Bob Purse found it and digitized it. I had nothing to do with it. A great 85 minute aircheck. There's several tape splices but overall, a great aircheck! Album-Oriented AC is what I might call it.
Bob Purse found it and digitized it. I had nothing to do with it. A great 85 minute aircheck. There's several tape splices but overall, a great aircheck! Album-Oriented AC is what I might call it.
Bob Purse found it and digitized it. I had nothing to do with it. A great 85 minute aircheck. There's several tape splices but overall, a great aircheck! Album-Oriented AC is what I might call it.
After KBBC-FM ditched top-40 (late 1976, I think), the Phoenix outlet at 98.7 mHz sounded much like KNX-FM's 1976 incarnation until 1982 when it became KKLT. Thanks for the find!
After KBBC-FM ditched top-40 (late 1976, I think), the Phoenix outlet at 98.7 mHz sounded much like KNX-FM's 1976 incarnation until 1982 when it became KKLT. Thanks for the find!
Also, Soma FM has tried to recreate the KNX-FM sound (without the disc jockeys) on its Left Coast Channel available on the Internet.
Both The Mellow Sound and Soma FM's "Left Coast 70s" are great re-creations of this format. Another is a tribute station created by Nick Archer to Nashville's WSM-FM, known as 'SM-95' from 1976-83: SM95 The Music FM - Free Internet Radio - Live365Also, Soma FM has tried to recreate the KNX-FM sound (without the disc jockeys) on its Left Coast Channel available on the Internet.
The Windchime Productions format made its way to St. Louis, when KCFM adopted that format in early 1978. By the summer, that station's programming was live and local.Steve Marshall began syndicating the KNX-FM format to markets around the country as Windchime Productions. KFYE-FM in Fresno also ran it.
This issue of Broadcast Programming and Production does a pretty good deep dive into the format, which by 1977, TM Productions in Dallas had jumped into with its "Beautiful Rock" format (interview begins on page 6):
There is also a part two that follows immediately, with profiles of four stations doing "mellow rock", including KNX-FM.
Speaking of Steve Marshall, nowhere in here has anyone pointed out that he segued from KNX to writing and producing first-run episodes of WKRP In Cincinnati. Yup, same guy. (Side question for anyone who might know: is he still with us, or did he pass away?)
Brain cramp above— I meant KFIG-FM in Fresno, not KFYE-FM.
Mike, you might be remembering that KFYE did its own quasi-mellow rock format on its own in the mid- to late-70s. I remember visiting them once during that period and they had something like six Scully machines, three carousels, and even an old Schafer Spotter (!).
IIRC, they were in the Del Webb Town Center, which also housed KFIG and KARM on other floors.