R
Radio_Realist
Guest
You wouldn't know this, since you don't live here in Pittsburgh, but the local PBS TV station is having huge success pushing a do-wop revival. Their do-wop revival concerts are packed. From the shots when the camera pans the audience, the do-wop fans are NOT just 60-somethings. The sales of do-wop collection CD's also indicates that there's a sizeable market of people who weren't around when do-wop was new, but who have come to really like that kind of music when they discovered it.
I don't know if that is a nationwide trend or just a 'Burgh thing. But, since this is the Pittsburgh board, it doesn't really matter much if there is a large, young audience of do-wop fans in any other city. What matters is that there is such an audience here.
> So, even though stations that played that music has seen
> their listeners pass into their 60s (meaning little or no
> advertiser support), they should just keep playin' the old
> Oldies-type music and lose big money?
>
>
> >
> > It's a shame what the oldies format has become. Hardly
> any
> > Motown. No Doo Wop. No surf music. Just tired 70's rock.
>
> > It's like Classic Rock Lite. Uggh.
> >
>
I don't know if that is a nationwide trend or just a 'Burgh thing. But, since this is the Pittsburgh board, it doesn't really matter much if there is a large, young audience of do-wop fans in any other city. What matters is that there is such an audience here.
> So, even though stations that played that music has seen
> their listeners pass into their 60s (meaning little or no
> advertiser support), they should just keep playin' the old
> Oldies-type music and lose big money?
>
>
> >
> > It's a shame what the oldies format has become. Hardly
> any
> > Motown. No Doo Wop. No surf music. Just tired 70's rock.
>
> > It's like Classic Rock Lite. Uggh.
> >
>