Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:
Kevin L. Sealy said:
Has anyone forgotton what the WNEW call signs meant? There are those of us who are still alive (especially second generation WNEW listeners) that there was a WNEW-AM on 1130 that has a history that can't be matched with exeption of WOR.
WNEW-FM has its own legacy. But to bring back the WNEW callsigns to 102.7FM, the station should bill itself WNEW-FM and leave the WNEW call letters reserved for the station that gave us the "Make Believe Ballroom".
But if rock is returned to 102.7FM and the WNEW call letters, bring back Dave Herman, Pete Fornatale, Dennis Elsas, Richard Neer and Pat St. John if they're all available.
Thanks,
Kevin L. Sealy
I agree with Kevin. New York's best set of call-letters were WNEW and WNEW-FM. 11-three-0, now WBBR, had a legacy that no station could ever match. Even this writer, living in suburban Boston, Massachusetts in the 1970's (as a teen) knew about WNEW thanks in part due to its' killer 50,000 watt signal up and down the Northeast coast. I also knew that WNEW-FM was one of the most-influential FM rock stations around, just like WBCN/Boston, WXRT/Chicago and more. I remember many rock albums in the 70's had liner notes from several 'NEW-FM jocks giving their "seal-of-approval" of the group and their music.
Could WNEW-FM make a resurgence today on 102.7 ? You bet! Since the end of the rock era on 102.7 back in the 90's, the replacements of WNEW-FM have "not-exactly" met with universal success. The "FM Talk", the "Blinks" (man was that a
dog!), the Christmas stint and finally the "Fresh" bit have been poor substitutes for the station that used to be "
Where Rock Lives". No doubt, any return to WNEW-FM will never be exactly what "once was". BUT, it could be the start of something new (no pun intended). Apparently, the HD2 version of WNEW-FM is getting some notice, mainly thanks to the Internet stream. 101.9 WRXP will never be a true competitor, at least in its'
current state. WAXQ ("Q-104.3") is doing what it does
best, playing Classic Rock almost exclusively. A
new WNEW-FM could do well in including the rock titles that made the music so popular in the first place AND also include some music from "up-and-coming" acts who would respect the Classic Rock genre. Keep the "liner cards" to a minimum and let the personalities (and include some of the original jocks) be themselves in true WNEW-FM fashion. Get some in studio guests once and a while and most of all, let it be fun. True, the WNEW-FM call-letters have been absent from the New York airwaves for sometime now. But, they still have some valuable recall ability. And let's face it, anything on 102.7 FM would be an improvement from what has occupied it now for the past 10 years.
Cheers,
Peter Q. George (K1XRB)
Whitman, Massachusetts
This is pretty ridiculous. People are posting on pure emotion and ignoring some realities. First off, Fresh is hardly a "dog." It may not be your cup of tea or mine, but it has a certain target audience that it sticks to and seems to be doing well with. It's not in Lite FM territory, but it's a station that seems to be doing fairly well and CBS is probably happy with its performance. Just because you or some other posters may not like the station (I personally cringe at their "Fresh" jingles), doesn't automatically make the station a failure. It also doesn't automatically mean that a return to rock on 102.7 would automatically be successful. If anything, when looking at WNEW's ratings in its last years as a rock station, they were nothing to be impressed about (Fresh's ratings are probably better).
As for recall...let's not forget that many of us here are "radio geeks" and paid more attention than the average person to different stations, call letters, etc. Whether or not you knew about WNEW in New England in the 1970s is absolutely irrelevant to radio realities today.
Including the rock titles that made WNEW popular as well as new up and coming music? That sounds like either a) Q104.3 (which does play some new music and many cuts from the 90s as well) or b) the train wreck that is RXP, with its mish-mash of rock from the 60s to today. Copying option a would merely lead to a split of the audience with Q104.3 (and the suburban classic rockers), and copying b would just be pathetic, when looking at RXP's ratings.
I do think a rock station leaning new and with a AAA-ish tilt can potentially succeed, but the music has to be *very* focused. I also think that it would have the same chance of succeeding (or failing) whether or not it adopts the WNEW branding or is on 102.7 or not.
It's nice to talk about heritage and history. It's important to celebrate those things and keep their memories alive. But there's also a lot of potential of destroying that heritage by reviving call letters and imaging, and putting it on the market as some kind of return to the past. Especially when the advertising world is kind of glutted with that kind of thing right now. Realistically, what could a revived WNEW-FM attract? A 2 share? I doubt it. This was not a station that spent a lot of time in NY's Top 10, as WCBS-FM did. This was mostly a fringe station that, when it became popular, was seen as a sell-out, causing some DJs like Vinny to leave because he couldn't have fun any more. And the fact is that most of the legendary air staff are either dead or unwilling to risk their own personal heritage. Why would Pete Fornatale go back to a big commercial radio station? Wouldn't that hurt his credibility?
The bigger problem is what music do you play? The WCBS-FM listeners argue about that all day. How much 80s music do you play on a 60s/70s station? With regards to WNEW, how many times do you play Freebird and Stairway to Heaven? At what point do you play the Beastie Boys? Green Day? Lenny Kravitz? I'm just asking. Do those audiences mesh? They didn't mesh 15 years ago, so why should they mesh now? There's a thread theer about K-Rock's music being all over the board. But that's kind of what they have to do in order to balance all the individual tastes in music. WNEW-FM would run into that same wall. It worked better when WNEW-FM didn't have to compete against WPLJ, or even WAPP, because it could take more chances, and the audience would stick with them. A revived station wouldn't have that advantage.
The thought I have in talking about heritage is that how relevant is it in the 21st century? Does heritage matter now? Because as great as it is to celebrate the past, radio is an entity that has to exist and get its funding in the present.
EXACTLY! At some point, one has to wonder what "heritage" really means. WNEW was not exactly a huge ratings success, especially in its last years. It may have had a dedicated audience, but not a particularly large one...and it's certainly an audience that, in 10 years since WNEW was last on the air, has probably waned. It would probably also be split between Q104.3, stations like WFUV (where many of the ex-WNEW DJ's live on), suburban stations like The Peak, and of course RXP, not to mention internet/satellite radio, which would go far deeper into the music those devoted rock fans want to hear and which would never be heard on any commercial reincarnation of WNEW, like it or not.
WNEW wasn't cracking a 2 share in the 90's when it left the airwaves. My bet is that it would hover in RXP-KRock territory if it's brought back....and bringing back the old DJ's as well? Pricey pricey. I don't see CBS taking that sort of a step.
Yes, and how many of those stations still resemble anything close to an "oldies" or "classic hits" (as you prefer) almost 40 years later?
Whether or not those stations are still carrying the oldies or classic hits format is absolutely irrelevant when discussing which stations "invented" the format. How many original Top 40 stations are still around? Can we say that Z100 "invented" Top 40 radio, because it's still around while, say, Musicradio WABC is not? Once again emotion is getting in the way of an objective discussion.