Your cart is currently empty!
Search results for: “LOS ANGELES”
-
The Real Don Steele, 93 KHJ Los Angeles | February 27, 1967
This is *almost* the best quality you can get from a recording of an old AM radio station.
-
Big Ron O’Brien, 64 KFI Los Angeles | September, 1979
Big Ron is in rare form here! A remark before every song. And after! This is a real fun aircheck!
-
KSWD 100.3 The Sound, Flips To KKLQ K-Love Los Angeles | November 16 2017
November 16, 2017, was a sad day for music lovers in Los Angeles. It was the day Adult Album Rock formatted station KSWD “The Sound” 100.3 FM went off the air. The station had a wide music playlist, by today’s standards, and featured legendary air personalities, like Uncle Joe Benson, Cynthia Fox and Rita…
-
Mark & Kim on KOST 103 Los Angeles | July 2, 1986
When this first posted back on December 3, 2007, Kim Amidon had just been let go from KOST. It’s been 12 years since this posted. For quite a while, this was the most-streamed aircheck on this website. We wondered how listeners would react to hearing this aircheck, from the BEGINNING of the Mark and Kim…
-
Geoff Edwards, 710 KMPC Los Angeles | November 13, 1978 Pt. 2
Part two of a great broadcast from Geoff Edwards on 710 KMPC Los Angeles!
-
Geoff Edwards, 710 KMPC Los Angeles | November 13, 1978
…the quality of this aircheck is quite good and the extra outside noise doesn’t detract from the overall sound of KMPC
-
Robert W Morgan FINAL SHOW, 93 KHJ Los Angeles | October 22 1970
Robert W. Morgan was a legendary broadcaster, who was an early-morning fixture on Southern California drive-time radio for more than three decades. Morgan was known to a generation of Southern Californians as the original morning man on trend-setting “Boss Radio” 93KHJ, beginning in the mid-1960s. His “Good Morgan!” sign-on became a widely recognized signature greeting.…
-
Kim Amidon on Car Radio 93 KHJ Los Angeles | Summer 1984
During its prime in the late 1960s and early 1970s, KHJ occupied the top position among Los Angeles radio stations, but by 1980 the numbers had eroded, and management decided to flip to a country format… which flopped. On April 1, 1983, KHJ switched to an oldies format, proclaiming “The Boss is Back” which also flopped.…