I don't like the Dead, myself, but their absence from classic rock radio is just one of many issues I have with today's version of the format.
I
definitely wish there was a market for classic rock from 1965-1979 or thereabouts, without the need to interject more 80s oriented stuff like Scorpions and Guns N Roses in every few breaks. I swear every time I turn on The Rocket, it's friggin' November Rain or Sweet Child O' Mine. Fine play-worthy songs, these, but not after Buffalo Springfield or Cream, PLEASE. Ugh. (Also, I have a personal and undying hatred of GNR, but please don't hate me for that. I know I'm a minority of one on that issue.)
Dunno about online specifically, but at least Sirius has retained Classic Vinyl, leaving newer classic rock from the late 70s to early 90s for its own station. I really think the two eras of rock need to be segregated. The old farts like my dad bristle at the 80s arena rock mixed in with classics, and no doubt the younger hard rock types go bananas when they hear The Allman Brothers after Def Leppard.
To almost sorta return to HMN, I tried listening to their HD feed as I drove from P'cola today to Mobile via Foley, and even out there in rural Baldwin County it was impossible. You'd think it would at least be reasonably stable from Lillian to Elberta, where one can more or less 'see' the tower itself, but nope. Choppy as bay water on a stormy day. TK 101 wasn't much better. I like the alt. rock feed on HD-2 but it's sub-AM quality, while the main channel's HD has the treble turned to 11. I wish I knew why these station's HD broadcasts performed so poorly, while KSJ and BLX are rock solid everywhere, with Rocket not far behind… Now if CC would put the WNTM-AM feed on 99.9-2 and put REAL classic rock on 96.1-2, I'd be a real happy camper.
