Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KTCL (93.3 FM) is a radio station licensed to Wheat Ridge, Colorado.Owned by iHeartMedia, it broadcasts an alternative rock format targeting the Denver metro area.Its studios are located alongside iHeartMedia's other Denver stations at 4695 S Monaco St. in the Tech Center, while its transmitter is located in Golden.
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee [1] [2] Format [citation needed]; KAAI: 98.5 FM: Palisade: Educational Media Foundation: Worship music () KAFM: 88.1 FM: Grand Junction
In 1982, KBCO was the first station in Colorado to play music from CDs. In a partnership with local audio retailer Listen Up, CDs and playback equipment were shipped in from Japan. Greenlee moved KADE and KBCO to a state-of-the-art studio complex at 4801 Riverbend Road in East Boulder and then sold the stations to Noble Broadcasting in 1987.
On April 13, 2020, KLVZ added a new simulcast translator on 95.3 FM (K237GG) to help boost the station's signal into downtown Denver. The station rebranded as Legends 95.3 FM, 810 AM, and refocused its playlist on oldies from the 50's, 60's and 70's, some of them little-played as compared to the much tighter playlists of other oldies stations ...
Until June 1, 2015, the station was the home for Mile High Sports, a multimedia sports-marketing and publishing company based in Denver via a partnership with Kroenke Sports and Entertainment. Mile High Sports was the radio flagship for the Denver Nuggets basketball team, Colorado Avalanche hockey team, Colorado Mammoth , and Colorado Rapids ...
At the same time, 93.3 adopted KBKS's mainstream CHR format, added some newer rhythmic titles to the playlist, and rebranded as "Power 93.3". [24] [25] The first song on "Power" was "Sorry" by Justin Bieber. [26] This returned the 93.3 frequency in Seattle to a Top 40/Mainstream format for the first time in nearly 24 years.
Robert began his radio career at 94.9 KSAN-FM in San Francisco, one of the country's first progressive rock stations. When KSAN changed its format to an Urban Country and Western format in the early 1980s, Robert assumed the on-air name "Will Robertson" for a brief period of time because he was opposed to the new format.
In addition, the station dropped the "Oldies 93.3" moniker in favor of branding by the KIOA call letters, and changed slogans to "Iowa's Greatest Hits", with KIOA's playlist primarily focusing on the music of the 1970s and 1980s. [17] KIOA's playlist features music from the 1970s and 1980s, with some 1990s tracks being played.