KLO-FM

KLO-FM is a radio station in Salt Lake City, Utah, which airs an classic alternative radio format. It broadcasts at 103.1 MHz. Its studios are located at the 257 Tower in Downtown Salt Lake City, and the transmitter site is atop Humpy Peak.

KLO-FM
CityCoalville, Utah
Broadcast areaSalt Lake City metropolitan area
Frequency103.1 MHz
Branding103.1 The Wave
SloganYour Classic Alternative
Programming
FormatClassic alternative rock
Ownership
OwnerCapital Broadcasting
(KLO Broadcasting Co.)
KBZN
History
First air date
2004 (2004)
Former call signs
KPEB (2001–2004)
KJQN (2004–2012)
KLO-FM (2012–2014)
KSQN (2014–2020)
Technical information
Facility ID88483
ClassC
ERP89,000 watts
HAAT647 meters (2,123 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
40°52′16″N 110°59′43″W
Repeater(s)See § Boosters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website1031thewave.com

Previously known as Classic Alternative KJQ, the station flipped to Jack FM in January 2005.[1]

KLO-FM is licensed to Coalville, Utah, and KNJQ to Manti, Utah. KNJQ ceased to simulcast the station in late 2005 and went off-air shortly after a brief stint of running Simmons' KZNS 1280 sports-talk format. The station is now on-air as KUDD and simulcasting MillCreek-owned "U92" through a mutual agreement between the companies.

History

KJQN began as a modern rock station from Ogden, Utah in 1983. At that time, the station broadcast on 95.5 FM and was also heard with a 1,000-watt simulcast from 1490 AM, which would later become KOGN.

In the late 1980s, KJQN was purchased by Abacus Communications, which fired much of the high-ranking staff in 1991. Fired program director Mike Summers, engineered a deal to take over another station, then-top 40 KZOL of Provo, Utah.[2] Re-dubbed "X96" in February 1992, KXRK raided much of KJQ's talent.[3] For a time the stations competed, but as KJQ's ratings eroded and modern rock promoters split their business, management decided to switch formats. In early October 1992 KJQN-FM switched formats to top 40, adopting the letters KKBE.

In 2001, Simmons purchased stations in Brigham City and Oakley, and acquired the historic call letters.[4] The "classic modern rock" format adopted by Simmons was meant to evoke music played on the original KJQ.[5] The morning show featured veterans of the original KJQ, "Chet and Brad," and the station adopted some of the original KJQ's promotions including the old "Bessie" milk truck.[6] Management went through several program directors including Ian McCain (from KCPX), Dom Casual (from KENZ and veteran of the original KJQ),[7] Lara Jones (a veteran of the original KJQ), interim PD Todd Noker (also PD at sister station KXRK), Music Director Jon Smith (also from KENZ).

On January 21, 2005, the station flipped to the adult hits Jack FM format at noon, and the staff was laid off mid-shift without advanced notice.[1] Management stated the audience "wasn't growing as fast as we wanted."[1]

Frank Bell and Randy Rose programmed KJQN after the station flipped to Jack FM.

On June 29, 2012, it was announced that KJQN would drop the "Jack FM" format on July 16, 2012, and would begin to simulcast the talk radio format of KLO,[8] and picked up the calls KLO-FM. The change took place at Midnight on that date; the last songs on Jack FM were "Wild Wild Life" by The Talking Heads and the first few seconds of "Janie's Got a Gun" by Aerosmith, which was abruptly cut off by the start of the simulcast.

On March 26, 2014, 103.1 changed callsigns to KSQN, sparking rumors of a format change in the following months. On June 5, 2014, KSQN dropped its simulcast with KLO[9] and changed their format to adult contemporary, branded as "Sunny 103."[10]

On September 30, 2016, Capitol Broadcasting announced that KSQN would flip to 80s hits as "103.1 The Wave" the following Monday, October 3; promoting itself as "The Next Wave of New Wave", the format featured alternative rock and new wave from the decade. The change took place at midnight on that date; the last song on Sunny was "Roar" by Katy Perry, and the first song on The Wave was "Wake Up (It's 1984)" by Oingo Boingo. The new format featured many former Salt Lake City personalities.[11][12]

The KLO-FM call sign returned on November 3, 2020.[13] The change followed Capital Broadcasting's sale of KLO to El Sembrador Ministries, a transaction that did not include the KLO call sign;[14] the AM station concurrently became KMES.

Boosters

Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
KLO-FM2103.1Ogden, Utah16187850028 m (92 ft)DFCC
KLO-FM4103.1Salt Lake City, Utah1618752,100313 m (1,027 ft)DFCC
KLO-FM6103.1Provo, Utah1618741,750−161 m (−528 ft)DFCC
KLO-FM7103.1No. Salt Lake, Utah165021500−98 m (−322 ft)DFCC
KLO-FM8103.1Park City, Utah1618763,000832 m (2,730 ft)DFCC
KLO-FM9103.1Bountiful, Utah1618772,500217 m (712 ft)DFCC

See also

References

  1. Griggs, Brandon (2005-02-01). "'New' radio station serves up the same old stale mix of music". The Salt Lake Tribune.; see also Arave, Lynn (2005-01-28). "KJQN says 'bye to alternative music". Deseret Morning News.
  2. Ross, Sean (1992-05-09). "Docket '92: Everything Else Is Just A Light? More Fights From Philly, Salt Lake City". Billboard. p. 85.
  3. Ross, Sean (1992-02-22). "Even More Markets Get LMAs From Hell; WW1 Loses Shannon Countdown, O'Malley". Billboard. p. 75.
  4. Arave, Lynn (2001-07-20). "Rumors flying about new Wasatch Front radio stations". Deseret News.
  5. Arave, Lynn (2002-01-18). "KJQ returns to airwaves with adult alternative music". Deseret News.
  6. Arave, Lynn (2002-05-24). "'Chet and Brad' a good KJQN fit". Deseret News. Archived from the original on 2008-10-30.
  7. Arave, Lynn (2003-07-23). "Disc jockey finds his way back home to KJQ". Deseret News.
  8. http://www.radio-info.com/news/salt-lake-city-standalone-klo-1430-buys-kjqn-fm-1031%5B%5D
  9. Sunny Shines in Salt Lake City
  10. Sunny 103 Salt Lake City To Go All 80s
  11. Sunny 103 Becomes The Wave
  12. "Call Sign History (KLO-FM)". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  13. Venta, Lance (July 22, 2020). "El Sembrador Ministries Acquires KLO". RadioInsight. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
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