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KUSC (91.5 FM; "Classical California™ KUSC") is a listener-supported classical music radio station broadcasting from downtown Los Angeles, California, United States. [2] KUSC is owned and operated by the University of Southern California, which also operates student-run Internet station KXSC (AM) and San Francisco's classical station KDFC. It ...
KDSC (91.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to serve Thousand Oaks, California. The station is owned by the University of Southern California, and is a repeater of KUSC and their classical music format. The KDSC signal previously competed with that of translator K216FM for the 91.1 FM frequency on the Los Angeles Westside.
KDB (93.7 MHz) is a non-commercial FM radio station licensed to Santa Barbara, California, and serving Santa Barbara County and Ventura County.It is owned by the University of Southern California and broadcasts a classical music radio format, simulcasting KUSC (91.5 FM) in Los Angeles.
Its mission was to preserve, enhance and expand experience of classical music for radio listeners. With this vision, CPRN was established in 1998 as a limited-liability non-profit company – a joint venture of KUSC (Los Angeles) and Colorado Public Radio – with startup funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Los Angeles, California 13 April 1922 AM 720 kHz, founded by C.R. Kierulff & Co., sold to Times-Mirror Company in late 1922 Class-A KFI: KFI: Los Angeles, California 16 April 1922 AM 640 kHz, founded by Earle C. Anthony Class-A 4XD WBT: Charlotte, North Carolina: 18 December 1920, License granted 10 April 1922 AM 1110 kHz Class-A CKOC CKOC
In addition to music, KGIL was the Los Angeles-area affiliate for California Golden Bears football and had aired games of the Los Angeles Clippers and Los Angeles Kings in the past to resolve time conflicts with other stations. KMZT aired a classical music radio format that was also heard on sister station KMZT-FM (95.9 MHz) in Big Sur ...
The station first signed on the air on December 29, 1948, as KFAC-FM, the FM adjunct to KFAC. [2] First owned by Errett Lobban Cord, a luxury vehicle manufacturer who purchased KFAC in 1931 from the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, [3] [4] KFAC became one of the first commercially operated radio stations in the United States to adopt a full-time fine arts/classical music format, having ...
Albert John Williams obtained the construction permit for a new daytime-only radio station on 1460 kHz in Inglewood on August 1, 1957. [2] The station signed on February 14, 1958, airing a format of popular and semi-classical music; [3] the same day, KTYM-FM 103.9 debuted as a simulcast.