Rahul Sharma (Editor)

KUSC

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Broadcast area
  
Southern California

Facility ID
  
69318

City of license
  
Los Angeles

Area
  
Southern California

First air date
  
October 24, 1946

HAAT
  
891 meters (2,923 ft)

Frequency
  
91.5 MHz

Format
  
Classical music

Call sign meaning
  
K

KUSC newsuscedufiles201111kusclogos061705webjpg

Repeater(s)
  
KPSC: 88.5 MHz KDSC: 91.1 MHz KDB: 93.7 MHz KESC: 99.7 MHz KXSC: 104.9 MHz

Audience share
  
1.2 (January 2017, Nielsen Audio[1])

ERP
  
39,000 watts (directional antenna)

Owner
  
University of Southern California

Kusc s brian lauritzen and the la phil s gustavo dudamel go inside mahler 6


KUSC (91.5 MHz FM) is a listener-supported classical music radio station broadcasting from downtown Los Angeles, California, United States. KUSC is owned and operated by the University of Southern California, which also operates student-run Internet station KXSC (AM) and San Francisco's classical station KDFC. It is the largest non-profit classical music station in the country and the only classical radio station in the Greater Los Angeles Area. In February 2014, public radio station KCRW of Santa Monica announced that it would buy the Santa Barbara Foundation's classical station KDB (FM) 93.7 in Santa Barbara for $1 million. The transaction will allow KCRW to begin using KQSC, USC's current repeater station in Santa Barbara, as a repeater for KCRW's programming, while transferring KUSC's classical programming from KQSC to KDB, thus perpetuating KDB's role as Santa Barbara's classical station. The legacy KDB call letters have been retained.

Contents

Notable local programming includes Dennis Bartel's weekday morning show, Rich Capparela's weekday afternoon program, Jim Svejda's weekday evening show, Duff Murphy's Saturday opera show, and special features by Gail Eichenthal. Other announcers include Alan Chapman and Brian Lauritzen. Management helped establish the nationwide Classical 24 network and also supervised Virginia's WMRA network before taking up leadership at KUSC.

The station holds three membership drives annually to help support operational costs. These drives usually last less than ten days. Corporate sponsors include Lexus, Miramax Films, University of Redlands, Universal Music Group, City of Hope National Medical Center and Providence Health & Services.

KUSC broadcasts in HD.

David bizic radio interview with classical kusc s duff murphy


Transmitter network

KDSC is non-directional (fcc.gov). Coverage pattern is not circular due to mountains to the NE which block line-of-sight FM transmissions. Any interference with the 91.1 (XETRA-FM) in Mexico goes both ways and is caused by a phenomenon called 'ducting'. Ducting occurs most often along coastal areas, particularly during spring and fall when temperature inversions occur. Ducting causes VHF signals to travel farther than normal. All VHF signals experience periodic interference from this phenomenon. (FM is in the VHF band just above TV channel 6.)

References

KUSC Wikipedia