Each Saturday would find me rigging up my receiver and my Sony cassette deck to capture the show on tape. Those recordings would get me through the week: Whodini, the Boogie Boys, Kool Moe Dee, Big Daddy Kane. Once I captured the epic seven-minute, 12-inch version of LL Cool J's "Rock the Bells" on tape, I played it until it came unspooled. While even then some other stations might give a spin or two to clunky rap-rock fusions like Aerosmith and Run-DMC's remake of "Walk This Way," Kidz Jamm was spinning the real goods from King of Rock: "My Adidas," "You Talk Too Much" and the title track.
And long before white radio picked up on the dumbest singles from the Beastie Boys' Licensed to Ill and played them to death, Kidz Jamm was playing the most adventurous one: "Hold It Now. " What's more, it was doing it so early on in the game I don't think anyone south of Jersey knew yet that the Beasties were white. I certainly did not.
Troy Fields
In February 2010, longtime Jazz Latino host Juan Flores was terminated, but was brought back a week later following public outcry. Flores, who's trying to revive his show at KPFT, says that he later left for good when KTSU management changed his shift time while he was on a vacation.
The Concerned Legends allege that Franklin's October 2008 hiring came directly from the office of TSU President John Rudley. KTSU's recently fired engineer says Rudley, who replaced Priscilla Slade following a spending scandal, likes to bully campus employees.
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This was the baby-blue facet of KTSU's "Jazz in All Its Colors" slogan: the newest, most adventurous music in America's crib, and it was soon to sweep the whole world before it. KTSU was doing what it was supposed to do as a cutting-edge black-run radio station — reflecting the music that its student body and those who soon would be enrolled there all loved and pushing the music forward. There's nothing like it on its airwaves now. That KTSU now seems content to pickle itself in the brine of the classics, rich as that brine may be, is a real shame.