• Latest
KUBE 93 93.3 Seattle

When Hip-Hop Ruled Seattle Radio: KUBE’S First and Last Episodes

4 years ago
98.5 KRXT Rockdale

Station Sales Week Of 2/20

3 hours ago
Compass Media Networks

Compass Media Promotes Sydney Sperling To Director of Affiliate Sales

5 hours ago
98 Rock 98.5 KRXQ Sacramento

Paul Marshall Exits As KRXQ Assistant Brand Manager/Morning Host

13 hours ago
ADVERTISEMENT
105.7 The Fan WJZ-FM Baltimore

Jason La Canfora Exits Afternoons At 105.7 The Fan Baltimore

21 hours ago
92.9 The Wave WTWV-FM Norfolk Virginia Beach

First Listen: Yacht Rock Vs. Soft AC

21 hours ago
Playa 98.1 99.3 WWCN Fort Myers ESPN Southwest Florida

Changes Begin In Fort Myers Following Sun/FMBC Acquisitions Of Beasley Cluster

21 hours ago
Q104.3 WAXQ New York

Jim Kerr To Extend His 50+ Year Run In New York For Five More

22 hours ago
Classic Country 104.3 W282CA WKHK-HD2 Richmond

Domain Insight 2/19: More Neon To Glow In Richmond?

24 hours ago
Sienna Spiro Die On This Hill

Mason’s Observations on Valentine’s Day, “Homewrecker” & “Die On This Hill”

2 days ago
104.7 The Flame WFLM West Palm Beach Reggie Dee JDD Radio

FCC Approves WFLM Sale Amidst Pending Civil Suit Decision

2 days ago
Got News? Let us know at News@RadioInsight.com
RadioInsight
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
  • Headlines
    • Format Changes
    • People & Places
    • Station Sales
    • FCC Applications
    • Domain Insight
  • Ratings
    • Nielsen Audio
    • Eastlan Ratings
  • Jobs
    • View Jobs
    • Submit A Job
    • Job Dashboard
  • Sean Ross
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscription Info
  • Contact Us
SUBSCRIBE
NEWSLETTER
RadioInsight
  • Headlines
    • Format Changes
    • People & Places
    • Station Sales
    • FCC Applications
    • Domain Insight
  • Ratings
    • Nielsen Audio
    • Eastlan Ratings
  • Jobs
    • View Jobs
    • Submit A Job
    • Job Dashboard
  • Sean Ross
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscription Info
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
RadioInsight
No Result
View All Result
Sean Ross On Radio Insight RadioInsight

When Hip-Hop Ruled Seattle Radio: KUBE’S First and Last Episodes

Sean Rossby Sean Ross
0

KUBE 93 93.3 SeattleAs a rookie radio journalist in the mid-’80s, I wrote an article for Radio & Records about markets where I felt the Urban format could flourish on FM. One of them was Seattle, and that prompted a quizzical call from a radio-station general manager in that market. Surely, I understood that there was a minimal African-American population, he said. I can’t remember whether it was the same call, but it was also around then that a radio person told me that even Whitney Houston’s hits wouldn’t work in Seattle.

Why did I think Urban would work, asked the GM? At that moment, all that backed me up was the explosive success of KPWR (Power 106) Los Angeles, and perhaps the surprising success of Rhythmic CHR on KSFM (FM102) Sacramento. KMEL San Francisco had the industry buzz, but that market had a history of R&B radio. Sacramento was the next step in R&B, then Hip-Hop, becoming the hit music of California and the Southwest — sometimes in places with an R&B radio history (San Diego), but also in new markets like Albuquerque, El Paso, Oxnard/Ventura.

Finally, in fall 1991, as Mainstream Top 40 began to falter, KUBE Seattle became “KUBE 93 Jams.” Six months later, Seattle’s Sir Mix-A-Lot’s was No. 1 with “Baby Got Back.” A few months later, I was in Seattle for an industry convention. KUBE had left KPLZ alone in the Mainstream Top 40 franchise, but it didn’t matter: R&B and Hip-Hop had become the pop music of Seattle as well. KPLZ would briefly lean more rhythmic itself, then it would give up and go Hot AC outright a few years later.

KUBE’s influence was felt throughout the region. From Spokane to Boise, R&B and Hip-Hop became he pop music of many smaller Pacific Northwest markets as well. That meant Rhythmic Top 40 was the default setting for everywhere between Seattle and Houston. Even more than KMEL or the mid-’90s success of WQHT (Hot 97) New York, KUBE’s success was the most compelling argument that Hip-Hop and R&B hadn’t infiltrated pop music, but superseded it. And at least three years passed in CHR before there was much evidence to the contrary.

KUBE briefly tried segueing back to an MTV-like version of Top 40 in 1994 that combined Hip-Hop and Alternative, a format tried in several places, but which took hold nowhere. A few months later, KUBE was back to Rhythmic Top 40. In the spring of 1997, just before Mainstream Top 40 proved that pop music had not been entirely usurped, it peaked at a 7.1 share, its highest as a Rhythmic Top 40. 

I could have written about KUBE’s impact in 2016, when the call letters and Hip-Hop format were moved to a rimshot frequency — the same one that had briefly tried to do Urban to KUBE’s Rhythmic Top 40 in the mid-‘90s. KUBE returned to 93.3 FM in 2018, as streaming showed Hip-Hop’s resurgence and briefly rekindled the “it’s the new rock and roll” discussion. On February 19, the station began stunting, this time sending the format to HD-2. In the just-released January ’22 PPM ratings, KUBE was up 1.4-1.7 in its final full month.

There aren’t a lot of strongholds for younger-leaning Hip-Hop/R&B radio overall right now. It was one of the first formats to show the impact of streaming — not just Spotify but Soundcloud. But other Western markets have seen a similar trajectory. KQKS (KS107.5) Denver was up 1.5-1.7. KKFR Phoenix was up 2.0-2.6. Parents recognize Hip-Hop as again being common currency among teenagers, but ratings don’t yet offer much evidence.

The station that most attests to KUBE’s legacy is rival KHTP (Hot 103.7), doing some form of Hip-Hop and R&B throwbacks since 2013. (For a while, it had Sir Mix-A-Lot as morning host as well.) At the end, KUBE was trying to draw on its heritage as well — billing itself as “No. 1 for Hip-Hop and the Best Throwbacks.” In the Final Listen I took on KUBE’s last day, the 75-minute stretch I heard was about 50% throwbacks, punctuated by three songs apiece from Drake and Doja Cat. Not even much of the Megan Thee Stallion/Saweetie/Latto female rap that has given Hip-Hop new crossover energy was there at the end.

There was ample evidence of Hip-Hop’s mid-’90s/early ’00s reach after this year’s Super Bowl halftime show. I’ve seen plenty of annoyed comments from radio people by now, mostly from those at least a generation older. But the reaction in my Twitter feed was 80% positive, and it was from radio programmers and air talent in every format. During its last week, KUBE drew heavily on that show’s performers. Dr. Dre’s “Forgot About Dre” and Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” both played about 30 times.

I’m finishing this article in Nashville in between sessions of Country Radio Seminar 2022. On the radio landscape, all formats, including seemingly unlikely ones, are linked, but the connection between Classic Hip-Hop and Country is more than chaos theory. The debate about Country’s Hip-Hop flavor stirs anew, as if it never happened, whenever there’s a “Fancy Like” or any phenomenal hit that invokes Hip-Hop even faintly. 

Power 93.3 KUBE SeattleIn the past few years, Country has found itself in roughly the same place with Hip-Hop-influenced music as Mainstream CHR was with Hip-Hop crossovers when KUBE changed in 1991. Detractors felt Top 40 had gone overboard on Hip-Hop and R&B crossovers, but CHR felt sapped without them. The music derided as “Bro Country” eventually gave way to the music derided as “Boyfriend Country.” When it did, programmers and listeners both felt the energy missing. But in the early ’90s, when both KUBE and Country radio surged, tempo and energy were drivers for them both.

Here’s KUBE on its final day, February 18, just before 2 p.m.

  • Drake, “Take Care”
  • Doja Cat f/Gucci Mane, “Like That”
  • Montell Jordan, “This Is How We Do It”
  • T-Pain f/Akon, “Bartender”
  • Drake f/Lil Durk, “Laugh Now Cry Later”
  • 112, “Peaches and Cream”
  • Chingy, “Right Thurr”
  • Lil Nas X, “Montero (Call Me by Your Name)”
  • DMX, “Party Up (Up in Here)”
  • Doja Cat f/Sza, “Kiss Me More”
  • Fugees, “Killing Me Softly”
  • Drake, “Nice for What”
  • Ja Rule f/Ashanti, “Mesmerize”
  • Jack Harlow, “What’s Poppin’”

Share This:

  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Pocket (Opens in new window) Pocket

Comments

Log In

Join Now | Lost Password?

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Sean Ross

Sean Ross

Sean Ross is a radio business researcher, programming consultant, conference speaker, and a veteran of radio trade journalism at Billboard, Radio & Records, M Street Journal, and others. For more than a decade, his weekly writings have been collected in the Ross On Radio newsletter; subscribe for free here. https://tinyurl.com/mhcnx4u

Recent Headlines

98.5 KRXT Rockdale
Featured Story

Station Sales Week Of 2/20

February 20, 2026
Compass Media Networks
Featured Story

Compass Media Promotes Sydney Sperling To Director of Affiliate Sales

February 20, 2026
98 Rock 98.5 KRXQ Sacramento
Featured Story

Paul Marshall Exits As KRXQ Assistant Brand Manager/Morning Host

February 19, 2026
105.7 The Fan WJZ-FM Baltimore
Featured Story

Jason La Canfora Exits Afternoons At 105.7 The Fan Baltimore

February 19, 2026

RadioInsight Daily

RadioInsight Daily

Get RadioInsight Headlines Direct To Your Inbox At 8pm Eastern Daily.

Please wait...

Thank you for sign up!

Newest Jobs

  • Eagle Communications, Inc.

    News Reporter

    Eagle Communications, Inc.
    Hays, KS
    • Full Time
  • Seehafer Broadcasting

    Assistant Operations Manager

    Seehafer Broadcasting
    Manitowoc Wisconsin
    • Full Time
  • Powell Broadcasting

    General Manager

    Powell Broadcasting
    Sioux City, IA
    • Full Time
  • 7 Mountains Media

    Parkersburg Operations Manager

    7 Mountains Media
    Parkersburg, WV
    • Full Time
  • Civic Media Inc

    Reporter

    Civic Media Inc
    Milwaukee, WI
    • Full Time
  • Bonneville International

    Program Director – Sactown Sports, KHTK 1140

    Bonneville International
    Sacramento, CA
    • Full Time
  • About RadioInsight
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

Copyright ©2025 RadioInsight / RadioBB Networks

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

*By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Headlines
    • Format Changes
    • People & Places
    • Station Sales
    • FCC Applications
    • Domain Insight
  • Ratings
    • Nielsen Audio
    • Eastlan Ratings
  • Jobs
    • View Jobs
    • Submit A Job
    • Job Dashboard
  • Sean Ross
  • Subscriptions
    • Subscription Info
  • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Sign Up

Copyright ©2025 RadioInsight / RadioBB Networks

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy Policy.