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| city = [[Lubbock, Texas]]
| city = [[Lubbock, Texas]]
| area = [[Lubbock, Texas]]
| area = [[Lubbock, Texas]]


| format = [[Country music|Country]]
| format = [[Country music|Country]]
| owner = [[Alpha Media]] Group
| owner = [[Alpha Media]] Group
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| erp = 100,000 [[watt]]s
| erp = 100,000 [[watt]]s
| haat = 249 [[meter]]s
| haat = 249 [[meter]]s
| branding = KLLL 96.3
| branding = 96.3 K Triple-L
| class = C1
| class = C1
| webcast = [http://player.streamtheworld.com/_players/wilks/index.html?callsign=KLLLFM Listen Live]
| webcast = [http://player.streamtheworld.com/_players/wilks/index.html?callsign=KLLLFM Listen Live]
| website = {{URL|http://www.klll.com/}}
| website = {{URL|http://www.klll.com/}}
| callsign_meaning =
| callsign_meaning =
| sister_stations =
| sister_stations = [[KBTE]], [[KMMX]], [[KONE (FM)|KONE]]
| affiliations = [[Westwood One]]
| licensing_authority= [[Federal Communications Commission|FCC]]
}}
}}


'''KLLL-FM''' 96.3 MHz is a [[country music]] station licensed and broadcast in [[Lubbock, Texas|Lubbock]], [[Texas]], owned by [[Alpha Media]] Group through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC. Its studios are located in south Lubbock on Avenue Q west of [[Interstate 27]], and its transmitter is located separately two miles away south of the studios.
'''KLLL-FM''' (96.3 [[Hertz|MHz]]) is a [[country music]] station licensed and broadcast in [[Lubbock, Texas]], owned by [[Alpha Media]] Group through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC. Its studios are located in south Lubbock on Avenue Q west of [[Interstate 27]], and its transmitter is located separately two miles away south of the studios.


KBFM, the forerunner to KLLL, began in 1958 as an easy listening station. It transmitted an SCA (Subsidiary Communications Authority) to transmit Muzak brand background music. The transmitter was located at the Great Plains Life Building (now known as Metro Tower) at Broadway and avenue M. Studios were originally at 2442 14th street, but were shortly moved to the fifth floor of the same building as the transmitter and antenna. The station was founded by a Mr. Blankenship. KLLL (AM) was in the same building with its studios on the top (20th) floor. During this time country legend and outlaw Waylon Jennings was a disc jockey and it was not uncommon for his good friend and Rock and Roll pioneer Buddy Holly would hang out together at the studios. KLLL still has jingles sung by Buddy Holly in its archives along with former airchecks of Waylon Jennings live on KLLL.
[[Waylon Jennings]] is a notable former personality of KLLL, working there before joining [[Buddy Holly]] on tour. When Buddy died, Jennings returned to KLLL, which had been taken over in 1958 by Sky Corbin and his brother, Slim. The ''[[Lubbock Avalanche-Journal]]'' described the Corbins as "a force locally and were influential throughout the industry". Sky was a manager and [[disk jockey]] for some twelve years; Slim was a personality on the station. Slim was the advisor and confidant of Jennings. When Jennings took his band, the Waylors, to [[Phoenix, Arizona|Phoenix]], [[Arizona]], where he became a local sensation, Slim moved his band to [[Scottsdale, Arizona|Scottsdale]], where the two would be close enough to maintain their friendship. Slim was in [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]], [[Tennessee]], when Jennings got his break.<ref name=wthr>Elvis E. Fleming, "Long Before Luckenbach", ''[[West Texas Historical Association|West Texas Historical Review]]'', Vol. LXL (2014), p. 72.</ref>


In 1968, KLLL's owners, the Corbins, bought KBFM in order to add an FM frequency to KLLL (most all stations at the time were AM as FM had not become popular yet). It kept its call letters, stayed easy listening by day but carried the country format of KLLL at night when the 1460 AM daytimer signed off.
The Corbins co-authored songs recorded by Jennings and Holly. They participated in some of the recording sessions at the [[Norman Petty]] studio in [[Clovis, New Mexico|Clovis]], [[New Mexico]]. One song co-written by Jennings and Sky Corbin was "Young Widow Brown", recorded by Jennings and [[Frankie Miller (country musician)|Frankie Miller]] in 1960.<ref name=wthr/>

KBFM, the forerunner to KLLL, began in 1958 as an easy listening station. It transmitted an SCA (Subsidiary Communications Authority) to transmit Muzak brand background music. The transmitter was located at the Great Plains Life Building (now known as Metro Tower) at Broadway and avenue M. Studios were originally at 2442 14th street, but were shortly moved to the fifth floor of the same building as the transmitter and antenna. The station was founded by a Mr. Blankenship. KLLL (AM) was in the same building with its studios on the top (20th) floor. In 1968, KLLL's owners, the Corbins, bought KBFM. It kept its call letters, stayed easy listening by day but carried the country format of KLLL at night when the 1460 AM daytimer signed off.


KBFM changed to KLLL in 1971, the year after the [[1970 Lubbock tornado]]. The studio building was damaged and the station relocated to the former KSEL studios on East Broadway; KSEL had moved to 84th and L where at the site of the new channel 28 KSEL-TV (now [[KAMC]]). KLLL moved to 50th and L in 1976.
KBFM changed to KLLL in 1971, the year after the [[1970 Lubbock tornado]]. The studio building was damaged and the station relocated to the former KSEL studios on East Broadway; KSEL had moved to 84th and L where at the site of the new channel 28 KSEL-TV (now [[KAMC]]). KLLL moved to 50th and L in 1976.


The Corbin family hired [[Jerry "Bo" Coleman]] as a radio host and made him a stockholder.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://lubbockonline.com/life-columnists/2012-05-06/jerry-coleman-continuing-marathon-radio-career#.Um8czBUo4fQ|title=Ray Westbrook, Jerry Coleman continuing marathon radio career: Coleman's mark on local radio has endured for half a century, May 6, 2012|newspaper=[[Lubbock Avalanche Journal]]|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref> In 1978, the Corbins sold KLLL AM/FM to Lubbock County Broadcasting, owned by James Thrash and John Frankhouser. Thrash and Frankhouseer in turn sold the company in 1987 to Pinnacle Broadcasting.
The Corbin family hired [[Jerry "Bo" Coleman]] as a radio host and made him a stockholder.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://lubbockonline.com/life-columnists/2012-05-06/jerry-coleman-continuing-marathon-radio-career#.Um8czBUo4fQ|title=Ray Westbrook, Jerry Coleman continuing marathon radio career: Coleman's mark on local radio has endured for half a century, May 6, 2012|newspaper=[[Lubbock Avalanche Journal]]|access-date=November 1, 2013}}</ref> In 1978, the Corbins sold KLLL AM/FM to Lubbock County Broadcasting, owned by James Thrash and John Frankhouser.

1980 saw FM become the format of choice and 5 FM stations rose to dominate the Lubbock Market:

KTEZ 101.1
KSEL 93.7
KFMX 94.5
KRLB 99.5
KLLL 96.3

By 1981, under the programming leadership of Jon Steele, the emergence of George Strait and the Urban Cowboy era saw KLLL rise to number one in the market. Johnny Walker was the morning personality and featured a very talented lineup that included Jon Steele, Chuck Luck and more.

Thrash and Frankhouser sold the company in 1987 to Pinnacle Broadcasting and was managed by Buddy Howell. At which time, Jon Steele became General Manager, a position he held along with being the anchor of the morning show until his departure in 2005.

KLLL is one of the biggest brands in country radio nationally and often one of the most innovative and ground breaking stations in the format. In 1989 it was a finalist for CMA radio station of the year.
Jon, Don(Vanlandingham) and Jane(Prince Jones) started broadcasting as its morning team in 1987 and by the fall of 1989 had become Lubbock's top ranked morning team on Lubbock's #1 radio station supplanting legendary FM 99.

In 1988, longtime radio/TV weather personality Rick Gilbert joined the station as midday personality and later program director. Afternoon drive personality Jeff Scott also joined the programming team as music director and was responsible for breaking artist like Clint Black and Garth Brooks.

By 1990, KLLL had locked up 32% of the listening audience in Lubbock and was known for breaking the biggest new stars that became the nucleus of the dominant 1990's in country music. From 1993 to 1995, Jay Richards was honored as the Radio Ink Program Director of the year.

In 1999, KLLL sold to Next Media along with sister markets of Myrtle Beach SC and Greenville New Bern NC. KLLL has continued to dominate the country position in Lubbock and the region.

Jeff Wilks, CEO of Wilks Broadcasting purchased KLLL and its sister stations Mix 100, Rock 101, and 104.9 The Beat in 2005 starting what would be the next and most significant chapter in the dynastical success the station group would enjoy. The cluster under the direction of Market Manager Jay Richardson along with Operations Manager Jeff Scott made the Lubbock stations the most profitable and most listened to group of radio stations in Lubbock radio history. This run would last for the next decade.

KLLL's morning team featuring Jeff Scott and Mudflap are the longest running morning team in KLLL history, having been together starting in 2005 until the present and have continued to be Lubbock's top local morning show over this period of time.
Jeff Wilks would sell Lubbock Group in the summer of 2015.


KLLL is currently owned by a privately held company [[Alpha Media]] Group.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/139443/alpha-buys-4-in-lubbock-from-wilks | title=Alpha Buys 4 in Lubbock from Wilks }}</ref>
KLLL is currently owned by a privately held company [[Alpha Media]] Group.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/139443/alpha-buys-4-in-lubbock-from-wilks | title=Alpha Buys 4 in Lubbock from Wilks }}</ref>
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==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}
The group is still run by Sr. Vice President Jay Richardson, Director of Sales Colleen Murphy, and Sr Content Director Jeff Scott and a team of 18 + year veterans consisting of Sean Dillon, Damon Scott, Amy O, Dave Fernandez, Jerri Cruz, Sam Stephens, and Chelsey Smith. A nucleus of individuals at the top of their field unheard of in most any industry.


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.klll.com/ KLLL-FM's official website]
*[http://www.klll.com/ KLLL-FM's official website]


{{FM station data|KLLL}}
{{FM station data|36954|KLLL-FM}}


{{Lubbock Radio}}
{{Lubbock Radio}}

Latest revision as of 20:23, 8 November 2024

KLLL-FM
Broadcast areaLubbock, Texas
Frequency96.3 MHz
Branding96.3 K Triple-L
Programming
FormatCountry
AffiliationsWestwood One
Ownership
Owner
KBTE, KMMX, KONE
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
ClassC1
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT249 meters
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websitewww.klll.com

KLLL-FM (96.3 MHz) is a country music station licensed and broadcast in Lubbock, Texas, owned by Alpha Media Group through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC. Its studios are located in south Lubbock on Avenue Q west of Interstate 27, and its transmitter is located separately two miles away south of the studios.

KBFM, the forerunner to KLLL, began in 1958 as an easy listening station. It transmitted an SCA (Subsidiary Communications Authority) to transmit Muzak brand background music. The transmitter was located at the Great Plains Life Building (now known as Metro Tower) at Broadway and avenue M. Studios were originally at 2442 14th street, but were shortly moved to the fifth floor of the same building as the transmitter and antenna. The station was founded by a Mr. Blankenship. KLLL (AM) was in the same building with its studios on the top (20th) floor. During this time country legend and outlaw Waylon Jennings was a disc jockey and it was not uncommon for his good friend and Rock and Roll pioneer Buddy Holly would hang out together at the studios. KLLL still has jingles sung by Buddy Holly in its archives along with former airchecks of Waylon Jennings live on KLLL.

In 1968, KLLL's owners, the Corbins, bought KBFM in order to add an FM frequency to KLLL (most all stations at the time were AM as FM had not become popular yet). It kept its call letters, stayed easy listening by day but carried the country format of KLLL at night when the 1460 AM daytimer signed off.

KBFM changed to KLLL in 1971, the year after the 1970 Lubbock tornado. The studio building was damaged and the station relocated to the former KSEL studios on East Broadway; KSEL had moved to 84th and L where at the site of the new channel 28 KSEL-TV (now KAMC). KLLL moved to 50th and L in 1976.

The Corbin family hired Jerry "Bo" Coleman as a radio host and made him a stockholder.[1] In 1978, the Corbins sold KLLL AM/FM to Lubbock County Broadcasting, owned by James Thrash and John Frankhouser.

1980 saw FM become the format of choice and 5 FM stations rose to dominate the Lubbock Market:

KTEZ 101.1 KSEL 93.7 KFMX 94.5 KRLB 99.5 KLLL 96.3

By 1981, under the programming leadership of Jon Steele, the emergence of George Strait and the Urban Cowboy era saw KLLL rise to number one in the market. Johnny Walker was the morning personality and featured a very talented lineup that included Jon Steele, Chuck Luck and more.

Thrash and Frankhouser sold the company in 1987 to Pinnacle Broadcasting and was managed by Buddy Howell. At which time, Jon Steele became General Manager, a position he held along with being the anchor of the morning show until his departure in 2005.

KLLL is one of the biggest brands in country radio nationally and often one of the most innovative and ground breaking stations in the format. In 1989 it was a finalist for CMA radio station of the year. Jon, Don(Vanlandingham) and Jane(Prince Jones) started broadcasting as its morning team in 1987 and by the fall of 1989 had become Lubbock's top ranked morning team on Lubbock's #1 radio station supplanting legendary FM 99.

In 1988, longtime radio/TV weather personality Rick Gilbert joined the station as midday personality and later program director. Afternoon drive personality Jeff Scott also joined the programming team as music director and was responsible for breaking artist like Clint Black and Garth Brooks.

By 1990, KLLL had locked up 32% of the listening audience in Lubbock and was known for breaking the biggest new stars that became the nucleus of the dominant 1990's in country music. From 1993 to 1995, Jay Richards was honored as the Radio Ink Program Director of the year.

In 1999, KLLL sold to Next Media along with sister markets of Myrtle Beach SC and Greenville New Bern NC. KLLL has continued to dominate the country position in Lubbock and the region.

Jeff Wilks, CEO of Wilks Broadcasting purchased KLLL and its sister stations Mix 100, Rock 101, and 104.9 The Beat in 2005 starting what would be the next and most significant chapter in the dynastical success the station group would enjoy. The cluster under the direction of Market Manager Jay Richardson along with Operations Manager Jeff Scott made the Lubbock stations the most profitable and most listened to group of radio stations in Lubbock radio history. This run would last for the next decade.

KLLL's morning team featuring Jeff Scott and Mudflap are the longest running morning team in KLLL history, having been together starting in 2005 until the present and have continued to be Lubbock's top local morning show over this period of time. Jeff Wilks would sell Lubbock Group in the summer of 2015.

KLLL is currently owned by a privately held company Alpha Media Group.[2]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Ray Westbrook, Jerry Coleman continuing marathon radio career: Coleman's mark on local radio has endured for half a century, May 6, 2012". Lubbock Avalanche Journal. Retrieved November 1, 2013.
  2. ^ "Alpha Buys 4 in Lubbock from Wilks".

The group is still run by Sr. Vice President Jay Richardson, Director of Sales Colleen Murphy, and Sr Content Director Jeff Scott and a team of 18 + year veterans consisting of Sean Dillon, Damon Scott, Amy O, Dave Fernandez, Jerri Cruz, Sam Stephens, and Chelsey Smith. A nucleus of individuals at the top of their field unheard of in most any industry.

[edit]