I’ll check them out. Thank you!1100 WGPA in Bethlehem, PA calls its music format "Ameripolitan".
This maybe a bit premature to say but looking over the playlist I feel like I struck gold. THANK YOU SOOO MUCH! 😂1100 WGPA in Bethlehem, PA calls its music format "Ameripolitan".
I just recently found out about the genre.'Countrypolitan'
I honestly haven't heard that term in decades.
I discovered Lee Hazelwood, Eddy Arnold, Ray Price and other great singers from the period listening to American standards/beautiful music stations. So I want a direct source to discover other hidden gems.This isn't what you're looking for but serenade-radio.com (standards) plays a lot of Jim Reeves and that sort of thing. It's surprising how much country-sounding music the stations plays.
Is definitely NOT “Ameripolitan“. Completely different genre.'Countrypolitan'
I honestly haven't heard that term in decades.
Although this station is great it’s not what I’m looking for. “Ameripolitan” is completely different from “Countrypolitan”. I’ll still keep WGPA in rotation. It’s one of the better stations out there.1100 WGPA in Bethlehem, PA calls its music format "Ameripolitan".
Very true, but the opportunities to blur genre boundaries are greater now than they've been in decades. All indications are that Gen Z, with TikTok, YouTube, and other platforms, are discovering tunes they like and start boosting them regardless of how the older folks would categorize them.'Countrypolitan'
I honestly haven't heard that term in decades.
That’s not exclusive to music. Gen z and people in general are blurring information which is very troubling.Very true, but the opportunities to blur genre boundaries are greater now than they've been in decades. All indications are that Gen Z, with TikTok, YouTube, and other platforms, are discovering tunes they like and start boosting them regardless of how the older folks would categorize them.
As another example, I've never heard Liveline, but I've read much of what Mason Kelter has written, which seems very much in-line with this phenomenon. It could be that the era of rigidly enforced, siloed formatic boundaries is coming to a close. The PDs who think they can conduct business the way PDs did in 1985 are in for a rude awakening, I believe.
WMOT in Nashville plays Americans which overlaps with countrypolitan. Also, KKXA in suburban Seattle plays lots of good country from the 60s, 70s, and 80s.I heard "Born to Lose" by Ray Charles on a 50s/60s oldies station yesterday.
Another country song was "Wake Up Little Susie" which is quite different.
Correction Above: WMOT plays Americana.WMOT in Nashville plays Americans which overlaps with countrypolitan. Also, KKXA in suburban Seattle plays lots of good country from the 60s, 70s, and 80s.
This is yet another reason not to rely on AI to tell you things.people in general are blurring information which is very troubling.
It’s a good genre to open up the market just like what ‘indigo’ is doing now.Even in its heyday, the "countrypolitan" sound was only one element of most country formats, especially after the mid-'70s, when artists like Willie Nelson and Emmylou Harris started to make twangier, more organic country music acceptable even in "sophisticated" Northern markets. Of course, stations in the South and Midwest were playing those Ray Price and Jim Reeves hits along with the more rural songs.
Thanks for this but I’m primarily looking for stations that are heavy on 50’s/60’s music.Now, if you can locate affiliates of this 24/7 music format. KXEZ-FM The Possum is an affiliate, but they no longer stream.
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