My point is Uptown Funk or anything post 2010 is too new for the format.
Send the format police.
Uptown Funk is being played on numerous classic hits stations, not just WLS.
My point is Uptown Funk or anything post 2010 is too new for the format.
Current based formats are another whole animal. Many country tunes crossed over in the 70s and early 80s. Crossovers from other other formats was part of what Top 40 or CHR great. And 20 years from now, some of those songs..Morgan Wallen etc will find their way into the Clasic Hits format.Adele actually started in alternative and moved to the other formats. Other of her songs were played there. My point is Uptown Funk or anything post 2010 is too new for the format. It will certainly fit in another 5 to 10 years.
But that was then, this is now. CHR has become just another niche format, focused on a specific genre of music. It's been 40 years since it was a sampling of the biggest hits of all (well, most) genres.Many country tunes crossed over in the 70s and early 80s. Crossovers from other other formats was part of what Top 40 or CHR great. And 20 years from now, some of those songs..Morgan Wallen etc will find their way into the Clasic Hits format.
There don't need to be many to perpetuate the format, just 500 songs or so spread over 25 years.But that was then, this is now. CHR has become just another niche format, focused on a specific genre of music. It's been 40 years since it was a sampling of the biggest hits of all (well, most) genres.
I won't likely still be here in 20 years, but there are so few consensus hits today that a broadbased classic hits format isn't gonna have much to choose from.
But that was then, this is now. CHR has become just another niche format, focused on a specific genre of music. It's been 40 years since it was a sampling of the biggest hits of all (well, most) genres.
there are so few consensus hits today that a broadbased classic hits format isn't gonna have much to choose from.
But the charts move like sludge compared to the '80s. Songs take the better part of the year to peak, then linger as recurrents for another year. So there are fewer songs reaching listeners' ears -- at least on radio.Depends on the format, but pop radio is built on consensus hits. There may be fewer now than 40 years ago, but when you have Shaboozey topping three different format charts, that's a consensus hit. My concern is how long will people remember these songs, because there is so much more music now than in the 80s.
But the charts move like sludge compared to the '80s. Songs take the better part of the year to peak,
And perhaps that’s why other people are running the show. Because they understand this isn’t 2000 anymore.But female leaning songs like Adele and Bruno Mars doesnt make sense to me.
95% of the music 94.7 plays is still very much in the "center lane" of the Classic Hits format for the year 2025, I would contend. I am in my middle 40s, and I find much of the playlist too old for my personal liking, as is true with most Classic Hits stations. I find nearly all Classic Hits stations to be too reliant on the 80s and not nearly deep enough on the 90s.
We are reliant on the 80's for the core of the format because that was the last decade where CHR was inclusive of multiple genres.
Is the cross-pollination of hip-hop, rock and country an attempt to prompt radio to return to its past something-for-everyone approach, or a way to ensure that fans of any or all of the genres can stream their favorite artists -- and interesting new ones -- from a variety of streaming channels and services? I'm beginning to think the end game is the latter, with radio eventually being out of the picture entirely or used strictly for talk, news and sports programming.I'll add that it was the last decade when record labels made music for radio. Radio was a key and critical part of their marketing plan. That began to change in the 90s. The two biggest record labels were owned by companies that also owned broadcasting: RCA & NBC, Columbia & CBS.) Both of those labels changed owners at the end of the 80s. In fact by the 2000s, both of those labels came together under Sony. Corporately, music became more international.
The other thing that helped the 80s was MTV. The channel helped further the impressions the music made with viewers, because they could now SEE the artists in ways they couldn't with radio. Once we got into the 90s, even MTV started to change, partly due to the nature of the music. They could see that the audience for the boy bands wasn't the same as the audience for MTV Raps. That wasn't a problem in the 80s. As the 90s continued, MTV played less music and began to create their own reality TV shows. Music really began to balkanize during the 90s.
Is the cross-pollination of hip-hop, rock and country an attempt to prompt radio to return to its past something-for-everyone approach, or a way to ensure that fans of any or all of the genres can stream their favorite artists -- and interesting new ones -- from a variety of streaming channels and services?
So what happens to the Classic Hits format a decade from now? Fragmentation didn't end when the 90s ended.As has been stated in other threads -- not only by myself but by others, including David (Eduardo) Gleason and Mike Hagerty -- there is a reason why it is incredibly difficult to "go deep" into the 90s. That was when CHR fragmented into mainstream, alternative, rock, and rhythmic-focused variations. Listener preferences for songs from that decade is dependent on which "flavor" of CHR they listened to when those songs were currents, and as a result there are very, very few consensus favorites.
Example: Play "Feels Like Teen Spirit" to a listener that wants to hear "Vogue" and that listener will go elsewhere. And vice versa.
We are reliant on the 80's for the core of the format because that was the last decade where CHR was inclusive of multiple genres. As a result, the same polarized reaction does not occur and so there are considerably more consensus favorites.
And that "center line" is what keeps the format relatively high in the ratings, so it's not likely to change anytime soon.
So what happens to the Classic Hits format a decade from now? Fragmentation didn't end when the 90s ended.
The solution is to pick the genre lane that's the best fit for a particular station's market. In the case of WOGL in Philly, they've chosen rhythmic crossover for the backbone of its 90s category.
One thing I've been saying is that I can see a day when there are no traditional formats as we have known them. Just various groupings of music built around percentages in order to reach a particular target demographic. We're almost there now. Stations may use the broad terminology like adult contemporary or classic hits, but they're really just brands for songs that aim at a specific audience.
There'll be a point where that 80s music is no longer a strong draw among advertiser coveted demos. I think that inflection point will happen by 2030.