The same thing is happening on country radio. Stations can play Garth Brooks, Alan Jackson, Brooks & Dunn, Shania Twain and find receptive ears on listeners who weren't even born when those performers had most or all of their radio hits. It's even crept into the production of many songs, with crisp acoustic guitars, dobro and steel prominent in the arrangements again, just as they were on so many hits during the '90s boom years.The younger demo fascination is with the 90s, not the 80s. So radio stations that program 90s music are the most likely to get good numbers with 18-34s.
Brooks & Dunn will be touring again this summer, and there'll be plenty of 18-34s in the crowd, I'll bet. Kix Brooks will be 67 years old, Ronnie Dunn 69. And Darius Rucker will be touring with them -- he's 55, and his pop work with Hootie & the Blowfish was as '90s as you can get.
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