How far back do the song-by-song playlist databases maintained by companies like Mediabase go? Is it possible to examine or search through them going as far back as 20 or even 30 years?
Every so often, I recall the handful of key stations I frequented in my youth and the countless songs they once played that, while popular at the time, aren't heard on the air at all anymore -- "oh wow songs," so to speak. And as I get older, I think about how much fun it would be, having the ability to re-discover most of those songs with precise searches like "give me a no-duplicate-entries .csv of title/artist/album/year entries for all songs played on KTWV >= 10 times/month during at least 1 month from 02/14/87 to 12/31/92." But I wonder if such a thing is even possible. Is it?
One reason I'm particularly interested in this subject is that, every so often, I'll find a piece of music in an old aircheck that's so obscure, neither humans nor algorithms can seemingly identify it today. Supposedly all-knowing services like Shazam will fail to recognize it entirely, and even silly tricks like uploading it to Youtube using a throw-away Google account in hopes of earning an intentional copyright strike (and a free song ID in the process) yield nothing.
Take https://files.catbox.moe/0lg0xl.mp4 for example. This is from an ancient VHS tape off my old cable system's public access channel, which was playing KTWV during the morning hours of December 20, 1989. The song that airs after "Know Who You Are" by "Supertramp" is the mystery song in question. I have been unable to identify it despite numerous attempts/inqueries throughout the years. So I've taken to thinking I'll never identify it at all, short of finding some company that actually keeps playlist databases going back decades.
Anyone have any insight on this? The main stations (and accompanying time periods) I've always wanted to somehow acquire song lists for are KTWV (dates above), KZLA (1983-1990), KPWR (1986-1993), and KOST (1983-1993). But in the meantime, it would sure be nice simply being able to identify unobtanium like the track in that video clip above.
Every so often, I recall the handful of key stations I frequented in my youth and the countless songs they once played that, while popular at the time, aren't heard on the air at all anymore -- "oh wow songs," so to speak. And as I get older, I think about how much fun it would be, having the ability to re-discover most of those songs with precise searches like "give me a no-duplicate-entries .csv of title/artist/album/year entries for all songs played on KTWV >= 10 times/month during at least 1 month from 02/14/87 to 12/31/92." But I wonder if such a thing is even possible. Is it?
One reason I'm particularly interested in this subject is that, every so often, I'll find a piece of music in an old aircheck that's so obscure, neither humans nor algorithms can seemingly identify it today. Supposedly all-knowing services like Shazam will fail to recognize it entirely, and even silly tricks like uploading it to Youtube using a throw-away Google account in hopes of earning an intentional copyright strike (and a free song ID in the process) yield nothing.
Take https://files.catbox.moe/0lg0xl.mp4 for example. This is from an ancient VHS tape off my old cable system's public access channel, which was playing KTWV during the morning hours of December 20, 1989. The song that airs after "Know Who You Are" by "Supertramp" is the mystery song in question. I have been unable to identify it despite numerous attempts/inqueries throughout the years. So I've taken to thinking I'll never identify it at all, short of finding some company that actually keeps playlist databases going back decades.
Anyone have any insight on this? The main stations (and accompanying time periods) I've always wanted to somehow acquire song lists for are KTWV (dates above), KZLA (1983-1990), KPWR (1986-1993), and KOST (1983-1993). But in the meantime, it would sure be nice simply being able to identify unobtanium like the track in that video clip above.