djfrresh said:what. happen to good mussic kmel.used to play.
They've always sucked.djfrresh said:what. happen to good mussic kmel.used to play.
jprg said:Bring back KMEL 106 ROCKIN' THE BAY!!!"
pbf1 said:jprg said:Bring back KMEL 106 ROCKIN' THE BAY!!!"
Not much chance of THAT happening....
They tried to make a go of KFRC FM - as an automated continous countdown of the Top 40 songs of the week, but as I understand it, some wise consultant told RKO that due to terrain issues, SF will always be an AM town and that FM will never make it and that they should unload it. They sold it with a non compete clause and I think it was Century who bought it, but I'm not positive, but they put on a Top Tracks AOR format on it. As soon as the noncompete ran out, they segued the format slowly to a rythmic Top 40.Lkeller said:When RKO General sold KFRC-FM 106.1 (about 1977, I think, but somebody will fill in the exact date), the call letters became KMEL, and they called it "Camel 106." Their logo was...not surprisingly - a cute cartoon camel, and it said "Rocking the Bay" below the camel. It was on billboards all over the Bay Area for a few years. The station played album rock, and it was a popular station for awhile. Alex Bennett made a big splash with his morning show - his first big break in the Bay Area, after returning from the East Coast...I think.
Somebody else said it switched to Top 40 in 1984 ("All Hit" K-M-E-L, no more "camel"), so I guess the rock format lasted about 7 years
Lkeller said:I'm not knowledgable enough about the various nuances of rock music formats to describe the first format on KMEL, and I didn't listen that much anyway - but I'd describe it as a slicker, more hit driven version of the album rock format at K-San at that time.
I don't remember when Bennett started, but I believe before him they had a chick on named Nadine Mars.VMan said:Lkeller said:I'm not knowledgable enough about the various nuances of rock music formats to describe the first format on KMEL, and I didn't listen that much anyway - but I'd describe it as a slicker, more hit driven version of the album rock format at K-San at that time.
I was a big KMEL fan from about '80 - '84, until they switched to Top 40. Their approach was indeed hit-driven album rock, with big personalities in almost all dayparts. They were very "talk-y" compared to other AORs, which I believe led to the hiring of a consultant around '82 or so who imposed a "6 in a row or $5000" type of format. This led to Alex Bennett's departure, and the station, in my opinion, wasn't the same after that.
Around that same time, the Bay Area was flush with rock stations, with KMEL, KFOG, KRQR, KQAK, KOME, and KSJO all doing some variation of the format. KQAK evolved to Alternative ("Rock of the 80s") in early '83, and KMEL gave up AOR in '84.
To the best of my recollection, the personalities were Bennett/Rigelski, Tony Kilbert (who also did VO at Channel 20), Paul Vincent, and Mary Holloway.