When the music changes, so does the dance...

On a January night in Houston, Texas in 1972, a young boy discovered the other half of the radio. Moving the dial just right of center he heard a familiar sound – Boogie Woogie Rock and Roll. He listened to song after song from the same artist, no commercials, no DJ, and then no music – dead air. He waited and waited then suddenly a loud vinyl-meets-needle sound scratched across his room and a newly enlightenedLogos/42kk1t1.jpg radio personality was heard to say, “Whoa, *cough* this is… KLOL… Mother’s Family Radio… it’s twelve thirty three…here’s some more of Deep Purple’s Machine Head.” As the next song began it came clear they were actually going to play this entire album. He fell asleep that night to Space Truckin’, Yes' Fragile and Zeppelin's IV.

The next morning at Sharpstown Jr. High he understood what those bumper stickers on the binders were all about. He was thirteen. He wore Levi’s 505 super bells, Dingo boots and a C.P.O. jacket. That day he danced a new dance.


When there's a buck involved...

When the AM station owners came into possession of a FM license they didn't quite know what to do witLogos/KNUS_hippie_logo.jpgh it. They had been fighting the FCC to allow them to simply rebroadcast the AM feed on the FM frequency, but to no avail. Record companies would routinely send in albums to stations and when the AM Program Director deemed it not Top 40 the FM station got them. The first Houston FM station playing this new Album Oriented format was KAUM.



It was said that the transmission signal was so weak the station had to instruct listeners on how to rig up a proper antenna. In 1970 KLOL went on the air with The Who's I'm Free. They started to get listeners: people were calling in, promotional events attended, advertisers signing up for spots. And that meant money. Logos/kaum1972.jpgBefore all this the station manger’s responsibility was to stay on the air. Keep the dirty words to a minimum and say the call-letters every thirty minutes. But now they had to keep the ratings up, keep the advertisers happy – more, more, more. So they employed the AM model with play lists, rotational matrices, news and weather. It worked. They made tons of cash. Gone were the albums, gone were the black artists, and gone were the cool DJ's. But if it was after midnight it was pretty wide open. In the mid- to late- seventies popular music exploded into many directions. There was Disco, Country, Logos/lols.gifPunk, Progressive Rock, New Wave and Glam. The radio stations didn’t know what to do so they pushed the AM model further into the Top 40 Rock genre. 97 Rock came and took many loyal KLOL listeners away. Outlaw Radio was the last effort to save Rock in Houston. KLOL would glom on to anything that sounded like Old School. Why do you think Billy Squire had a career?


Why we do this...

We pay tribute to this frame of mind. To the sweet-spot of Rock. To something of our own. There is no market for this anymore, so let's take it back underground where it began. Our music is free. Download all you want. Come and see us live - no cover. We do it for us, if you dig it - cool.


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MFR is not in your face but rather somewhere near your Auerbach's plexus or the Spiral valves of Heister  - there is still some confusion on this matter.