I prefer music on AM when it's done properly. I just happen to like being able to hear music for long distances, and still have good signals. For example I'd love to be able to drive 75 mph / 120 km/h heading west across northern Canada on the summer solstice, from sunrise(3-4am) to sunset(10-11pm), listening to one AM music station whose tower is too far to even get a grandfathered superpower FM on top of its tower by tropo (the Southern California coast type that Scott Fybush has mentioned previously when I've mentioned my regular 212-mile reception of KVYB) - without it ever fading out enough so that if the volume is set similar to the front row at a Disney-sponsored concert (or similar), the radio noise would ever be audible with the road noise in the car.
It would help if the FCC would get their act together and go after all of these noisemakers in the AM band. BTW recently I looked at the FCC part 15 (unlicensed) rules for unintentional radiators (100s sections) vs intentional radiators (mostly 200s sections, possibly others, don't remember atm), and noticed that the general limits (109, 209) were the same in both cases. IMO, I'd like to see the unintentional radiator limits decreased so that, for example when using a 0.1 Hz bandwidth (or whatever QRSSSSSS CW or PSK31 would be), the signal is at least 60dB below natural wintertime/auroral (whichever is lowest) atmospheric noise measured at the exterior surface of the device with any user-servicable cover removed. I'd be ok with seeing intentional radiator limits increased, though (especially the non-wideband ones, relative to the typical use of that frequency range - for example FMs with their 200 kHz wide channels (part 15 IBOC, if it's even possible, would still have the current limit) would be increased (maybe similar to what 27 MHz or 13.56 MHz gets now) and AM with up to 20kHz audio response & stereo would get up to a watt or two (input into the antenna, allowing for a little extra for transmission line losses), and antennas would be something between 15 meters (with the transmission line and ground not included) and no more than 200 feet high (to avoid FAA requirements).
Also my main computer's down (looking at getting replacement parts, haven't decided what all yet but that's a topic for somewhere else) but somewhere I have some airchecks of Radio Disney's L.A. outlet, KDIS, when they were C-Quam, recorded from an SRF-42 I had (and may still have, but is misplaced and/or non-functional now). Someday I hope to be able to split them into songs (I hate scoped airchecks btw) or at least segments, and upload some of them.