2Son said:Out of all due respect John, isn't EVERYTHING obscure for the masses until it gets played on the radio? How do you think people actually get to know songs? If you only played songs that everyone already knew, you wouldn't be playing new songs, right? So how do you explain CHR playing new songs?
Only in AAA did we listen to every track on a CD and pick out which songs to play. Every other format I've worked in we play what's worked to radio.
What does a station look for in a song to add?
- crossover from another format
- it's worked in the clubs first
- it's a cover of something that the audience already knows (country artists love to cover pop hits because they're instant adds)
- it's in a movie or a trailer first
- it's in a commercial
- it sounds like something else that's currently hot
- there's a guest artist singing backing vocals
and my favorite...
- if you add these three crappy songs for a few weeks, the label will let you have a track act for your station concert
CHR, in turn, will try to bring back records that stiffed three years earlier that sound like something that's currently hot when they don't like what's currently being worked. In any event, you surround new music with familiar music and pound the hell out of it. If it catches on, you keep playing it, and if it doesn't, you try something else. But the preference is that someone else breaks the song for you, whether it be in a TV show or movie soundtrack, club, or crossover hit and then you jump on the trend and act like you've been there all along. It's all smoke and mirrors in CHR.
In country, artists will go from town to town playing acoustic sets for stations to get exposure and airplay. We had The Band Perry playing our festival 3 years straight before they hit it big with If I Die Young. There's a more direct relationship between the artists and radio than in other formats.