> > > You may be right about which artists are truly country
> and
> >
> > > which ones are not. But in the scheme of things what
> > matters
> > > (and what should matter) to radio is size of audience
> and
> > > the demos various formats attract.
> >
> > unfortunatly i know. we had a classic country here that
> just
> > flipped to smooth jazz..reason given to me by the
> > office..they couldnt sell it..
> > >
> > > I'm not saying there isn't a place for real country. It
> > > could work in some markets, although the demos might
> lean
> > > too old and too male (and possibly too downscale)
> compared
> >
> > > to mainstream country. On the other hand, redneck pop as
>
> > you
> > > call it (not a bad name for it) attracts a larger
> audience
> >
> > > and better demos. Have you seen the screaming women at
> > Kenny
> > > Chesney concerts? Advertisers love to reach that demo
> and
> > > lifegroup.
> > >
> >
> > again unfortunatly you are right...
> >
>
>
> I read your post Jay F yesterday and wanted to think about
> it before I answered and I think I have an idea on the
> upswing...
>
> Country in the last year or so has been changin a little.
> About 4 years ago, country radio was starting to sound more
> like a/c than country and actually pulled some of the core
> listeners away from country (cause it sounded to much like
> pop to them)
>
> Within the last 6 months to year, I've noticed most of the
> country artists who 4 years ago was going pop have added
> more country elements back into their music that the core
> males are slowly coming back from other music such as
> classic rock (plus new artists like Gretchen Wilson are
> making full on country records)but not enough that the
> females who came to country because of the artists and the
> music think it's too Hick country and leave... Country is
> starting to find it's balance again IMO.
>
> Some of the numbers you possibly saw were for classic
> country also.
> One of the elements I have seen come up in my area within
> the last year is the addition of classic country with the
> new country to appeal to both tastes. A lot of 80s that
> hadn't really aged has been added I found most often (such
> as Ronnie Milsap,Alabama,Restless Heart) but others are
> expanding to try to gather more of the older listening
> audience IMO.
> Another side I found to be is weird, is the listener to
> classic country who doesn't like modern country at all. In
> some circles for the younger part of the demo, It's almost
> as an alternative if you will,they will listen to say Merle
> Haggard from the 1960's but hate anything out of Tim or
> Faith. I have found others who share that view who are in
> the olderer part of the demo also, but not for the same
> reasons.
>
> To answer Smashed on the classic country station... Most of
> it's signal was the rural part of the parish (county)
> (compared to other every other station in that area) and I
> never really heard anything about the station in the media.
> Plus Dowdy gave it 6 months to basically grow legs..which it
> seems it didn't. My opinion is the smooth Jazz will be the
> same way..... (I don't know why they didn't decide to go
> back with a/c again)
>
> To answer on the rock, I think numbers have been down lately
> due to quality of the product on rock radio as of late (most
> of it's is starting to sound cookie cutter). Add to that,
> the younger generation getting influenced more by Puff Daddy
> than Poppa roach (Plus who wants to listen to Mom and dad's
> music) and the numbers sink.
> I think Jack-Fm is showing radio that people do like a
> little variety of new and classics if done right, cause
> right now the stations I see in my area increasing are ones
> who have expanded their playlist with classics/new music
> compared to say a year ago... New Rock can easily play on
> classic rock, just gotta do it right...
>
> I am seeing a trend however personally with the younger
> crowd actually picking back up on some of the more
> mainstream rock groups from pop radio (plus IMO,rap is
> starting to get stale with the same stuff as it's last
> movement was 2-3 years ago with east/west coast styles being
> the last big thing nationally If I remember)
>
> Urban's shooting up is due to people listening from pop and
> liking what they hear IMO, But my guess it's more the R&B
> than the Hip-Hop bringing it in (Let me rephrase as true hip
> hop such as 50 cent compared to rap/pop such as Black eyed
> Peas which are big right now)... Other than say
> ludacris,ying yang twins,eminem, and 50 cent most of the
> urban you hear right now is R&B usually on CHR/POP... plus
> add the CHR/Urban stations that are basically aimed more at
> whites and that ends my opinion on urban.
>
> Hope this doesn't boar or offend, but this is what I've been
> seeing personally lately.
>
> RFLA
>
You didn't boar or offend me at all, I found your observations interesting. I think you nailed a lot of what's going on. I always like to get a feel for what's hot and what's not in music and different radio formats. Both radio as well as peoples tastes are in a constant state of change, so the subject is endlessley fascinating to me.
I have thoughts on all the formats you brought up. As for country, I think you are right, it's not quite as AC as it was a few years ago. Some of the songs really have an edge to them, "Hicktown" by Jason Aldean as an example of one that I really like. But it's not all edge, there's a lot of variety in the format right now, something for everyone.