City | East Grand Forks, Minnesota |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Grand Forks, North Dakota |
Branding | 104.3 Cities FM |
Slogan | More Music, More Variety |
Frequency | 104.3 MHz |
First air date | December 3, 1979 (as KRAD-FM at 103.9) |
Format | Commercial; Adult contemporary |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 139.5 meters |
Class | C1 |
Facility ID | 35509 |
Callsign meaning | EZ (easy) LiTe (describes the AC music format) |
Former callsigns | KRAD-FM (1979–1981) KRRK (1981–1985) |
Former frequencies | 103.9 MHz (1979-1981) |
Owner | Leighton Broadcasting |
Sister stations | KGFK, KNOX, KYCK, KZGF |
Webcast | Listen Live! |
Website | 1043citiesfm.com |
KZLT-FM (104.3 FM, "Cities FM") is a radio station broadcasting an adult contemporary format. Licensed to East Grand Forks, Minnesota, it serves the Grand Forks, North Dakota metropolitan area. It first began broadcasting in 1979 under the call sign KRAD-FM. The station is currently owned by Leighton Broadcasting.
The station signed on December 3, 1979 as a Class A on 103.9 as KRAD-FM, simulcasting KRAD AM 1590 (now KGFK), and was owned by Dave Norman.
The station flipped to album-oriented rock (predecessor to the classic rock radio format) in 1981 as KRRK "Rock 104", and KZLT in the spring of 1985 on the 104.3 frequency. Station owner Dave Norman changed the format to light Adult contemporary (AC) as "K-Lite" under the KZLT call sign, increased power to 100,000 watts from a transmitter west of Fisher, Minnesota. KZLT and KCNN were moved from the transmitter/studio complex in East Grand Forks to the Cass Gilbert designed Great Northern Railway Depot in downtown Grand Forks.
In late 1999, the station repositioned itself with a Hot AC format as "Cities 104.3". Lightning struck KZLT's transmitter on May 31, 2001, keeping the station off-air for a week. Cities 104.3 began broadcasting again at low-power until a new transmitter was completed in October 2001, when an 80's based classic rock format as "Z104" was introduced. Norman sold KZLT and KCNN to Leighton Broadcasting in 2003, and later KZLT changed back to an adult contemporary format as "Breeze 104.3".