KTWN On August 1, 1968, the station
signed on as KTWN, the
sister station of KANO in Anoka (1470 AM, now
KMNQ in
Brooklyn Park). At first, KTWN’s effective radiated power was 57,000 watts on a 320-foot tower. In the 1970s, KTWN cycled through several formats. For a time, it played
beautiful music, then had a short stint as a
classical music station, beginning September 1, 1974. Then, it tried a
full-service Middle of the Road (MOR) format, focusing on the northern suburbs of the Twin Cities. From
1978 to
1983, KTWN carried a
jazz format. At the time, the station was operated by Jack Moore, who had previously run
WAYL, the market's leading beautiful music station.
B108 and Magic 108 The station was sold to Colorado-based Sunbelt Communications, with the new owners immediately switching the station's format to a
soft adult contemporary and
oldies hybrid on September 24, 1983. The
call sign became KGBB ("B108"). Later, the station became "Magic 108" with the call letters KMGW (later KMGK). The station's signal limitations were a hindrance, with competition from full-market stations such as
WLTE and
KSTP-FM. In the mid-1980s, KMGK got permission from the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to become a full-powered station, increasing power to 100,000 watts on a tower more than 1,000 feet in
height above average terrain (HAAT), making the station's signal equal to other major Twin Cities FM stations. In 1988, KMGK was acquired by Trumper Communications.
KQQL On September 30, 1988, at noon, after playing "
Do You Believe in Magic?" by
The Lovin' Spoonful, KMGK began
stunting with a loop of various
versions of the 1960s oldie "
Louie, Louie". At noon on October 3, the station was reborn as KQQL, "Kool 108". While some FM stations had oldies as part of their
playlists, KQQL was the first all-oldies FM station in the Twin Cities area. The first song on "Kool 108" was "
Rock and Roll Is Here to Stay" by
Danny & the Juniors. The oldies format originally spanned the era of the early days of rock 'n roll music of the mid-1950s through the late 1960s. In the mid-1990s, some 70s hits were added. By 2000, the 1950s hits were removed, and the station shifted to hits of the 1960s and 1970s (with an occasional early 1980s song thrown in). For a brief time, KQQL was the FM
flagship station for
Minnesota Vikings football, with games being
simulcasted with co-owned
sports radio station
KFAN.
Clear Channel ownership In 1997, KQQL was acquired by Chancellor Media Corporation. Three years later, Chancellor was merged into
Clear Channel Communications, based in
San Antonio. (In 2014, Clear Channel changed its corporate name to
iHeartMedia, Inc.) In the early 2000s, KQQL began switching to
Christmas music during the holiday season. It would usually begin on the Friday before
Thanksgiving at 5 p.m. and conclude at midnight on
Christmas Day. KQQL would compete with
CBS-owned
adult contemporary station
WLTE until that station flipped to
country music in December 2011, which ended its Christmas music tradition. In 2008, KQQL started the Christmas music earlier than usual, on the weekend of November 15. This may have been triggered by WLTE flipping its format earlier in the week. KQQL's format was tweaked again in 2006 to an
oldies/
classic hits hybrid, positioned as "Super Hits of the 60s & 70s". Some 1980s hits were also included. KQQL also began airing "
American Top 40" episodes from the 1970s hosted by
Casey Kasem. KQQL also aired classic 1980s American Top 40 shows for a short time, but the station dropped the AT40 '80s broadcasts after the station cut back on playing '80s music. On April 28, 2009, KQQL released all on-air personalities, including morning host Lois Mae and radio veteran Dan Donovan.
Disk jockeys on KQQL were
voicetracked from other Clear Channel stations, with news coming from
KOA in
Denver. However, in mid-2010, KQQL hired several new on-air personalities, including radio veteran and
KARE 11 reporter Lee Valsvik. On December 27, 2009, the station tweaked to a
classic hits format and dropped most
1960s titles while adding some
1990s songs, with a primary focus on 1970s and 1980s hits. Direct competition with
Cumulus Media's
WGVX (Love 105) ended when that station switched formats to
adult contemporary music in early 2012. At this time,
AT40: The 80s returned, and
Dick Bartley's
Classic Countdown was added to the lineup. In January 2019, KQQL slightly tweaked its format and officially dropped all music from the 1960s and many hits from the 1970s while adding some 2000s music. At the same time KQQL began airing
The Ellen K Show on Saturday mornings. The station's format now primarily focuses on music from the 1980s and 1990s. ==HD Radio==