Is mixshows important anymore
Take a look at the lack of syndicated mix shows available now. It's because the demand disappeared.
Why? The demand disappeared.
I once asked someone about that. Part of it was the expense. But the other part was the experience. You go to a concert, and you have a few drinks, you hang out with your friends, and have a good time. When you remove that aspect, all you have is the music. That's often not enough,
Mixshows on the radio are more of a fad now (like disco was originally) and not a mainstream programming element. It's the constant evolution of the business, and I don't see anything on the horizon that would resurrect them.
Yes. In market #1. I’m sure Z100 still uses Hotmix as well. It’s great that those stations still use mixing, especially having a mixer on staff.Ask Alex Sensation, who is the centerpiece of New York's WSKQ.
That is a very good point. Alex is on a noon shift, not on the weekend and not at night. It is not a dance party or something to “light up“ to. Each of Alex‘s mix segments is themed… he may mix based on a type of music, an era, a type of artist or some other subject. But each segment is original.Ask Alex Sensation, who is the centerpiece of New York's WSKQ.
Centreforce Radio out of London is pretty much entirely mixed live, 24/7, from a real studio:There are still mixshows on in KC on weekends, Club Vibe with DJ Kirby Saturday nights on 107.3, Steve Serrano and another DJ do one on KMXV on either Friday or Saturday nights. Also the Baka Boyz are on KPRS Saturday nights.
www.centreforceradio.com
Was HotMix a syndicated feature from the U.S.? One of my local stations in the UK used to run it on a regular basis back in the late 90s/early 2000s, I always assumed they produced them in-house! The ones they used to use were 10-15 minute mixes, they tended to run one daily just after 5pm.We ran HotMix at our small market CHR/Hot AC on Saturday nights back in the early/mid 2000s for a while. This is back when we were live on weekends. We would run our regular logs with 2-3 specialty golds an hour from 7-10 and then at 10 we would start HotMix. The phones would always die out when HotMix started even though our Saturday night jock was still there doing live cut ins during the show.
One week as an experiment we didn't run it and kept the regular Saturday night logs rolling through midnight. The phones didn't have their usual 10:00 cutoff. Had we not abruptly flipped to a jockless Variety Hits station a few weeks after that, the plan was still to eliminate the mixes, save for a short HotMix cut our PD/PM drive host would use on Friday at 5pm for a 10-15 minute block.
... the other part was the experience. You go to a concert, and you have a few drinks, you hang out with your friends, and have a good time. When you remove that aspect, all you have is the music. That's often not enough,
Thanks for the link and info! What are the other similar London stations?Centreforce Radio out of London is pretty much entirely mixed live, 24/7, from a real studio:
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Centreforce Radio 883 - Global Dance Music Radio Station
Centreforce 883 has grown to be one of the largest independent dance music radio stations globally broadcasting on DAB+, TuneIn Radio and 883TV.www.centreforceradio.com
In weekday daytimes, there's generally a camera in the studio so listeners can watch the DJ mixing in real time. On Sundays they vary things a bit, it's more soul than dance. The format is live mixes with "shout outs" and listener mentions - the music will usually be interrupted a few times per track with the DJ reading out a list of people who have contacted the studio. There are a few very similar stations on the air in London but Centreforce is the big dog in the market.