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PRESS RELEASE: KTRB/860 Signing On

San Francisco’s Newest Radio Station, KTRB-AM 860, Hits the Airwaves with 50,000 Watts of Power

- 73-Year-Old Heritage Radio Station Moves from Modesto to San Francisco -

- Station Begins Final Phase of Testing at Alameda County Transmitter Site

Thursday, February 1, 2007 -

- On-Air Testing Features a Tribute to“The San Francisco Sound” -

San Francisco, California (January 31, 2007) - - Something old is new again, as one of Northern California’s pioneer radio stations, KTRB-AM 860, makes its historic Bay Area debut by bringing “The San Francisco Sound” back to the nation’s fourth-largest radio market beginning this Thursday, February 1, 2007.

KTRB-AM 860 will sign-on at midnight on February 1, and beginning at 6:00 a.m. that day, the station will play continuous music reprising the late 60s and early 70s heyday of “The San Francisco Sound.”

“The San Francisco Sound” refers to rock music performed live and recorded by San Francisco-based artists and groups from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. KTRB-AM 860 will showcase seminal Bay Area bands such as The Beau Brummels, The Syndicate of Sound, The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother & The Holding Company, as well as Santana, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and Journey.

KTRB-AM 860 Vice President & General Manager Jim P. Pappas said, “Our sign-on in the Bay Area is the culmination of three decades of dreaming, planning, and hard work by the best and brightest from inside and outside our company. KTRB-AM 860 represents the genesis of our company’s more than 50-year California-based broadcast tradition. It was KTRB that inspired the three Pappas Brothers to become broadcasters. We are thrilled to own and operate a 50,000 Watt blowtorch that will serve the millions of residents in San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose and the entire Bay Area, just as KTRB-AM 860 has served generations of Californians since its founding in 1933.”

KTRB-AM 860’s permanent format will commence March 1, 2007. While plans have not been disclosed, Pappas said, “KTRB will bring a fresh sound to the Bay Area to add diversity to the choices available to the public. KTRB will entertain and inform with fresh, lively content, the likes of which the public does not now have available.”


About KTRB

KTRB-AM 860 is one of the oldest radio stations on the West Coast, having served the San Joaquin Valley and surrounding areas since the early days of the medium. Until recently, the station was licensed to Modesto, California. In 2003, the Federal Communications Commission authorized the relocation of KTRB's transmitter site to the Bay Area. On February 1, the station will return to the air licensed to San Francisco and serving the entire San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose radio market. Broadcasting on a Canadian Clear Channel frequency with 50,000 Watts of power day and night - the highest power allowed in the United States - KTRB has been engineered to cover a huge geographic area. San Francisco is the fourth-ranked radio market in the United States and the number-one AM radio market in the nation.

KTRB’s storied history began in 1933, when original owners T.R. McTammany and Bill Bates (the “TR” and “B” in KTRB) established the station as the first commercial broadcast outlet in Modesto. Through the years, KTRB has served as the launch pad for the careers of Country music notables such as The Maddox Brothers and Rose, and Chester Smith, and the station was the dominant radio voice in the San Joaquin Valley for decades. In 1973, brothers Pete, Mike, and Harry Pappas led a group of investors in purchasing KTRB from the Bates estate, and the station has remained under Pappas family ownership ever since.

KTRB’s studios are located at 1700 Montgomery Street in San Francisco, overlooking The Embarcadero. KTRB is owned by Pappas Radio of California, an affiliated company of Pappas Telecasting Companies, the largest privately-held, commercial television broadcaster in the United States.

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(Quick aside, and only because I'm about to burst at the seams of my already over-stuffed Levis: I had the singular honor and pleasure with working with the terrific folks at KTRB on the "stunting" described here. It will be a little more than just music...)

DJ
 
That's it tease the bay area with the best of the san francisco sound for twenty eight days in order to make a big splash, and then kick all the listeners in the teeth with the switch to a spanish language format! Big deal!
 
Or to become a reggaeton station which will give competitance to La Kalle
 
So now that KTRB is on the air, how does it sound? A friend in Modesto tells me that it comes in pretty good there. He tells me they are stunting Vintage AOR. I checked out KTRB's website and it is the same "Now Under Construction". I was hoping they were streaming.
 
Daytime reception in SF in buildings lousy...way worse than a couple 5Kw stations (one D, one non-D). At night, seems to be right up there with the other big boys in a car from SF to inner East Bay. They may have been running on drastically reduced power in the daytime while they test.
 
Sounds to me like it's out of phase or that they need to "mono-out" the programming. Parts are missing.
 
Here in Santa Cruz County, the signal is OK during the daytime, but full of skywave cancellation at night. And the audio is missing one channel, which for the current stunting format, is critical. Stereo records back then had real separation between the channels, and stuff is really missing when you lose a channel.
 
I'm listening in Eugene Oregon after 9pm and reception is sporadic tonight, was totally unlistenable last night.

I'm enjoying the music and I wish they had a stream.
 
Know what? I 'll bet they are doing that on purpose to get us to talk about them more. They are really pretty smart over there, and that one channel thing might be on purpose. Ya think maybe? I am still very tired afte the other night. I am going to hit the rack again. Good night everyone.

Howard Halland
Thank You
 
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