That’s…not how that works.well the audience is just gonna have to deal with it.
Atlanta has lost 99X twice. If Cumulus wants to have any sort of long term stability with it, they have to be careful and methodical when it comes to newer music.
That’s…not how that works.well the audience is just gonna have to deal with it.
I wouldn’t. If you’re going to do all-classic alt, you can’t ignore punk and new wave (which, if you’ve heard any early airchecks of 99X, they played plenty of the latter when it first started out…though it seems when the relaunch happened, people derided hearing Blondie (‘they’re not alternative!’ they shouted. Oh they definitely were played on alternative in the 80s.)) Alt music didn’t start in ‘91.I'd also steer the station just a little more in a guitar oriented alternative rock direction. I'd scale back the pre-grunge music.
So, the audience tends to have a love for the past djs that helped grow the station they loved back in the 90s and 00s @99X, correct? I heard djs like Leslie Fram and Steve Barnes are beloved in Atlanta due to the music they helped their city discover and love for many years, would they not give those SAME djs trust for spinning new music they do enjoy again? If they only liked the old stuff they discovered from them, then they clearly do not give a crap about the station or the djs that help craft it, and shouldn't be a concern or priority because it's on the audience, and not the djs for being stuck in the past.
As a P1 and frequent streamer (as I’m not in the market), I’ve noticed the playlist has become more balanced. I’m hearing more of a 90s focus, but stretching into the 2000s, though playing a few 80s tracks per hour.99X didn't exist, though, in the 80s. I don't think that era should be eliminated from the playlist, just scaled back.
well the audience is just gonna have to deal with it.
So, the audience tends to have a love for the past djs that helped grow the station they loved back in the 90s and 00s @99X, correct? I heard djs like Leslie Fram and Steve Barnes are beloved in Atlanta due to the music they helped their city discover and love for many years, would they not give those SAME djs trust for spinning new music they do enjoy again?
If they only liked the old stuff they discovered from them, then they clearly do not give a crap about the station or the djs that help craft it, and shouldn't be a concern or priority because it's on the audience, and not the djs for being stuck in the past.
Alternative being stuck in the past is what's killing it more than new music ever will.
There's a not-insignificant number of alt fans who don't like any alt from the late 70s through the 80s (aka punk and new wave).I wouldn’t. If you’re going to do all-classic alt, you can’t ignore punk and new wave (which, if you’ve heard any early airchecks of 99X, they played plenty of the latter when it first started out…though it seems when the relaunch happened, people derided hearing Blondie (‘they’re not alternative!’ they shouted. Oh they definitely were played on alternative in the 80s.)) Alt music didn’t start in ‘91.
An important thing to note that we learned from the constant measurement of the same people in the PPM is that many people have two or even three stations that they alternate in their personal P1 status. This week they listen a bit more to one, less to the others. Next week or so they may listen more to a different one. Mood may be part of it, but also things like your preferred morning show getting into a rut or having its main host on vacation will change the P1-P2 and P3 status of a person's preferred stations.I don’t think you’re quite getting it. Let’s try it from a P1’s POV.
A very nice and precise way of expressing the fragmentation of the genre in the area of currents and the lack of plentiful good mass-appeal currents.By and large, for the most part, new alternative is not resonating very well. There are VERY few consensus currents that the audience as a whole can agree on. (I should know - there aren’t a lot of currents that I personally actually care for.) Until the music improves and a large-scale audience buys into it and loves it wholeheartedly like they did in the 90s (and if research actually backs it up - can’t forget that), currents will likely be very limited on alt.
As a P1 and frequent streamer (as I’m not in the market), I’ve noticed the playlist has become more balanced. I’m hearing more of a 90s focus, but stretching into the 2000s, though playing a few 80s tracks per hour.
How about any of these from last year?I feel like they are close to perfection right now. I am not really sure what more they could do at this point. There are very few new alternative songs that appeal to me. I am enjoying the extremely large playlist of classic alternative songs and the original DJs. Hopefully, adding Steve will be a big part of what the station needs to increase its ratings.
because the audience who don't like the new stuff have nostalgia bias, bias of what THEY believe alternative or rock was, and are picky.You obviously don't understand the point: very few new alt songs are liked by everyone. There are subsets or groups that like each song, but they don't overlap to make most songs truly mass appeal.
And? For a radio station playing most new songs will drive away a portion of the audience. So the only place where there are wide, consensus songs is in library material as nearly none of the newer releases can be played as they are so polarized.because the audience who don't like the new stuff have nostalgia bias, bias of what THEY believe alternative or rock was, and are picky.
It's very likely they have researched this, title by title, and not found it attractive or positive to the largest potential audience group. Alt rock started fragmenting into dissimilar and polarized groups 15 to 18 years ago.I'd probably scale that back by at least one-half and backfill those open slots with music from the 00s and 10s.
because the audience who don't like the new stuff have nostalgia bias, bias of what THEY believe alternative or rock was, and are picky.
| 3.8 | 3.6 | 3.0 | 2.8 | 2.5 | WNNX-FM | 99X |
Well that portion of the audience just wants radio to stay in it's comfort zone and be the status quo that's killing it in the first place, dying out in lame fashion reliving it's glory days, thus repeating the cycle of the boring corporate AOR stations stations that caused new wave stations like KROQ and 91X to birth in the first place.And? For a radio station playing most new songs will drive away a portion of the audience. So the only place where there are wide, consensus songs is in library material as nearly none of the newer releases can be played as they are so polarized.
You are failing to understand that current alternative rock is not a single format... it is at least 3 formats that don't overlap. The problem there is that none of the three (or more) varieties of current based music is big enough to sustain a station.Well that portion of the audience just wants radio to stay in it's comfort zone and be the status quo that's killing it in the first place, dying out in lame fashion reliving it's glory days, thus repeating the cycle of the boring corporate AOR stations stations that caused new wave stations like KROQ and 91X to birth in the first place.
Alternative needs to stop being lame and out of touch and be daring again, there's artists out there to do it, it's worth taking the risk to appeal to a newer/younger audience or people who used to listen but listen to newer artists that are beloved thanks to the internet (like, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, or hundreds of other bands that have a good audience and sell out places that I see zero radio stations even TRY to play because they're playing the more corporate stuff people hate, which got us into this mess in the first place).