In July 1965, the father-son team of Loren (father) and Terry W. (son) Denbrook, doing business as Denbrook Enterprises, was granted a Federal Communications Commissionconstruction permit to build an FM station in Spokane on 105.7 MHz using the call sign KTWD.[4] KTWD signed on the air on February 23, 1966.
The station's transmitter and studio were located on 610 West Garland Avenue in Spokane, and the station played popular music.[5] KTWD was Spokane's first FM-only commercial station, not co-owned with an AM station. It was also Spokane's first FM stereo station. Terry Denbrook served as the station's chief engineer and station manager. The call letters were Terry W. Denbrook's initials.[6]
KEZE-FM
In 1970, Denbrook Enterprises sold the station to Bellevue Broadcasters, which changed the format to easy listening and the call letters to KEZE-FM.[7] The station used the identification "KEZE, E-Z listening." It was paired with KEZE (1380 AM), which adopted a simulcast of the FM station's beautiful music format.[8]
In 1979, Great American Broadcasting acquired KEZE (AM), switching it to a middle of the road format as KCKO. KEZE-FM was acquired by Kaye-Smith Enterprises.[9] Kaye-Smith already owned Top 40-formatted KJRB, so the FM station flipped to a format that would also bring in young listeners, album-oriented rock, and called itself "Rock 106 - Spokane's Best Rock." In 1989, KJRB and KEZE were acquired by Apollo Broadcasting.[10] Under Apollo, KEZE leaned more toward active rock, with plenty of harder-edged rock acts on its playlist.
The Peak and The Buzzard
On October 20, 1995, the station flipped to Adult Album Alternative (AAA) as KAEP, "105.7 The Peak."[11][12] The former album rock format and KEZE call letters returned to the FM dial at 96.9 on March 4, 1996.
In 2003, 105.7 shifted to active rock, becoming "105.7 The Buzzard", KZBD. In 2008, the station switched back to "105.7 The Peak", but with an alternative rock format instead of AAA. It was also the Spokane home of two syndicated shows, "The Bob & Tom Show" in AM drive time and "Loveline" at night.
Now 105.7 FM
On May 19, 2010, KZBD flipped to a Top 40/CHR format, branded as "Now 105.7 FM." This marked the first time that Spokane had a full-powered Top 40/CHR format since 2005, when KZZU flipped to Adult Top 40. The station added Elvis Duran's syndicated morning show to its lineup on May 24, 2010.[13] Middays featured On Air with Ryan Seacrest, which was added the day of the switch. DJ Kowax hosted afternoons and B-Mega was heard in nights, both local and live.
When KIXZ flipped to Top 40/CHR in March 2012, it picked up both Duran's and Seacrest's shows. Both programs were owned by Clear Channel Communications, which also owned KIXZ. (Clear Channel has since become iHeartMedia, Inc.) On May 8, 2014, KZBD once again became Spokane's only Top 40/CHR when KIXZ returned to country music (they have since switched to alternative as KFOO-FM).
^FM Broadcast Station Construction Permit for KTWD, Spokane, Washington. File Number BPH-4886. Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC. July 9, 1965. Found in National Archives, College Park, Maryland.
^FM Broadcast Station License for KTWD, Spokane, Washington. File Number BLH-3075. Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC. 23 February 1966. Found in National Archives, College Park, Maryland.
^Voluntary Assigned of License for KTWD to Bellevue Broadcasters. File Number BALH-1364. Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC. 7 August 1970. Found in National Archives, College Park, Maryland.