KULA, KVEG-FM, KTRI and KENO-FM The station
signed on the air on September 1, 1966. Its original
call sign was KULA and it was a
sister station to
KVEG (970 AM) with studios in the Castaways Hotel. Because KVEG was a
daytimer, KULA
simulcast its
country music programming in the daytime and continued it at night when KVEG was off the air. In the 1970s, AM 970 KVEG began playing
oldies while 92.3 FM continued the country sounds as KTRI. It was an
affiliate of the
ABC Information Network. While the station was powered at 27,000 watts, its
tower was only tall, so it was only heard in and around Las Vegas. Around 1980, the station became
KENO-FM. It aired the same
Top 40 format as
KENO (1460 AM) as management moved the hit music sounds from its AM station to an FM signal. The two stations were affiliated with the
ABC Contemporary Network. KENO-FM was granted a
construction permit by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to boost its power to 100,000 watts and relocated to a tower at .
KOMP The format flipped to
album rock on February 8, 1981. The station's first song in the rock format was
The Who's "
Long Live Rock". The station's new call sign was KOMP and it was known simply as FM92 K-O-M-P. Some of the
DJs from that era included Big Marty and Leslie Blied, Todd Fowler, Dice Martin and Lark Williams. The station's slogan later became "KOMP 92.3 The Rock Of Las Vegas." Other personalities included: Byrd (later with
WDRV Chicago), Craig Williams, Scott "So Hot" Jameson, Charlie Morriss, Freddie Woods, Mike Dailey, Mike Culotta and JD Pig. ==Programming==