Geek Life: Fun stories, memes, humor and other random items at the intersection of tech, science, business and culture. SEE MORE by Todd Bishop on Feb 17, 2014 at 2:38 pm February 4, 2015 at 6:13 pm ...
SEATTLE -- A woman who is known only as Suzanne has given nearly $10 million to KEXP-FM, making it the largest bequest to a single public radio station in history, the station says. “She was a ...
NYC Media Group President Arick Wierson announced the launch of new music programming on Radio New York (WNYE 91.5 FM) airing in partnership with KEXP-FM, the legendary Seattle Indie radio station.
Kevin Suggs arrived in Seattle just in time for the ’90s grunge-era gold rush, when the city was bursting with bands looking to score a record deal. Spending a decade of 12-hour-plus days pushing ...
Here’s all we know: Her name was Suzanne. She was generous with her money. She wanted to remain anonymous. And she loved music. So much so, that before she died, Suzanne made the largest-ever ...
Internet radio was supposed to squash small FM music stations like KEXP. Someone forget to tell that to KEXP, the little station that has helped launch the careers of big music acts like Macklemore & ...
KEXP started broadcasting its music programming in San Francisco Tuesday on 92.7 FM, a commercial frequency acquired for $3.75 million in October. Operating under new call letters KEXC, the station is ...
Fans of Seattle radio station KEXP 90.3/91.7 FM now can listen to local artists and live in-studio performances on their MP3 players. KEXP, known for its unique mix of music ranging from rock to ...
If you tuned your radio to 92.7 FM this weekend, you likely heard whispers of ghosts of Bay Area radio past. Snippets of songs by local artists and archival radio clips faded in and out over a swirl ...
Less than two years after taking over a South Sound radio station to boost its coverage of Tacoma and Olympia, Seattle-based KEXP-FM (90.3) plans to pull the plug on the service at the end of the year ...
Here’s all we know: Her name was Suzanne. She was generous with her money. She wanted to remain anonymous. And she loved music. So much so, that before she died, Suzanne made the largest-ever ...