The station was one of the first radio stations to operate on the FM band when it officially signed on using the frequency of 91.7 on December 5, 1946.2 Its primary benefactor was George Allan Hancock. It operated out the Hancock Foundation building on the USC campus and broadcast from a 250 foot tower above the building.3
In the 1970s the station adopted a general public radio format. On April 2, 1973 new station manager Wally Smith oversaw the return to the all classical station. In 1976 the station's transmitter was placed on Lookout Mountain (34°06′34″N 118°23′26″W / 34.109444°N 118.390556°W / 34.109444; -118.390556 (KUSC alternate transmitter on Lookout Mountain))4 in Laurel Canyon, above Hollywood. In 1993 a tower was erected on Mount Harvard near Mount Wilson.5 In 1996 Smith left the station after changing the format to talk, classical, jazz, folk and world music (he would go on to develop WPBB).
In 2010 it moved its broadcast studio to the USC Building in downtown Los Angeles.6
In February 2014, public radio station KCRW of Santa Monica announced that it would buy the Santa Barbara Foundation's classical station KDB (FM) 93.7 in Santa Barbara for $1 million.7 The transaction will allow KCRW to begin using KQSC, USC's current repeater station in Santa Barbara, as a repeater for KCRW's programming, while transferring KUSC's classical programming from KQSC to KDB, thus perpetuating KDB's role as Santa Barbara's classical station. The legacy KDB call letters have been retained. In 2022, KUSC rebranded as Classical California KUSC. In February 2025, KUSC announced plans to combine programming with KDFC in San Francisco.8
Notable local programming includes:9
Management helped establish the nationwide Classical 24 network and also supervised Virginia's WMRA network before taking up leadership at KUSC.
The station holds three pledge drive periods annually to help support operational costs, each occurring in a ten day period.
Notes:
"Classical KUSC Our Mission". University of Southern California. Retrieved November 28, 2016. http://kusc.org/culture/our-mission/ ↩
"5 Dec 1946, 21 - Valley Times at". Newspapers.com. December 5, 1946. Retrieved June 5, 2022. https://www.newspapers.com/image/580312451/?terms=KUSC ↩
"The Story of Classical KUSC". https://www.kusc.org/our-story ↩
"FM Query Results – KUSC". fcc.gov. Retrieved November 5, 2020. https://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/fmq?call=KUSC#n10001 ↩
KUSC Annual Report 2017 kusc.org Retrieved August 3, 2023 https://www.kusc.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/KUSC-Annual-Report-2017.pdf ↩
Engel, Allison. "Classical KUSC to Operate Santa Barbara Classical Station". University of Southern California. Retrieved July 1, 2017. http://www.kusc.org/culture/santa-barbara/classical-kusc-to-operate-santa-barbara-classical-station/ ↩
"L.A.'s classical KUSC will merge programming with San Francisco sister station". Los Angeles Times. February 12, 2025. Retrieved February 20, 2025. https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2025-02-12/classical-radio-station-kusc-will-merge-signal-with-sister-station-in-san-francisco ↩
"Schedule". University of Southern California. Retrieved October 1, 2018. http://www.kusc.org/schedule/ ↩
KDSC is non-directional (fcc.gov). Coverage pattern is not circular due to mountains to the NE which block line-of-sight FM transmissions. Any interference with the 91.1 (XETRA-FM) in Mexico goes both ways and is caused by a phenomenon called 'ducting'. Ducting occurs most often along coastal areas, particularly during spring and fall when temperature inversions occur. Ducting causes VHF signals to travel farther than normal. All VHF signals experience periodic interference from this phenomenon. (FM is in the VHF band just above TV channel 6.) /wiki/Omnidirectional_antenna ↩