KSTY went on the air on June 1, 1975, as KRLN-FM on 103.9 MHz, changing to KSTX on August 30, 1976. It was the FM sister to
KRLN, and initially simulcast the AM station. KRLN-FM broadcast with 3,000 watts from a transmitter site in Canon City. On May 31, 1982, KSTX reverted to the KRLN-FM call letters. By 1991, when the station added programming from
Unistar, KRLN-FM was a
country music station. It became KSTY on December 30, 1994. The station remained on 103.9 MHz until 1999, when it swapped frequencies with
KYZX in
Pueblo and moved to 104.5. Later that year, Warner Enterprises sold its stations — KSTY and KRLN, along with stations in
Lincoln, Nebraska — to James Haber's JC Acquisition for $11.465 million, in conjunction with the sale of the Lincoln stations to
Triad Broadcasting. The Warner family's Royal Gorge Broadcasting bought back KSTY and KRLN for $715,000 in 2000. On December 8, 2005, KSTY took on the programming and call sign of
KKCS-FM (101.9). The move was undone in 2007, and the KSTY call letters and "Star Country" moniker returned to the 104.5 frequency. On December 23, 2024, Royal Gorge Broadcasting announced that it would close KSTY and KRLN effective January 1, 2025. The stations were the last to be owned by the Warner family, whose station group had included stations in Colorado, Kansas, and Nebraska. In April 2025 the rights to KSTY 104.5 "Star Country" were purchased by the former manager for the radio station Meg Stanley. It is now owned by the company "Frontier Frequencies". On August 1st of 2025 the radio station KSTY 104.5 "Star Country" began airing again, now operated by "Frontier Frequencies". ==References==