After two months of silence, Memphis-based Flinn Broadcasting's WJXN now has classic hip-hop. The station is now nicknamed Hot 100.9.
After two months of silence, Memphis-based Flinn Broadcasting's WJXN now has classic hip-hop. The station is now nicknamed Hot 100.9.
Do we really need anymore "urban" stations? 90.1, 90.5, 94.3, 1240, 95.5, 97.7, 99.7, 99.1, 970, 103.5, 1300, 1150, 1370, 100.5, 100.9, 107.5 !
Satellite delivered classic hip-hop format from Westwood One - songs from the 80's and 90's. Direct competition for B-Day 99.1 - be interesting to see what happens over the next few months.
RFB
technicality nit picking here... unless im mistaken, classic hip hop is delivered via Storq, WW'1s voicetrack service uploaded directly to local computers.. voicetracks, music, everything is sitting on a local computer
technicality nit picking here... unless im mistaken, classic hip hop is delivered via Storq, WW'1s voicetrack service uploaded directly to local computers.. voicetracks, music, everything is sitting on a local computer
You really mean "African American targeted stations", don't you? The stations you list range from Hip Hop to Urban to Urban AC to Gospel, and represent the broad range of formats that target predominantly Black audiences.
Since the metro is 50% African American, and there are 52 stations (including translators and LPFM operations) in the metro, having 16 specifically targeting those residents is actually a low percentage. In fact, 5 of the top 6 stations in 12+ are African American targeted, not surprising considering that there are fewer stations competing for that listener group than for the smaller "white" listener segment.
The only thing about having too many similar stations is that it will split the audience too thin.
I recall the early black-oriented stations' format being referred to as "race music." Somewhere along the way, some equally unfortunate synonyms showed up, like "Harlem Hit Parade," and "Ebony Radio " (1950s stations here in Mobile/Pensacola used that moniker). In the following decade, "r&b" and "soul" became the nom du jour.
I see nothing "similar" between a hip-hop station on one side and a gospel station at the other. There is a considerable degree of variety even between the Urban and Urban A/C stations.
Long ago (maybe not long enough!) stations appealing to "Negroes" were described as playing "race music". Fortunately, those terms are not used and even repudiated today. But their usage shows the lack of understanding of people of African American heritage who may like anything from jazz to classical to reggae and rap.
Those terms were as ignorant as saying WLSJ and WMSI play "white music". No race and no ethnic group all like exactly the same things in music or anything else.
In the market I worked in for 25 years, we have about 16 or so Spanish language stations. I was constantly amazed that people would say "why do you need 16 stations all doing the same thing?" when Spanish is a language, not a format.
Just too much competition.
Do they play public enemy, ice t , ice cube??? Or top 40 old school urban?
So far, I've heard only hip-hop from the '90s and 2000-2009 on Hot 100.9.