On October 30, 1957, 95.5 KAZZ first signed on the air. It was owned by Audioland Broadcasting, powered at only 340 watts. The call sign KAZZ was supposed to rhyme with "jazz." The station played jazz, adult standards and big band music. At a time when few people owned FM radios, this was a rare "stand-alone" FM outlet, not co-owned with an AM radio station, TV station or newspaper. The station was purchased in 1963 by Monroe Lopez, owner of several Mexican restaurants in the Austin area. Under Lopez' ownership, KAZZ adopted a block-programming format featuring various types of music throughout the broadcast day. They included easy listening, jazz, country music, show tunes, R&B, and, starting in 1964, Top 40. That made KAZZ the first FM station in Austin to play rock and roll. During this time, the station also expanded its broadcast day from 6am-1am to 24 hours.
KOKE-FM
In November 1967, Lopez sold KAZZ to the owners of AM 1370 KOKE. On January 5, 1968, the station began simulcasting KOKE 1370's country format as KOKE-FM. Because KOKE 1370 was a daytimer, 95.5 KOKE-FM allowed listeners with FM radios to continue hearing the station after sunset. The station called itself "The People's Choice, KOKE." At this point, KOKE-FM's power was 10,000 watts, able to cover Austin and its close-in suburbs, but still just a fraction of its current power.
Soft AC
In the early 1980s, the owners of KOKE-AM-FM decided to make a change. KOKE 1370 became KMMM, a Regional Mexican music station, while KOKE-FM switched to soft adult contemporary music as KLQT. The call sign stood for "Light 95," as in light music. In the mid-1980s, the station got a boost to 100,000 watts, the maximum power permitted for non-grandfathered FM stations. in height above average terrain In 1990, The Tremont Group bought AM 1370 and FM 95.5. It switched the FM station's call letters to KKMJ, calling it "Majic 95.5." The soft AC format remained the same. The AM station went back to the KOKE call letters, this time airing an easy listening/adult standards format. In 1998, Infinity Broadcasting, which would later merge into CBS Radio, bought KKMJ and its AM station, which became KJCE, airing a talk radio format. In 2004, KKMJ was named the "R&R Station of The Year" for radio markets between #26 and #100. KKMJ has a consistent history of being a top 5 rated station in the Austin Arbitron and Nielsen ratings.
Mainstream AC
In the 2000s, KKMJ began shifting from mostly Soft AC to a more uptempo adult contemporary sound. In late 2013, it dropped the "Continuous Soft Rock" description and began using the slogan "Better Music for a Better Workday." The syndicatedDelilah evening show was discontinued in August 2014, with the 7 p.m. to midnight hours being programmed similarly to other dayparts. In 2007, KKMJ and KJCE, along with Hot AC 94.7 KAMX were acquired by Entercom, when CBS Radio decided to leave the Austin radio market. In 2014 KKMJ began occasionally airing "The Great '80s Weekend," similar to the previous '70s weekends.
Past programming
From 2008 to 2011, KKMJ aired a mix of adult contemporary and 1970s hits, called the "Super Songs of The '70s." On Fridays, from 3 to 7 p.m., the station would play only 1970s hits followed by Adult Contemporary music with Delilah, and from midnight until 7:00 p.m. on Saturdays, '70s Oldies were heard, followed by Delilah again. Then back to '70s Oldies from midnight until 7:00 PM. On some Monday holidays, the '70s Oldies weekends were extended into the holiday. Around 2011, the "Super Songs of the '70s" stopped airing on weekends. KKMJ began calling its music "Continuous Soft Rock."