The original 92 KTU had the tri-state area shaking their ass! RIP Paco...one of the best radio DJ"S.. I grew up with this station.. Thank you for the memories.
Thank you for all the good times and great disco music .You gave latinos a voice through out NYC and beyond so for that I salute you .RIP Boriqua you’ve gone home.
@@radiorewinder thanks I remember listening to Paco almost daily but I never knew when he left. One day he was just gone and I forgot which year that was.
@@billbates5475 Radio Rewinder is correct. It was 1984 or early '85(maybe someone out there has the exact day of his last 92.3 FM show)Makes sense since soon after the first KTU of this era went off the air for good. As most of you are aware by the summer of 1985, this station became "K-Rock" for the next 20 years or so. K-Rock was one of the first major stations in America that played the so-called Golden Age of Rock N Roll i.e 1969-1980 full time that later expanded their playlist to play '80's and early '90's as well. Plus of course K-Rock being best known as the home and the start of a legendary run for a controversial new Morning Host named Howard Stern. However in the last few years of Stern's run at 92.3 FM, it revised it's rock format to include a hybird modern Hard Rock/Alternative Rock format i.e Niravana, Pearl Jam, Creed, etc. After Stern left, the station had several different format attempts i.e Hard Rock, Talkradio for then younger adults i.e the Generation X demographic, even a TOP 40/Contemporary Hits Format, etc that failed miserably. 92.3 now plays Alternative/Progressive Rock songs again here in late 2019. That my history lesson for the 92..3 FM station in NYC for the past 45 years or so, class is now dismissed lol.
@@americangiant1003 Thanks for the history lesson. My favorite years were the early eighties. To add to the history they played soft rock in 1977....songs like Carly Simon sang.
The original 92 KTU had the tri-state area shaking their ass! RIP Paco...one of the best radio DJ"S.. I grew up with this station.. Thank you for the memories.
Thank you for all the good times and great disco music .You gave latinos a voice through out NYC and beyond so for that I salute you .RIP Boriqua you’ve gone home.
Paco's Supermixe's The Best For Ever!!!
REST IN PEACE ❤️🙏❤️🙏. WE LOVE PACO....THANK YOU FOR THE BEST DISCO YEARS!!!!!!
I miss Paco. Loved his voice!
God Bless Paco!!! Treasured memories!!!
He was the biggest thing going at the time in NYC!
I remember Paco. He reminded me of Ricardo Montalban. Great days!
That was probably a huge part of popularity. As a then little boy, I thought Paco and Montalban was the same person lol.
I feel nostalgia for this and I wasn't even alive during this time!
I remember "Paco's panties" give aways,lol ! Thanks for the memories.
RIP PACO . Los amos
RIP good sir
Those were cool days thx paco rip
Paco=GOAT.
Greatest
Of
All
Times.
He left ktu in 1984 I was born at the end of that year
I have hours of his shows with the "Latin Rascals" on tape.
Wasn’t this before the flip to rock and roll as K Rock in 1985?
paco
what year was this?
what year was this?
It was either 1984 or 1985
@@radiorewinder thanks I remember listening to Paco almost daily but I never knew when he left. One day he was just gone and I forgot which year that was.
@@billbates5475 Radio Rewinder is correct. It was 1984 or early '85(maybe someone out there has the exact day of his last 92.3 FM show)Makes sense since soon after the first KTU of this era went off the air for good. As most of you are aware by the summer of 1985, this station became "K-Rock" for the next 20 years or so. K-Rock was one of the first major stations in America that played the so-called Golden Age of Rock N Roll i.e 1969-1980 full time that later expanded their playlist to play '80's and early '90's as well.
Plus of course K-Rock being best known as the home and the start of a legendary run for a controversial new Morning Host named Howard Stern. However in the last few years of Stern's run at 92.3 FM, it revised it's rock format to include a hybird modern Hard Rock/Alternative Rock format i.e Niravana, Pearl Jam, Creed, etc.
After Stern left, the station had several different format attempts i.e Hard Rock, Talkradio for then younger adults i.e the Generation X demographic, even a TOP 40/Contemporary Hits Format, etc that failed miserably. 92.3 now plays Alternative/Progressive Rock songs again here in late 2019. That my history lesson for the 92..3 FM station in NYC for the past 45 years or so, class is now dismissed lol.
@@americangiant1003 Thanks for the history lesson. My favorite years were the early eighties. To add to the history they played soft rock in 1977....songs like Carly Simon sang.