> > Milwaukee checking in... when it flipped a year ago,
> WQBW's
> > billboards and promos did call it "Rock of '80s." There
> are
> > still a few of the old billboards around, but the new
> > billboards around Milwaukee have the positioner
> "Milwaukee's
> > Classic Rock" in the place where "Rock of '80s" was.
> > They're definitely downplaying the "80's" positoner.
> > Interestingly, our Classic HITS station, WKLH, flipped to
> > Classic Rock this year, too, so we have two stations that
> > promote themselves as Classic Rock now.
> >
> Has The Milwaukee Brew's music evolved much since it
> started? If so, how?
>
> Also, do you think being located in the "Beer Capital" might
> have accounted for part of the sucsess of a station with
> that positioner? Is (or was) that connection specically
> promoted beyond the natural mental connection?
>
> Re the fact that you've now got two stations positioned as
> Classic Rock: One thing worth noting is that (and correct
> me if I'm wrong), Milwaukee had lacked a true Classic Rock
> for years. WKLH, which was a dominant rock-based station
> until the Brew came along, was Classic Hits (although I
> believe it hardened its sound some in later years).
>
WKLH has been a classic rock station for years. They called it 'classic hits' to widen the listener base. Otherwise, it's tons of Pink Floyd, Zeppelin and Doors. The jocks come from rock backgrounds.
I live in Milwaukee, and little changed in the playlist when they started calling themselves 'classic rock'. Brew changed from "Rock Of '80's" to "Milwaukee's Classic Rock", and now the insipid "Everything... Rock of '80's and more" in response to a repositioning by KLH's sister station, 102.9 The Hog (formerly active rocker Lazer 103), which uses the moniker "Everything That Rocks". The Hog's playlist is basically hard rock from the 70's on up, including newer stuff like Audioslave. The only ballads I've heard are "Dream On" and "Mama I'm Coming Home". <P ID="signature">______________
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