Name Keith Naftaly | ||
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DJR-71@~CHRIS MATHEWS-KEITH NAFTALY@KMEL-LONDON1976-93: HALF-BLACK/UC BERKELEY-"S.F.!!!" CALI/FORNIA... ACROSS THE POND AT JOLLY OLD LONDON TOWN!!
Keith Phillip Naftaly is a radio program director, a music business professional and A&R executive for various major record labels including Arista, J, DreamWorks, Sony Music and presently Executive VP and Head of A&R for RCA Records. He is often credited for the breaking of early hip hop through the San Francisco radio station KMEL and collaboration with many renowned artists and has won many awards, most notably AIR’s "Best Ears In Radio" competition, as well as several important industry awards.
Contents
- DJR 71CHRIS MATHEWS KEITH NAFTALYKMEL LONDON1976 93 HALF BLACKUC BERKELEY SF CALIFORNIA ACROSS THE POND AT JOLLY OLD LONDON TOWN
- DJR 71KMEL SAN FRANCISCO 1990 106FM CHRIS MATHEWSMUSICAL DIRECTORHALF BLACKUC BERKELEYKEITH NAFTALYKIIS FM1LA HOLLYWOODCACLIVE DAVIS
- Early life
- Career
- References

DJR-71@KMEL-SAN FRANCISCO 1990 @106FM (CHRIS MATHEWS,MUSICAL DIRECTOR,HALF-BLACK/UC BERKELEY;KEITH NAFTALY/KIIS-FM#[email protected],CA.../CLIVE DAVIS)
Early life

Naftaly was born and raised in San Francisco to a Jewish family and lived in the Miraloma Park neighborhood. At age nine, as a result of desegregation busing, Naftaly began attending a majority black school in Hunters Point. Although Naftaly studied classical piano as a child, he also took interest in popular music, especially R&B played on local radio station KDIA.
After graduating from Lowell High School in 1980, Naftaly attended the University of California, Berkeley and briefly worked for student station KALX.
Career
While a student at UC Berkeley, Naftaly took a night shift job answering request lines at San Francisco top-40 station KFRC after dissatisfaction with KALX. Naftaly also explored the workings of KFRC's music department and made connections with record promoters. He eventually dropped out of college to produce KFRC's morning show with Don Rose.
In 1984, Naftaly became assistant music director for KMEL, which had recently switched from its "Camel" rock format to top-40. Naftaly incorporated more R&B, dance and rap music into the station and helped raise KMEL's ratings by a percentage point. Naftaly became the Gavin Report's "Music Director of the Year" in 1987, the year he was promoted to program director.
As KMEL program director, Naftaly moved KMEL from a general top-40 to a rhythmic format focusing on R&B and freestyle artists. By early 1988, KMEL's ratings share rose from 4.9 to 6.1, enough to be the Bay Area's highest rated music station and beat rival KSOL. Naftaly also recruited Sway & King Tech to host The Wake Up Show mornings on KMEL. In 1993, Naftaly was appointed Vice President of Programming for Los Angeles' station KKBT (92.3 The Beat), a sister station to KMEL.
In 1995, he left radio to work for the music mogul Clive Davis at Arista Records.
Then he moved on to other record labels with positions added:
In 2011, Naftaly took part in the judging panel of BravoTV's Platinum Hit, an elimination competition series featuring 12 as yet undiscovered singer-songwriters, where talented newcomers battled through a series of innovative songwriting challenges to find out who's ready for the top of the pop charts.