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The station made even more changes, including in its air staff and playlist. [17] The station briefly aired Los Angeles-based Rick Dees in syndication for a few months in 2000. [18] With all of these changes, however, KZZP was usually ranked in the mid-2 to low-3 share range of the radio market.
This is a list of notable hip hop music artists that are from Los Angeles, California This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
KZON also boasted on air to playing "100,000 watts of 'Static-Free' Hip-Hop" and borrowed Apple's "Mac vs. PC" ad campaign in which KZON billed itself as the "Mac" to KKFR's "PC". In addition, the station also attempted to take on Top 40 rival KZZP , the former Rhythmic AC (later top 40 ) station KMVA , and (as of 2013) former Old School Hip ...
The station signed on the air on June 4, 1977, as KNVR-FM, then in 1992 changed to KZZP. In 1995, The "Z" switched to "A" and the current call letters KZAP became reality. KZAP became the market's AC leader in 2000 as "Star 96.7" and in 2002 switched to Rhythmic Top 40 as "Club 96.7".
Zach Sciacca (born July 22, 1971), better known as DJ Z-Trip, is an American DJ and producer. He is a pioneer of the mashup movement. [1]He was the 2009 recipient of the "America's Best DJ Award". [2]
Las Vegas(KLAS)-It all went down last week at Drai’s Nightclub, the premiere hip hop club experience on the strip. The BET Hip Hop Awards brings together some of the greatest rap artists in the ...
While attending high school in Mid-City Los Angeles, group members Thes One and Double K were independently sampling music, creating beat tapes, and DJing local events. Thes One attended Loyola High, and Double K attended Hamilton High and was a part of the Log Cabin Crew, a hip hop collective that also included fellow Hamilton High students Murs, Eligh and Scarub (of Living Legends).
Straight Outta L.A., a 2010 documentary film in ESPN's 30 for 30 series directed by Ice Cube, covers the NFL team Raiders' time in Los Angeles, from 1982 to 1994, and how this overlapped with the local hip hop's transition from party jams to gangsta raps, a move led by the group N.W.A, which seized Raiders symbolism.