Kevin L. Sealy said:
It is a proven fact that Rock is not a very popular format in NYC, especially if we have more than two rock stations serving the area.
Twenty five yerars ago we had WNEW-FM, WPLJ and in the summer of 1982 WAPP wasa born. A year later WPLJ became a Top 40 on June 30th.
After WPLJ dropped out of rock, New York hasn't had three successful rock formatted stations. When we had three, one failed and switched.WNEW-FM lost its battle with WAXQ-1043.
Thanks,
Kevin L. Sealy
There was a time approximately 10 years ago, when K-Rock was Alternative (and sounded like a good streamlined major market Alternative, like sister station KROQ in LA), WAXQ was a Hard Rocker for those with edgier tastes, and even WHTZ was in on it by going heavy on Modern Rock tracks. At the time, the market was saturated with current rock and it was inevitable that some stations would fail with competition like this.
A few years later, K-Rock lost their focus and became a jumbled mess of a station. No one that liked the station in the mid '90s could bear to listen to this dreadful hybrid of frat boy music (Limp Bizkit, Linkin Park), forklift driver rock (Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith) and only the safest rock acts of the '90s (Nirvana, Pearl Jam). WHTZ had reverted back to a straight-up CHR presentation, throwing its weight behind the once-again burgeoning bubblegum movement. And WAXQ? They were full-on trucker rock, 24/7. But they managed to trump their very similar sounding competition, WNEW - the only difference between the two stations was that 'NEW managed to throw in about 5 or 10 currents.
Fast forward to the present. K-Rock, after an ill-advised attempt to completely co-opt the sound of its fallen comrade WNEW as "K-Rock: Great Rock Period", became a Hot Talker in Free-FM ... nevermind the fact that the format crashed and burned as a successor to 'NEW on 102.7, and continues to disappoint to this day. WHTZ still plays the sounds that are popular with the kids today, which are basically self-absorbed pop (Pussycat Dolls, Gwen Stefani) and "I'm richer than you" hip hop (Ludacris, Jibbs and a slew of "Young" rappers). And WAXQ continues to slam the same 200 or so songs into the ground that they have played ever since the format switch. There is no other Rock station in town, not even one that plays any Currents whatsoever. Would you like to hear Disturbed, Korn or System Of A Down? How about The Strokes, Muse or Radiohead? Well then, you're out of luck - the programmers in NYC could care less about folks like you. If you love soft rock or new-school bling-obsessed hip hop, though, you can consider the George Washington Bridge and the Lincoln Tunnel as the gateways to Heaven.
NYC needs at least one station that plays current-based rock music - either Active, Alternative, or some permutation thereof. Just keep it from sounding like the awful mess that was K-Rock, which not only had terrible selection but played those same songs to death - they kept things as tight as your average "hit music" station, for crying out loud! I guarantee that this will perform better than Free, Jack or Fresh. CBS needs to realize that K-Rock fell out of favor not because of the format, but because of the way it was managed. There are other stations out there that could be doing better (*cough* WPLJ *cough*) - maybe they ought to consider a format change.