LITTLEBOYBLUE said:
Couple-of-friends who worked at KSPL during "those days" nicknamed it "K-Spleen" which I always found amusing!
If memory serves, KSPL 1150, began in 1982 as a competitor to KIXI, as "Seattle's
SPecia
L Radio Station". Didn't last long. Within months, you could gradually hear the format get "hotter" until by mid-1983, they were almost a full blown CHR (Hot AC? I'm not sure, but do remember a few Loverboy songs and "Shadows Of The Night" Pat Benetar being played on "Musicradio 1150 KSPL")
KSPL didn't make it through 1984. I think Vic Streidke (pardon me if I messed up his name) wrote an article in the Times about the station's struggle to keep on the air As I remember, Joe Michaels and Steve Nicholet were almost begging for sponsors "We don't like to hang our dirty laundry out over the air like this" I recall Joe Michaels saying one morning. The station began a 6pm sign off.
Then one morning soon after, KSPL simply disappeared from the airwaves. Then returned as religious KGNW.
I think other KSPL airstaff (including Steve Nicholet) went to KBRO 1490, which at the time had a similar format to KSPL.
KGNW would operate on 1150 until December of 1986, a VERY radio-active time of changes as I recall, (KQKT 96.5 was stunting towards it's flip to KXRX, KCMU moved to 90.3 and upped their power, KZOK was adrift in the aftermath of it's "Quality Rock" experiment and KHIT had revamped as "Power 106.9 K-H-I-T") and KGNW simulcasted on the old KQIN frequency, telling everybody to make the switch to 820. I remember that night KGNW signed off 1150 and KEZX (AM) came on 1150 (in the middle of "Russians" by Sting.)
At first, it was an AM/FM simulcast, but broke off in late 1987 to become "1150 The Oasis" (during the daytime, still simulcasting KEZX-FM by night), with a virtually all New Age music format (perhaps to counter KNUA's infusion of light jazz and AC with their occasional Kitaro, George Winston or Andreas Vollenwieder track.)
Never understood what people were thinking of this "new age" stuff. I remember my high school counselors playing and recommending this music in their offices (as well as giving me healing crystals and charts illustrating where my tantric chakras were back in 1985. That seemed to be when this whole New Age thing really peaked.)
But it was dead on arrival by 1987 when radio stations in Puget Sound attempted to make a format out of this music. And my old high school counselors had long went back to KVI or KLSY..
1150 AM itself flipped back to KEZX-FM simulcast briefly, then relaunched as a business station.
I could go on, but that pretty much summed up 1150 AM back in the '80s......