Last "holdouts" in 1996? Last I knew, KAHM was *still* beautiful music in Prescott AZ...neither rain, nor pandemic, nor declaration of war can stop that station from continuing its heritage. Even though the Cesar Chavez Foundation owns it now, it has never changed format.
Even though Beautiful Music has been gone for 25-30 years in a vast majority of America, there are a couple of exceptions left on terrestrial radio. WGCY in Illinois is another, but with no webstream.
Adult Contemporary has morphed several times over the decades as well. At this point, you could call it CHR-Lite with a Little '80s Thrown In. A current 35-year-old soccer mom would love the rhythmic appeal of AC. A 55-year-old turns it out and listens to Classic Hits instead. Of course, exceptions apply with Adult Contemporary stations - some lean towards CHR-Lite, some are a mix, some lean towards gold/classic songs - but not many anymore. There's a station in Arkansas, KBVA, that leans towards 1970s and early '80s soft songs. Not a format you will often hear in major markets, and if there are, it's tested hits, more tighter than small-town radio, and often with some 2010s or 2020-21 songs here and there.
I wish the 'New Adult Contemporary' format got a little more traction, but eventually, those stations (like KTWV) went to contemporary SJ. Not a lot of stations out there playing Basia, Toni Childs, Bonnie Raitt (songs not called 'Something to Talk About'), B-sides of Steely Dan, Melody Gardot, Michael Franks, non-'Tom's Diner' Suzanne Vega, later Paul Carrack, etc. anymore. I assume a playlist under these artists would be considered 'classic AAA' nowadays. I still have all my airchecks I taped of Sierra Wave 92.5 in Bishop before they went to Alternative, and hope to put them up somewhere (Archive?) soon. I loved the NAC-type blend they had outside of the morning show and newscasts. I guess like with SJ, reviving NAC would appeal to an older audience that isn't in the target demo for advertising anymore.
Even though Beautiful Music has been gone for 25-30 years in a vast majority of America, there are a couple of exceptions left on terrestrial radio. WGCY in Illinois is another, but with no webstream.
Adult Contemporary has morphed several times over the decades as well. At this point, you could call it CHR-Lite with a Little '80s Thrown In. A current 35-year-old soccer mom would love the rhythmic appeal of AC. A 55-year-old turns it out and listens to Classic Hits instead. Of course, exceptions apply with Adult Contemporary stations - some lean towards CHR-Lite, some are a mix, some lean towards gold/classic songs - but not many anymore. There's a station in Arkansas, KBVA, that leans towards 1970s and early '80s soft songs. Not a format you will often hear in major markets, and if there are, it's tested hits, more tighter than small-town radio, and often with some 2010s or 2020-21 songs here and there.
I wish the 'New Adult Contemporary' format got a little more traction, but eventually, those stations (like KTWV) went to contemporary SJ. Not a lot of stations out there playing Basia, Toni Childs, Bonnie Raitt (songs not called 'Something to Talk About'), B-sides of Steely Dan, Melody Gardot, Michael Franks, non-'Tom's Diner' Suzanne Vega, later Paul Carrack, etc. anymore. I assume a playlist under these artists would be considered 'classic AAA' nowadays. I still have all my airchecks I taped of Sierra Wave 92.5 in Bishop before they went to Alternative, and hope to put them up somewhere (Archive?) soon. I loved the NAC-type blend they had outside of the morning show and newscasts. I guess like with SJ, reviving NAC would appeal to an older audience that isn't in the target demo for advertising anymore.