More often than not, yes. The MD will typically focus on things like scheduling the logs, loading in music, talking with record reps. The PD will typically have final say on adds/conversions on the playlist.If the two are different, what is the relationship between them. Does the PD get final say as to what songs go on the air?
So does the PD determine the actual songs which make the playlist and the overall "sound."More often than not, yes. The MD will typically focus on things like scheduling the logs, loading in music, talking with record reps. The PD will typically have final say on adds/conversions on the playlist.
If the two are different, what is the relationship between them. Does the PD get final say as to what songs go on the air?
I don't think there's a mystery there. Being a weekend jock wasn't a great job. It didn't pay enough to support yourself, so most had to juggle multiple jobs. In many cases weekend jocks were looking for new full-time work in other markets. If they found it, there was an incentive for them to get to their new job quickly. If that meant skipping a shift to pack the UHaul, so be it.I never could understand it, but finding reliable part-time employees was always difficult. My phone rang frequently on weekends with a PD or APD calling me asking if I could help because a part-timer or two didn’t show up.
I don't think there's a mystery there. Being a weekend jock wasn't a great job. It didn't pay enough to support yourself, so most had to juggle multiple jobs. In many cases weekend jocks were looking for new full-time work in other markets. If they found it, there was an incentive for them to get to their new job quickly. If that meant skipping a shift to pack the UHaul, so be it.
Major market MDs often had one day of the week set aside for phone calls and another for in-person visits.
Every station is a little... or a lot... different. There is no "Title Police".So does the PD determine the actual songs which make the playlist and the overall "sound."
The one time I had a Music Director was when I was programming WERC, a hot AC AM in Birmingham and its CHR FM. We were reporters to Gavin and Hamilton and FMQB, so we got lots of calls. We restricted them as much as we could, but back in the 1970's it was hard to do as there were so many independent labels.Music Directors were necessary in the days when record labels were putting out hundreds of new releases a week and enthusiastically promoting stations. In the days before e-mail, that meant phone calls, and that could be very time-consuming.
That is why we relied on Gavin, R&R, Hamilton and all the other tip sheets. That showed us quite a bit about what songs were getting action, so we were left with just the ones that came that week. Often, we'd select those last minute songs based on how famous the artist was. Big artists won over secondary ones, and secondaries won over unknowns. On those, we'd wait for the more adventurous stations or smaller market stations with no competitor to make adds and then listen again.Especially in markets where the labels had promo reps or where the promo reps could visit on a regular/semi-regular basis, dealing with the record people and listening to the music could pretty much be a fulltime job.
In some cases, it was just one morning or afternoon. There is very little a record promoter can do for you in making a music add decision.Major market MDs often had one day of the week set aside for phone calls and another for in-person visits.
One station that was a competitor in Quito (where there were over 30 full signal local stations) did what today we would call "the morning show" or what the Brits better call "Breakfast Show".I worked at one station where, while we had local DJS.. the music logs came from westwood one, we had very similar to identical logs to the WW1 mainstream network. So I guess westwood one was our MD.
Most small places I've worked the PD was also the MD.
My title here is PD but as the only full time employee, i';m also MD
Their jobs would be to just pass along the Playlist from the President in the big city with orders as to when to play each song, of course, determined by high class research and development.
There is no probably no better example of "a lot different" than WABC vs... well, everybody else back in the days when they played music. There's much more to the story, but you can gain a small bit of insight from the following quote from an article by former assistant PD Glenn Morgan on the hiring of George Michael:Every station is a little... or a lot... different. There is no "Title Police".
Over the years, George did his best to fit in and accept his new surroundings. But WABC was not WFIL. We had more polices, the pressure was enormous, and George did not have the clout he had at WFIL regarding format and what songs would be added to the playlist. Our jocks had to maintain their distance from playlist additions as well as people in the record industry. This was all new territory for George and it frustrated him. Our short playlist with very few records being added as soon as they were released frustrated him even more. George was never totally happy at WABC.