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Telltale signs of an imminent format change?

There are some absolutely huge hits in the 60's, including 6 #1 songs and 16 top 10 songs.

The 60s hits were initially promoted by his movies. Then he got married, moved from LA back to Memphis, and then had the 1968 revival with Suspicious Minds, Kentucky Rain, and of course Burning Love. The latter hits were crossover between pop and country.
 
The 60s hits were initially promoted by his movies.

Which didn't necessarily make them bad songs. Lennon and McCartney wrote "A Hard Day's Night," "I Should Have Known Better" and several other well-known Beatles songs for their first movie, and I don't run into too many Beatles buffs downgrading them for that. Are you suggesting that songs like "Viva Las Vegas" and "Follow That Dream" would have been ignored by the record-buying public and radio if they weren't used in a movie?
 
I think the "some" Semoochie was referring to, tongue firmly in cheek, are the Elvis "purists" who maintain that he never recorded anything worth listening to after his stint in the Army. But you, of course, are right. From "Return to Sender" to "Can't Help Falling in Love" to "Kentucky Rain," the '60s were an excellent decade for the King, and those songs and many more were legitimate hits.
You read that perfectly. That's exactly what I meant!
 
Are you suggesting that songs like "Viva Las Vegas" and "Follow That Dream" would have been ignored by the record-buying public and radio if they weren't used in a movie?

Not at all. But they benefited from that unique platform at a time when his career was starting to trend older
 
I was a member of the "Elvis generation". By the time I graduated from high school ('62) he was largely over the hill except for some hangers-on females who didn't mind the extra pounds and put up with his ballads. He could have sung the Burl Ives songbook and those females would still have swooned. Most of the people my age had moved on several years ago.
 


Let's keep our personal taste from making offensive statements.

Many people who love the K-love format think classic rock or hip hop or reggaeton or CHR are "horrible" and they simply don't listen without the need to offend those who do like that kind of music or the formats that play them.

I apologize there are some good religious songs like here I am to worship but I just am not a fan of how they say that donating to their religious station will bring you blessings and money but your point is definitely noted in that regard.
 
Remember the brouhaha in the late '80s (I think it was) when they announced that they were not going to play anymore Elvis? Seems like they had to backtrack from that one rather quickly at the time.

I think it was probably the early 80's when that happened. They eventually went to news/talk when FM 100 became the primary top 40 or CHR station, and in the late 80's RKO sold WHBQ to Dr. George Flinn, who changed to oldies and eventually sports talk in the 90's, which they still are now.
 
I apologize there are some good religious songs like here I am to worship but I just am not a fan of how they say that donating to their religious station will bring you blessings and money but your point is definitely noted in that regard.

You're thinking of Word of Faith preachers. K-LOVE asks for donations to keep stations going, but not in a give to get type scheme like WOF.
 
and in the late 80's RKO sold WHBQ to Dr. George Flinn, who changed to oldies and eventually sports talk in the 90's, which they still are now.
I'm thinking that this is when it was. This was also about the time when WHBQ made the very strange (and extremely short-lived) decision to play "clean" heavy metal (in other words, nothing derogatory) in the evenings in the late '80s. (Any kind of music on AM would have been in trouble by then.) It seemed like they were looking to see if anything would "stick" before they finally went to sports.
 
I know of a station that mysteriously burned to the ground right after a format change back in the early '80s. No arrests were ever made (that I was aware of), but arson was highly suspected.

Or it was the most insanely over-the-top promotional stunt ever.

"WZQF's new format is HOT! I mean REALLY HOT! So hot that we're literally ON FIRE!"
 
Or it was the most insanely over-the-top promotional stunt ever.
"WZQF's new format is HOT! I mean REALLY HOT! So hot that we're literally ON FIRE!"
I didn't mention it here, but they also had bomb threats right after they returned to the air (three months later). That station is still country to this day, but has not been continuously so since then.
 
I'm thinking that this is when it was. This was also about the time when WHBQ made the very strange (and extremely short-lived) decision to play "clean" heavy metal (in other words, nothing derogatory) in the evenings in the late '80s. (Any kind of music on AM would have been in trouble by then.) It seemed like they were looking to see if anything would "stick" before they finally went to sports.

I seem to remember WHBQ did country for a year or two in the early 90's, also. By the time I got to Memphis for college, where I only ended up spending one semester, it was sports. Yes, I did actually check the AM band once-in-awhile back then! I actually had music tastes that were older and more eclectic than most of my peers, though FM 100 was still about my third choice at the time.
 
I seem to remember WHBQ did country for a year or two in the early 90's, also. By the time I got to Memphis for college, where I only ended up spending one semester, it was sports. Yes, I did actually check the AM band once-in-awhile back then! I actually had music tastes that were older and more eclectic than most of my peers, though FM 100 was still about my third choice at the time.
This would seem plausible, as music-playing formats on AM gradually skewed older throughout the '80s, until music on AM wasn't really viable anymore. I worked at some of those hangers-on music-playing AM stations in the early '90s, and I believe that all of them have either flipped to some form of talk since then, or have added FM translators, or have signed off altogether.
 
I'm thinking that this is when it was. This was also about the time when WHBQ made the very strange (and extremely short-lived) decision to play "clean" heavy metal (in other words, nothing derogatory) in the evenings in the late '80s. (Any kind of music on AM would have been in trouble by then.) It seemed like they were looking to see if anything would "stick" before they finally went to sports.

You might be right if it was during the oldies period after Flinn took over.
 
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