Grunge ruined this station (as well as KROQ)- I loved The Quake and how this station was at first with synth-pop and new wave, which peacefully co-existed with the harder stuff for a while until grunge pushed it out completely. Always thought Live 105 was a stupid name too, never knew what it meant. It's not like they played only live concert recordings. I sometimes wonder if The Quake would have taken the same direction had it lasted longer. (And funny how often that station is still talked about over 30 years after it died, while the higher-rated stations of that era are pretty much forgotten now!)
"Live" usually means the programing is "live", as opposed to recorded or coming from a syndicator.
Maybe to inside radio geeks. At the time it was launched in 86, everything WAS live, regardless of the station. But the alternative lifestyle is built around attending live concert events, so I think they wanted to identify more with that.
Plus the rhyme was good marketing. And they played a lot of live recordings and did a lot to promote the live music scene.
Grunge ruined this station (as well as KROQ)- I loved The Quake and how this station was at first with synth-pop and new wave, which peacefully co-existed with the harder stuff for a while until grunge pushed it out completely. Always thought Live 105 was a stupid name too, never knew what it meant. It's not like they played only live concert recordings. I sometimes wonder if The Quake would have taken the same direction had it lasted longer. (And funny how often that station is still talked about over 30 years after it died, while the higher-rated stations of that era are pretty much forgotten now!)
I'm not sure if it was an overall change in taste or not, but I do know that when KOME changed from their active rock to the grunge-driven alternative format that's where I and most of my friends went (from Live 105) at the time. The complaint was that Live 105 was "too dancy". I think it was about that time that Alex Bennett's morning show ended, so that was certainly a factor.
Interesting what you say about stations that are still talked about. KQAK was on for 2 years. KFAT for seven. KSAN (the jive 95 version) for 12. KKCY for 3. Yet I hear about them all the time. KOIT, KYLD, & KMEL? Not so much. Yet they've all been around for way longer.
Dave B.
I'm not sure if it was an overall change in taste or not, but I do know that when KOME changed from their active rock to the grunge-driven alternative format that's where I and most of my friends went (from Live 105) at the time. The complaint was that Live 105 was "too dancy". I think it was about that time that Alex Bennett's morning show ended, so that was certainly a factor.
Interesting what you say about stations that are still talked about. KQAK was on for 2 years. KFAT for seven. KSAN (the jive 95 version) for 12. KKCY for 3. Yet I hear about them all the time. KOIT, KYLD, & KMEL? Not so much. Yet they've all been around for way longer.
Dave B.
KIOI aka K101 back in the 1990's and now Star 101.3 has been around for decades with the same format even through various ownership/management changes prior to Iheart getting the station two decades ago.
I remember when iHeart, then Clear Channel - sucked up K-101, and IIRC, would have been the third owner. The first owner was independent broadcaster James Gabbert. It was lowly 101.3 KPEN, down on the PENinsula, when he bought it in the mid or late 1950s. Gabbert is credited as being one of the first to bring stereo sound to FM, and one of the first to market and popularize FM on its own - not just as an AM simulcast, or an automated elevator music station. From what I've heard, he was not just a programmer, but also very involved in the technical aspects of broadcasting FM radio. Gabbert is also credited as the one of the first broadcasters to use dial position in the branding of a station, i.e.: KIOI = K-101...back in 1968.
You may also remember Gabbert from KOFY TV 20 in the 80s and 90s. He bought broken down and off-the-air KEMO Channel 20 with the profits he made from the sale of K-101. Keeping with his call-letter branding gimmick, his original call letters for TV 20 were KTZO, until he got back into radio by buying KOFY AM and FM. There was a rumor around in the 80s that when 610/KFRC flipped their format from Top 40 to standards, and re-branded as "Magic 61," that Gabbert tried to buy the KFRC call letters from RKO General, but no sale.
http://bayarearadio.org/audio/kioi/
Yes - 101.3 has a lot of history.
I have an enormous respect Jim Gabbert and his accomplishments. My understanding he founded KPEN in Atherton. My memory is sketchy but I seem to recall he owned two stations in Hawaii as well as KIOI AM/FM. When he sold all four stations to purchase KEMO, he brought those same fun common sense audience building branding sensibilities to television and making TV20 quite the force and brand that still resonates today.
I think people remember the short-lived formats more, and forget about the stations that have been around forever, because they've become so ubiquitous. How about KFOG? They flipped from "Beautiful Music" to rock in 1982. That's 35 years of virtually the same format. For Top 40 or CHR, people of my era idolize the Drake era (KFRC, KHJ), but KHJ's "Boss Radio" format lasted approximately 20 years - KIIS-FM has lasted more than 40 years.. K-Earth in LA has been playing "Oldies" since before the songs on their current play list were written and performed.
Llew: KHJ had 15 years from the birth of Boss Radio to the flip to Country, but only six using the term "Boss" and only eight under creator Bill Drake. After he left in 1973 and Paul Drew became KHJ's national PD, KHJ was just another big city Top 40. With the exception of the years Charlie Van Dyke was PD (early 1975-May of 1977), very few people regard 1973-80 as being particularly great years for KHJ. Ironically, those are the years in which sister KFRC really bloomed and prospered.