Not saying Standards wouldn't work in Utica or Syracuse, but the format is a roll of the dice more now than it was ten years ago. It's nowhere near the sure thing it may have been 20 years ago, when Al Hamm's "Music Of Your Life" stations were steady but on the brink of falling off the table. Oldies, especially on FM, really hurt the MOYL stations because it took away the "lower end" of the MOYL ratings success and left MOYL stations with 55+. Oldies offered the Baby Boom generation a format that it loved: Four Tops, Stones, Temptations, Beatles, Elvis, Supremes, Four Seasons. Oldies was a younger version of Music Of Your Life/Standards and an "older" version of Classic Hits.
Classic Hits has about five years of legs before it's forced to feature much more music from the 80s in order to survive and deliver 45-50 year olds. Classic Hits does very well these days, but its primarily a 70s format. Do the math: Playing 35-40 year old songs attracts listeners who are 45-55 years old. Not bad today. Five years from now? Not so much.
Playing songs that are 45 years old puts a station in the Oldies category. Playing songs that are 55 years old is Standards' bailiwick. Listener perception and differentiation get pretty foggy around this point. What's the difference between Standards and Oldies?
Standards is primarily a "Great American Song Book" format: Count Basie, Sinatra, Glenn Miller, Andrews Sisters, Johnny Mathis, Barbra Streisand and the like. Problem is, Standards hits the 65-70 demo. An Oldies/Standards hybrid might be a better approach, offering music centered around 1955-65, which would be the sweet spot of the format. If a listener was 10 in 1955... 65 today. You can see where this is going.
We haven't even touched on the fact that a lot of "older" listeners want to hear their favorite music on something better than a noisy, crackly AM station, preferring FM. Used to be radio people would say, "Hell, those old people don't care if it's AM, they just wanna hear their songs." Maybe that was true twenty or ten years ago, but that kind of logic is less than accurate these days. So if you're thinking of putting Oldies/Standards on an AM, you'd want the audio to sound as clean as possible inside the 5 mv/m contour.
Elvis, Roy Orbison, early Beatles, Four Seasons, Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Dusty Springfield, Neil Diamond, Drifters... all great artists for Oldies/Standards. Play the music/artists that Classic Hits stations won't touch. If a station can sell 55-65 demos and make a profit, the format is viable, at least for about five years. But if it's going to be done, please make it sound good, not like some iPod on life support or worse, somebody's cassette tape collection.