R
rapking
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What your favorite Urban/hip Hop station in Los Angeles, That is no longer around ( The Real KDAY and KACE ) ??
bucwhyl said:Back in the early 90's I stayed in Bellflower for a couple of months. I really enjoyed 1580 KDAY. That was a real hip hop station. I enjoyed the quick mixes, and for life of me, I can't remember that guy who was the mixer for the station at the time.
Big E said:bucwhyl said:Back in the early 90's I stayed in Bellflower for a couple of months. I really enjoyed 1580 KDAY. That was a real hip hop station. I enjoyed the quick mixes, and for life of me, I can't remember that guy who was the mixer for the station at the time.
KDAY wasnt around in the early 90's, I think you mean the 80's.
KACE ( Urban A/C ) was Listed as Urban back Then . Urban A/C format was not official back then . I remember alot of Rap Artist ( Ice T ) talk trash about KACE and KJLH , Because these Urban Stations ( Hidden Urban A/C )will not play rap music .urban said:Wasn't KACE an urban AC? I remember Willie Davis, who owned stations in Milwaukee when I lived there, owned KACE for awhile?
Joshua Messex said:KKBT hands down
KDAY started the move with West Coast Hip Hop no doubt, but the Beat took it to a whole another level. KKBT proved Urban could succeed in LA if you thought outside the box and that meant reaching out to Latinos and Asians. The lineup of John London, Diana Steele, Theo, Julio G, and Lisa Canning was hard to "Beat" for several years(KPWR did try though)
The Beat would still be with us if both CC and Radio One hadn't tried to destroy it.
[/quote I agree, The Beat did jam back in the the day. Let's don't forget Mucho Morales. BTW, he sounded great and young this past
weekend on Hot92.3 Jamz
When Frankie Ross resigned as host of 92.3 The Beat's Nightbeat to return to KJLH as program director, he turned it into a rap/urban station. He renamed it Rhythm 102.3...KJLH. I should know because I'm the one who gave him the idea of using the name "Rhythm". KHJ was also once known as Rhythm 93 KHJ where I remembered it from. Rhythm 102.3 KJLH was a disaster in the ratings as a rap station. Before leaving The Beat, Frankie use to talk to Stevie all the time during his Nightbeat show. Stevie doesn't talk much business unless "business' is talking about women...rapking said:KACE ( Urban A/C ) was Listed as Urban back Then . Urban A/C format was not official back then . I remember alot of Rap Artist ( Ice T ) talk trash about KACE and KJLH , Because these Urban Stations ( Hidden Urban A/C )will not play rap music .urban said:Wasn't KACE an urban AC? I remember Willie Davis, who owned stations in Milwaukee when I lived there, owned KACE for awhile?
I don't know if you can credit Steve Woods, PD of KDAY back in the day, of being the first L.A. p.d. to add rap to a format but certainly he is THE pd who really promoted its growth on Los Angeles radio. He later worked weekends/fill at The Beat, btw. He was a very nice guy and a true professional. I had the pleasure of many conversations with him. God rest his soul.Joshua Messex said:KKBT hands down
KDAY started the move with West Coast Hip Hop no doubt, but the Beat took it to a whole another level. KKBT proved Urban could succeed in LA if you thought outside the box and that meant reaching out to Latinos and Asians. The lineup of John London, Diana Steele, Theo, Julio G, and Lisa Canning was hard to "Beat" for several years(KPWR did try though)
The Beat would still be with us if both CC and Radio One hadn't tried to destroy it.
955wdhf said:I know Mucho personally. He was not part of The Beat's urban success. Mucho was great during the "Dance Now" days of Power 106 and should have been brought back to Movin at its debut. Rick needed Los Angeles radio vereran professionals surrounding him which is major part of Movin and Rick Dees failure.Joshua Messex said:KKBT hands down
KDAY started the move with West Coast Hip Hop no doubt, but the Beat took it to a whole another level. KKBT proved Urban could succeed in LA if you thought outside the box and that meant reaching out to Latinos and Asians. The lineup of John London, Diana Steele, Theo, Julio G, and Lisa Canning was hard to "Beat" for several years(KPWR did try though)
The Beat would still be with us if both CC and Radio One hadn't tried to destroy it.
[/quote I agree, The Beat did jam back in the the day. Let's don't forget Mucho Morales. BTW, he sounded great and young this past
weekend on Hot92.3 Jamz
The Beat's best line-up was London 5 (first 5:30) -10, Diana Steele 10-1, Big John 1-4 (Diana and Big John did flip shifts for a while), Cliff Winston 4-7, Sky Walker 7-10, Frankie Ross 10-1. I forget who did overnights prior to Ben Kelly. Those were the days of challenging KIIS and really put The Beat on the map.
CHRles said:This is a sensitive thread.
April was the month in which Joshua Messex, who posted in this very thread, died.