We have been doing this for about 50 years now.
Actually, since music radio was invented around 1951 in Omaha with Todd Storz' first Top 40 station, music stations have done research by checking record sales of 45's and jukebox spins. But when 45 sales declined and jukeboxes went out of fashion, we had to come up with a new system. By as early as 1975 a couple of programmers in Phoenix and San Diego and Miami were doing primitive call-out. By 1980 it was tabulated on early S-100 bus computers. And early in the 70's the Auditorium Music Test became the way to test library songs.If everyone in the business had that attitude there would have never been Top 40 radio.
That's sounds like the attitude the big three had before the Japanese auto makers decimated Detroit.
Not counting the covid bouce when folks had to return to work has radio listenership gone up?
I am not saying do away with testing. This is just a "check" for tune out factors. It might be a song, or an announcer bit, newscast, traffic report. Especially in the top makers, in a competitive demo a 10th point can move you from 4th to 5th. If an agency is only buying the top 4 stations in a demo it will not care that you are only a tenth of a point from being #4. Your still #5.
Only 18 days? Are certain days removed from the 28 day period?
Because of my exposure to several music industry workers while in highschool (Springfield TN. just north of Nashville) and crushed dreams of becoming a songwriter / performer, I listen to music differently than most folks. There are artists in Nashville that talent wise should have been major stars like Gene Cotten RIP. The music industry really is a
If I spend ten minutes in a store which (illegally, but that's not the point) has the radio on for background music, the PPM will count that as my "listening" as well. Again, when I left the store the timing was not based on what was playing at the time.
LOL. Of course, it is a 28 day, 4 week cycle.Only 18 days? Are certain days removed from the 28 day period?
Interesting thread, but don't CHRs play stuff that old still? I think even Z100 spins Complicated by Avril Lavigne. It seems like the flow of time has kind of slowed down on most formats, and oldies used to add stuff newer than what they are doing now.
Some historical points:Interesting thread, but don't CHRs play stuff that old still? I think even Z100 spins Complicated by Avril Lavigne. It seems like the flow of time has kind of slowed down on most formats, and oldies used to add stuff newer than what they are doing now.
Interesting points. It seems like CHRs which leaned Hot AC used to go back 15-20+ years, but in recent years, it seems more common. But interesting the early top 40s did not go back at all.Some historical points:
From its inception in 1961 to the mid-60's, most Top 40 stations did not play any non-currents.
Then the mid-60's saw big stations like KHJ and on down the list adding "gold" cuts. But currents that faded out were dropped. Move another decade ahead, and we started having big-when-current songs move to a lighter rotation as "recurrents".
So, from the 70's on, Top 40, now called CHR, was playing songs 8, 10, 12 years old. So if you were a teen in the 90's, you likely heard a bunch of 8'0's songs. That means that even if a person was just in grade school when a song was a current, they likely grew up hearing it as a gold category song as they grew up.
Me too! WCBS-FM was the station that I don’t listen to anymore. I stopped listening to the station back on March 29th when Race Taylor was my favorite, and it was the final time I listened to until I flipped the following Monday and listen to Mike McGann on WLML’s “Legends 100.3” from down in South Florida and he does a great job taking over Race Taylor’s time slot. He plays great music like Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Tony Bennett, Peggy Lee, Nat King Cole, and more. Plus, they throw in some Bobby Darin stuff in during his later years before “If I Were A Carpenter” in 1966, and some other ones that I have never heard of before.I have started to like a couple of their stations.
Interesting points. It seems like CHRs which leaned Hot AC used to go back 15-20+ years, but in recent years, it seems more common. But interesting the early top 40s did not go back at all.
There's a very logical reason for that. If the early top-40s were to play gold, it would have been Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, and Perry Como, Never would have been accepted by the audience.
Even hip-hop music, which is considered new is 50 years old.
At least some of them would. The 1961 doo-wop song "Those Oldies but Goodies (Remind Me of You)", which popularized the term "Oldies", wasn't singing about rock'n'roll, which by then was only a few years old. It was singing about the big band and crooner music of the '30s and '40s.There's a very logical reason for that. If the early top-40s were to play gold, it would have been Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, and Perry Como, Never would have been accepted by the audience.