KTWR (1958–1964) On June 2, 1958, the station first signed on. The original call sign was KTWR, and it broadcast on 103.9 MHz. It was owned by Thomas Wilmot Read (hence the call sign). Its effective radiated power was 830 watts, a fraction of its current output. The signal was limited to the area in and around Tacoma, not the larger Seattle radio market.
KTAC (1964–1977) In 1964, the station was acquired by Tacoma Broadcasters, Inc, which already owned KTAC 850 AM (now
KHHO). Tacoma Broadcasters changed the call letters to KTAC-FM to simulcast KTAC. A few years later, the FM station began running separate programming, with an automated
Top 40 format.
Entercom bought KTAC-AM-FM in June 1973.
Beautiful music (1977–1991) In 1977, the FM call letters were changed to KBRD, as Entercom flipped the station to a
beautiful music format as "K-Bird FM 104." KBRD upgraded to a stronger signal at 103.7 FM in 1979. The station went from less than 930 watts, 1 kW ERP, to a new diesel-fueled power generator and the output of the transmitter at 63,000 watts, boosted 100 kW. ERP by a complicated additive antenna array that was noisy.
Adult alternative (1991–2012) At 2 p.m. on April 10, 1991, KBRD flipped to a long running
adult album alternative (AAA) format as "FM 104 The Mountain" and the KMTT call sign. The first song on "The Mountain" was "
Rock Me on the Water" by
Jackson Browne. The former
KBRD call letters are now on
680 AM in
Lacey. The station did have some ratings issues for the first couple of years due to its transmitter location south of Tacoma. This was changed when the transmitter relocated to Tiger Mountain in Issaquah, amid the towers for other Seattle area TV and FM stations. KMTT, while it was never #1 in Arbitron ratings books, did well with affluent adult demographics. It was the Seattle market's fourth attempt at a AAA format dating back to 1975-1983 as KZAM FM 92.5 (now
KQMV), 1983-1990 as KEZX FM 98.9 (now
KPNW-FM), and 1985-1987 as KQKT FM 96.5 (now
KJAQ). However, as time went on, the station saw a decline in ratings, especially after the introduction of the
Portable People Meter in the Seattle market in 2009. KMTT featured several different morning drive time shows. The Mountain was the home of John Fisher & Peyton Mays, Fisher & Gary Crow, Crow & Mike West, and Fisher & West. The Marty Riemer & Jodi Brothers morning show were dismissed in September 2009, and were replaced by Sean Demery (formerly of
99X in
Atlanta), until he was released in early 2011. A short time later, Reimer returned to the station to host afternoon drive. In late 2011, Shawn Stewart left KMTT, as the station shifted to a more
classic rock direction, but still retaining AAA artists. Stewart began hosting ''It's Raining Cats & Dogs'' on
Bonneville International-owned
KIRO-FM.
Classic rock (2012–2013) In the Fall of 2012, KMTT shifted its format to "A Mountain of Classics," featuring adult rock hits from the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, in hopes to better compete against
classic rock-formatted
KZOK. Reimer again left the station on December 20, 2012. Ultimately, the "Mountain of Classics" direction did not find enough of an audience.
Rhythmic (2013–present) On August 30, 2013, at 1:50 p.m., after playing "
If You Leave" by
OMD, KMTT began
stunting with a loop of "
It's The End of the World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by
R.E.M. until 3:00 p.m., when the station flipped to
Rhythmic AC, branded as "Hot 103.7." The first song on "Hot" was "
Blurred Lines" by
Robin Thicke featuring
T.I. and
Pharrell. The Mountain's AAA format was moved onto the station's HD2 subchannel. Two weeks later, on September 11, 2013, KMTT changed its call letters to KHTP. Concurrently, the KMTT call sign was moved to co-owned
AM 910 in
Portland (formerly KKSN). KHTP experienced immediate ratings success with its new format; in its first full book as "Hot" in October, the station jumped to a 4.8 share. On December 4, 2013, Entercom announced that "Candy & Potter," former morning show hosts at
KBKS-FM, would join the station for mornings beginning January 22, 2014. (The pair were released in March 2015). Kristin the Island Girl, former midday personality on KBKS, began hosting middays at KHTP on that day as well. On June 27, 2017, Entercom announced that recording artist and Seattle native
Sir Mix-a-Lot would host mornings on the station beginning July 5. In addition, Eric Powers, long-time afternoon host and program director at
KUBE, was also named KHTP's new PD and would also begin hosting afternoons on the same day. (Mike Preston, KHTP's PD since the station's 2013 inception, and former longtime PD at KBKS, left the station in February 2017.) With the change, morning host Deanna Cruz exited, and afternoon host/APD Tanch moved to middays. Kristin the Island Girl left the station as well. On August 30, 2018, former
KSFM on-air host and MD Bre Ruiz was named co-host for the Sir Mix-a-Lot morning show effective September 4. Sir Mix-a-Lot exited the station on June 28, 2019, after nearly two years with the station. ==Translator==