When T.I. dropped a new track produced by Dr. Dre in May, Peter Parker was immediately on top of it. He downloaded the song himself, uploaded it into the Go 95.3 FM database, got on the microphone and hyped it, then pressed the button to make Twin Cities radio listeners some of the first in the country to hear the song.
"I didn't have to call up a corporate office in Atlanta or New York and get anybody's permission," Parker bragged the next day, sitting in his station's sound booth in Minneapolis 22 hours and three more spins later.
"I've been a professional radio DJ for 15 years, and I'm finally in a position to execute my own vision without being controlled by anyone."
That's partly because — for now, anyway — there is no one else.
On air, Parker is a one-man army leading the charge for Minnesota's first modern all-hip-hop station after a six-year lull in the format. He's the hardest working man in Twin Cities radio, serving as the station's only full-time jockey as well as its music director, event organizer and social-media hype man.
Go 95.3 debuted in January as the rap-loving kid sister of Go 96.3, the two-year-old modern-rock station that also airs the Minnesota Twins' game broadcasts. Both Go stations and the baseball team are owned by the Pohlad family.
In a convoluted chain of format changes that recall the Twins' trades in recent years, the Pohlads killed off the last local modern hip-hop station, B-96, in 2010 to make room for what eventually became Go 96.3. Six years later, the Pohlad operation decided that the Twin Cities could use a hip-hop outlet after all.
A half-year into its run, people are putting aside their skepticism and taking Go 95.3 seriously. Its ratings are modestly impressive for a start-up station, especially among listeners ages 18-25. Its general buzz within the local hip-hop community is growing by the minute and the tweet.