The station signed on the air on July 1, 1967; 57 years ago (1967-07-01).[3] Its original call sign was KSJN-FM. It was owned by Saint John's University, with the call letters standing for St. John. It was powered at 16,500 watts, a fraction of its current output. The university also owned a station near its home base of St. Cloud, 90.1 KSJR-FM. Trying to run two radio stations was difficult for the Catholic university. It transferred both stations to a non-profit organization that later became Minnesota Public Radio.
In 1980, Minnesota Public Radio purchased an AM radio station at 1330 kHz, WLOL. MPR changed its call sign to KSJN and used it to simulcast its FM sister station, 91.1 KSJN-FM. MPR was already making plans to run two different networks of programming when it bought the AM frequency. In that era, 91.1 KSJN-FM had to serve two audiences at the same time. It offered NPR news and information shows in morning and afternoon drive time, with mostly classical music in middays, nights and weekends.
KNOW-FM
In 1989, KSJN-AM changed its call letters to KNOW, to stand for the word "know." It began airing an expanded lineup of NPR programming, including shows that were not available on the FM's schedule. Two years later, MPR bought 99.5 FM-–the former WLOL-FM. With that acquisition, MPR moved the KNOW call letters and informational programming to 91.1, while the KSJN-FM call sign moved to 99.5 as a full-time classical music station. The AM signal was later spun off into a for-profit subsidiary to help fund the public broadcaster, and was eventually sold. That station has since returned to using the WLOL call sign and it airs Catholicreligious programming.
With MPR's two FM frequencies in the Minneapolis-St. Paul market, listeners can choose between news and information on 91.1 KNOW-FM and classical music on 99.5 KSJN-FM. A third station in the area was also acquired by MPR, 89.3 KCMP in Northfield, which plays adult album alternative (Triple-A) music.
Quadrophonic stereo and call sign history
In the 1970s, KSJN 91.1 FM and WLOL (99.5 FM) cooperated in an experimental use of quadraphonicstereo, with each station carrying two channels of audio. However, this "quadcast" had some undesirable "ping-pong" effects. As KNOW now mainly broadcasts spoken word programming, the station broadcasts in analog, using monaural audio, to help extend the station's coverage.
The call sign KNOW was once used by an adult contemporary radio station in Austin, Texas, at 1490 AM. The station signed off in 1989 after operating for 50 years. The KNOW call letters were also used by an oldies station in Lufkin, Texas, at 1420 AM. A fire forced it to shut down in 1987.