Were those in the '90s or early '00s?KMXV used to do 80’s Memorial Day weekends, and there was a station in Omaha that did an all 80’s format around 20 years ago as “The Mall”.
As someone who only started listening in the '00s (born '92) what was the presence of '80s music like back then? Were there gold tracks on CHR and Hot AC? What format carried it? (80s MJ, Madonna, Journey, ect.)
KMXV did their 80’s Memorial Day weekends in the late 90’s for sure, but not sure what year they started doing them. Also KMAJ~FM did an 80’s at 8 show starting sometime in the late 90’s.Were those in the '90s or early '00s?
1980s CHR music in the 1990s was still there. Only it was pretty much regulated to the Adult Contemporary stations by 1994 before becoming full blown Oldies (excuse me, "Classic Hits") in the 2000s.As someone who only started listening in the '00s (born '92) what was the presence of '80s music like back then? Were there gold tracks on CHR and Hot AC? What format carried it? (80s MJ, Madonna, Journey, ect.)
As someone who only started listening in the '00s (born '92) what was the presence of '80s music like back then? Were there gold tracks on CHR and Hot AC? What format carried it? (80s MJ, Madonna, Journey, ect.)
KMXV did their 80’s Memorial Day weekends in the late 90’s for sure, but not sure what year they started doing them. Also KMAJ~FM did an 80’s at 8 show starting sometime in the late 90’s.
I forgot Mix 93 did 90's at noon, but I generally just listened to them in mornings and Kelly Urich in the afternoons. Do you remember if Z95.7 did any 80's weekends? I don't remember eFM doing any 80's weekends or generally having any 80's songs at all.In the days before the internet, people in the early 90's would occasionally post on FIDONet and in newsgroups asking about the potential of an all-80's format. A common retort was, "We already have an all-80's format. It's called Hot AC!" Hot AC's tended to replace the rap and hard rock in the Top-40 with 80's gold. KSRR-FM "Star 93" in San Antonio even went back into the 70's playing Latin-friendly artists it called "San Antonio Classic." I don't remember other stations really doing that, at least not that early, but, like I said, we didn't have internet back then and couldn't just listen to stations from anywhere. KYIS in Oklahoma City had a brief spell doing the "7 70's at 7:00," but that was a mid-90's stunt that tried to take advantage of the increasing popularity of 70's centric stations. OKC was unlikely to get a 70's centric station as it had fewer stations than most cities of its size, and both 98.9 Kiss FM and Magic 104.1 tried to include the audience that was too old for their normal playlists but too young for KOMA.
CHR's had evolving philosophies on 80's music, but 80's gold as a regular part of the playlist was more common, as you might expect, in the early 90's when there was less 90's gold available. I remember Hot AC's playing 80's gold as recently as 20 years ago. I never thought it worked very well because Hot AC friendly artists like Vanessa Carlton and Michelle Branch didn't really sound like Madonna's early music or other music from 20 years earlier and had little in common with those artists, but station research apparently showed differently. Hot AC always tended to have middle of the pack ratings, especially when competing against CHR's. CHR, though, had problems with sales in the early 90's. The 80's was the decade when the big box retaliers pushed out the smaller operators, and those smaller retailers were some of CHR's better customers. The default audience for CHR has always been younger, and CHR was a format that didn't appeal to very many people over 25 in the early 90's. The led to the sales crunch and stations wanting CHR without being CHR.
By the end of the decade, a handful of stations tried their hands at all-80's formats. Most of them did quite well for a book or two only to quickly burn out. Entercom launched KFBZ 105.3 in Wichita around 2000, and, in its first full book, it became the first station to beat KFDI-FM in the 12+ ratings in years only to quickly level off. That was probably the best result, but the pattern seemed to happen everywhere. As a few other posters mention, 80's music started to gain traction 15-20 years ago as the new classic hits. From what I remember, PPM really helped those classic hits stations and happened to be introduced around the same time the 60's oldies had completely aged out of the money demos.
I don't know when Mix started doing 80's Memorial and Labor Day Weekends, though I know it was doing them in 1997. It also did an 80's lunch. I seem to remember both of those went away around the time e.FM launched in the summer of 2001, but I was already on my way out of KC by that time. I remember, however, that I stopped paying much attention to Mix after e signed on. When I worked at KTXY in Mid-MO, we were still doing a retro lunch in 2005. I remember that going on at least a couple more years, but I don't remember when it stopped. I was at Q106.1 first, and we were going to do the "90's at Noon" as a way to counterprogram to Y107's Retro Lunch, but that was Steve and Dede's baby. Dede was middays at Q106.1 (and its predecessor, Q104) as "Kristie Kelly," but she and Steve moved to Pennsylvania a few weeks after the format change at 106.1. Cosmo and the new operations manager decided the best way to compete against Y107 was to be more, not less, current focused (and to focus on Y107's reputation under Brill Media for a heavy commercial load).
I don't remember KMAJ-FM doing an 80's show, but I know it was airing Delilah by the summer of '98. That summer, I could hear Delilah on 98.1, 97.7 (Omaha), and 107.7. Plus, if I went about 20 miles east, I could hear her on 101.5 KPLA, which replaced a smooth jazz evening show hosted by Lana Trezise with her. Not sure when KMAJ-FM dumped Delilah, but it was one of the last of the Cumulus stations to get rid of her after most of the company's stations signed with Tesh. Seems like Majic 107.7 added Tesh when Rose Diehl volunteered for the company's mass layoffs in '09 and ran him in middays.
I forgot Mix 93 did 90's at noon, but I generally just listened to them in mornings and Kelly Urich in the afternoons. Do you remember if Z95.7 did any 80's weekends? I don't remember eFM doing any 80's weekends or generally having any 80's songs at all.
Also by 1987-1988 a lot of new music started to suck (Milli Vanilli, "We Built This City", etc.), so that led to radio stations and record companies reaching back to older music to fill in the gap, including a lot of songs from the early '80s that were overlooked when first released but still sounded fresh enough to get another shot.The same thing happened when "The Big Chill" factor helped bring 60s music to the forefront in the 80s (titles like Stand By Me and Twist And Shout even made it back to CHR thanks to movie exposure.)
I listened to a bunch of different stations, so I don't remember what music specifically was on E 105-1. I listened to Mix, Z, 102.1 when it was the Zone, 105.1 EFM, KJO-105, The Lazer, The Buzz, a bunch of different stations.I don't remember Z95.7 ever dipping back into the 80's. If anything, it dipped into alternative and modern AC more than it did older cuts.
Sounds like you weren't a regular listener to e 105-1. Its playlist was almost totally 80's.
You will find that the popular of music from one era tends to take a rest before nostalgia brings it back. In the early 90s, you wouldn't have heard much 80s music on CHR, and only the most adult-leaning titles survived on AC (and the then new "Hot AC" format). By the mid-to-late 90s, special "80s lunches" and "80s weekends" started to pop up, especially on AC/Hot AC as the music had been rested and was fresh again. By the early 00s, some stations launched all-80s formats. Some of those evolved into Classic Hits, some fizzled. But eventually 80s material aged into the Oldies format and it evolved into what we now call "Classic Hits."
FYI - the same thing happened in the late 80s/early 90s, when Oldies stations had previously focused on 50s/60s - all-70s features, then all-70s stations popped up, before 70s material started to age into Oldies libraries.
The same thing happened when "The Big Chill" factor helped bring 60s music to the forefront in the 80s (titles like Stand By Me and Twist And Shout even made it back to CHR thanks to movie exposure.)
The same thing happened when American Graffiti and Happy Days helped bring 50s nostalgia back in the 70s.
This is all oversimplified, but you get the point.
I listened to a bunch of different stations, so I don't remember what music specifically was on E 105-1. I listened to Mix, Z, 102.1 when it was the Zone, 105.1 EFM, KJO-105, The Lazer, The Buzz, a bunch of different stations.
Cool! I don't remember anyone on that station, other than Bryan Truta (who now does mornings on KTBG) and Nycki Pace. I think they were teamed up in mornings at one point but I don't remember.E 105-1's positioner was "Retro to Right Now," though, at least early in its run, it was almost all-80's. It could've evolved during the last part of its run, but it only lasted about three years. I don't remember it changing much, and I did listen occasionally since a couple of my former co-workers ended up taking weekend jobs there. I don't remember it ever setting the ratings on fire, but the audience it had was fiercely loyal. Several years after it had left the air, I was driving to Springfield to visit my dad when I saw someone in Lebanon, MO crossing the street in an e1051.fm t-shirt. I'm hard-pressed to think of another time I've seen anyone other than myself wearing a radio station t-shirt in the Lake area!
Cool! I don't remember anyone on that station, other than Bryan Truta (who now does mornings on KTBG) and Nycki Pace. I think they were teamed up in mornings at one point but I don't remember.
In my sixty-some years in radio, I've never seen a record promoter push "older products". While record companies liked to milk big hits and big artists by issuing "greatest hits" collections in the past, they did not promote those songs or compilations to radio, at least in my experience.The fact that the 20-year nostalgia boom began in the 1970s suggests to me that the nostalgia booms from that decade on were, at least in part, manufactured by the music industry to encourage people to purchase more of its older products.
The rock era, and mass commercialization and formatting of music as we know it, didn't begin until the mid-50s, so there really wasn't a solid history for nostalgia to draw upon until those first rock-n-rollers started feeling out of touch with the music of the 70s.While you are correct as far as you go, the replaying of hits basically 20 years (or more) after they were hits started during the 1970s. In fact, during the 1960s, there was no mass desire to play 1940s hits again; nor did that desire come into play during the 1950s to replay the hits of the 1930s. The fact that the 20-year nostalgia boom began in the 1970s suggests to me that the nostalgia booms from that decade on were, at least in part, manufactured by the music industry to encourage people to purchase more of its older products.