hornet61 said:
I can't believe that you all really swallow this crap 4,000 songs = 3500 stiffs...Since when is a top40 hit a stiff, and the term obscure , only means that person never heard it.
If you are going to take umbrage at my statement, at least get the terminology and nomenclature right.
A stiff is a song people do not want to hear, that they don't like. They may not want to hear it because they never liked it, or because of "developed dislike" because they used to like it but no longer do... often called "burn." For whatever reason, a stiff is
a song that is not playable on the radio today.
The average Oldies station plays 528 a day, your 500 song library repeats with-in 24hrs , boy that really programming.
We were talking about AC. AC's nearly always have a percentage of currents and recurrents, which will play multiple times a day and where somewhere around 30 to 50 songs will make up a third or more of the total weekly spins. So the remaining 350 to 400 songs on an AC will play, were they all evenly rotated, about every 50 hours. And, if properly rotated, the average PPM lsitener will hear them about once every 10 to 15 days.
There are very, very few viable oldies stations left in the US. The classic hits stations, in the model of WOGL, WCBS-FM, KRTH and KOOL-FM, seem to have libraries in the 800 song range exclusive of tunes played in specialty shows in less listened to dayparts.
By the way, it is tough for a station to average more than 12 songs an hour, and that is just under 300 total spins a day, not 528 songs a day. You seem to think that a station can play 22 songs an hour! How about the commercials, the promos, the DJ liners, and the fact that the average length of a song is not 2:45 but more like 3:30 to 4:00.
My point with whitburn is to prove that there are over 4,000 quality cuts over the period of 1965-1995.........If you can't comprehend that point, i'm better of talking to the wall.
Have a snit... no, have two, they are small.
Of the 4000 songs, there are a considerable number that got play because of factors other than their hittiness. We're talking Joe Isgro here.
And there are many that are burnt out, which nearly nobody wants to hear any more. I am embarassed that I ever listened to anything by the 1910 Fruitgum Company. I don't want to hear the Carpenters and Osmonds ever again. I will wretch if I hear Ballad of the Green Berets or Nel Blu di Pinto di Blu (Volare) or Simon Says and on and on. Those songs, while they charted, are stiffs today and unplayable.
You are confusing a radio station with a museum.
Key statement "Over the Years Tested" well after 40 years
By "over the years" I mean over the last couple of years. Stations test, each time they do so, lots of songs they don't play to see if they are playable, always looking for the opportunity to add a tune or ten to replace others that burnt out or are too old to be demographically suitable.
And you forget that radio is a business... there is a fuzzy barrier somewhere in the late 60's that makes most songs that are any older unacceptable as they appeal principally to people over 55, an unsalable demolgraphic.
And, again, we were talking about AC and not oldies. There is a big difference.
These same listeners are tired of those same 500 songs. This is a waste of my time , I'm outta here.
The vast and enormous majority of listeners are not tired of the consensus-mandated big hits. And they want to hear them often...