What was on 93.5 before KDAY? I remember when the format arrived in 2003-04. But, had no idea the signal existed before then. Even looking up the 93.5 signal in L.A., I can’t find any history on it
From Ickipedia:
The station at 93.5 FM, licensed to
Redondo Beach, California, signed on in 1961 as KAPP-FM and was owned by South Bay Broadcasting Company. The license was granted after the applications for
KPOL-FM and
KNX-FM were denied. Chuck Johnson and Lonnie Cook came to KAPP-FM from
KTYM-FM (103.9 FM) in
Inglewood. The frequency was shared as the signal's programming came from Redondo Beach in the daytime, and the
pop,
blues,
doo wop, and
jazz format being aired by Johnson and Cook (from Johnson's home) at night. It has been determined that their FM
top 40 chart is the oldest one known to exist.
The station changed its callsign to KKOP with its sale to Southern California Associated Newspapers in 1965 and began playing mellow pop music. The transmitter moved to
Torrance in the 1970s. In 1978, KKOP became KFOX-FM upon its sale to the former operators of
KFOX at 1280 AM. Like its predecessor, KFOX-FM played
country music. The format in the early 1980s was an
adult contemporary hit music station. In 1981–1982, KFOX-FM employed Los Angeles' youngest disc jockey at the time, a 16-year-old student from
Torrance High School, Brett Nordhoff, who later changed his on-air name to Kidd Kelly.
[46]
By 1983, KFOX-FM had evolved into a multi-ethnic, multilingual format such as Radio Rangarang (
Persian), Radio Omid (Persian), and Radio Naeeri (
Armenian). In the mid-1990s, this became "Radio Korea USA" with an all-
Korean format. This continued until 1999, when the
International Church of the Foursquare Gospel (ICFG) moved the KFSG call letters and
Christian radio format to 93.5 FM. This switch was a condition of selling
KXOL-FM (96.3 FM), acquired by
Spanish Broadcasting System specifically for the purpose of relocating KFSG.
[47] In 2002, the lease arrangement with the ICFG ended and SBS switched KFSG to a
Spanish-language outlet, first as KMJR ("La Mejor") and later KZAB as La Sabrosa.