.7 it became my favorite station and also sounded great. Still does with the Spot .
I gave up on Houston's 95.7 when my KIKKup truck became obsolete.I loved The Wave; but then, I worked there on the air.
Just the recipe for killing TSL.I find that 95.7 The Spot has great audio processing. It’s consistently loud and the bass has a punch. I love how it sounds.
I also worked there in 1975 along with KIKK 650.I gave up on Houston's 95.7 when my KIKKup truck became obsolete.
Just gave it a listen while on lunch and I agree. Sounds great on the tuner in my truck, and coincidentally on a boombox sitting in the vestibule of a Kroger store in The Woodlands.I find that 95.7 The Spot has great audio processing. It’s consistently loud and the bass has a punch. I love how it sounds.
Chuck Wolf, the news director, was a great guy. When I was pushed out of KTRH, he didn't have any spot open for someone like me, but he offered kind words of encouragement, which meant a lot.I also worked there in 1975 along with KIKK 650.
That juggernaut began in the 1960s. Funny thing, many of the the DJs at KIKK would refer to themselves as Boot-I-Boot Boot back in those days. The crew in the 1960s laid the foundation for the success of KIKK in the following years.Chuck Wolf, the news director, was a great guy. When I was pushed out of KTRH, he didn't have any spot open for someone like me, but he offered kind words of encouragement, which meant a lot.
Some folks at KTRH referred to the station as "Boot I Boot Boot", mimicking its longtime logo. It still astonishes me that it's not still around; it was such a juggernaut in the 1980s.
If history is any indication, their TSL is just fine. The Spot has been a top performer pretty much since launch.Just the recipe for killing TSL.
Sister station KILT-FM has somewhat similar processing with regards to loudness, and if I'm not mistaken, they have regularly been the highest TSL country station in the US.If history is any indication, their TSL is just fine. The Spot has been a top performer pretty much since launch.
They are not. Of the 8 major country outlets in the four PPM Markets in Texas, they are tied for 7th.Sister station KILT-FM has somewhat similar processing with regards to loudness, and if I'm not mistaken, they have regularly been the highest TSL country station in the US.
Good to know, thanks for the correction. Just more proof that I don't know everything!They are not. Of the 8 major country outlets in the four PPM Markets in Texas, they are tied for 7th.
Audio processing akin to the loudness wars of the 80's and 90's doesn't cut it these days when your direct competitor is streaming.KIKK-FM had superb audio processing in the 1980s and 90s, sounded fantastic. That continued through the KHJZ Smooth Jazz incarnation. However I thought Hot 95-7 sounded like overly compressed mp3 files, though that may have had more to do with the source material than the audio chain.
In the mid-1980s, KKBQ-FM and KRBE-FM were notorious for heavy-handed processing...KRBE more so than KKBQ, but KKBQ was bad enough. When KKBQ started simulcasting on AM and FM, both in stereo, in 1986, I found the AM signal more listenable, because there just wasn't as much processing and it sounded more natural.Audio processing akin to the loudness wars of the 80's and 90's doesn't cut it these days when your direct competitor is streaming.
A great way to drive away TSL, is 'great sounding processing'. Processing should make the music natural sounding while maintaining as much natural dynamic range as possible. If a listener can hear the processing, it's probably too much.
Sister station KILT-FM has somewhat similar processing with regards to loudness, and if I'm not mistaken, they have regularly been the highest TSL country station in the US.