bigjohnson said:
Why is there 3 or 4 different variations of the pop/ac charts, yet forever there has never been an off shoot of the country chart?
Actually they've tried many times, and Billboard has variations of the country chart with a bluegrass chart and an Americana chart. Plus the Americana Music Association has its own chart. There's a Texas music chart amd loads of other charts available.
But the simple answer to your question is the audience isn't big enough to make it work. The only reason country music is as big and popular as it is now is because it remains a unified format. And within the unified format, you have all the variations represented, from outlaws to pop/country to rock/country to traditional to cowboy to garage country to even bluegrass country. It's all there are you can see them on the chart now. You can play Cross Canadian Ragweed or you can play The Lost Trailers. They sound about the same, but the Lost Trailers have a bit more muscle behind them.
As for playing the "tired old stuff from the same tired old people," you need to look at this week's country chart. More than one-third of the artists on the airplay chart are on their first album. Folks like Luke Bryan or Julianna Hough or Chuck Wicks or Bucky Covington. Lots of them come with additional marketing musle from having done a reality TV show or some kind of national platform.
And in defense of people like George Strait, what's wrong with hearing the same kind of thing from someone we love? I don't see a problem with that. Or Alan Jackson or Brooks & Dunn. None of them are reinventing the wheel. Merle Haggard stuck to a formula and it served him well for 30 years.
The interesting thing about country as a format now is there's no shortage of artists. No one is going away, and there are dozens of new people trying to push their way on the airwaves. When you have someone willing to make radio visits and play live for your listeners, what's the point in looking basically outside the format to alternative country for artists who aren't as motivated? Is their music that much better that it's worth not playing someone your listeners already know?
That's obviously a local decision. If you can do more by playing unknown music by unknown artists, more power to you. The rest of us have a different battle to fight.