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The new K rock will fall apart....worst idea since radio....wahtever
That would be an improvement !Ny is missing an alternative rocker and Krock SHOULD be it.Is NY a rocker?erwin33 said:Maybe a flip to a more K-ROCK2 format or a replace from this HD2 format to FM.
Tony Santiago said:Just trying to think back to a recent past.
Didn't K-Rock do a modern/alternative rock format years ago?
frozenfiresb said:I think the best thing to do would be to tweak RXP to make it more of an alternative that plays new and old (something like WFNX in Boston) and K-ROCK should be an edgy active rock station (like WCCC in Hartford CT). Right now, K-ROCK is even worse than WYSP's "rock you grew up with".![]()
p_herring said:To quickly sum it up:
K-Rock flipped to "Alternative" in 1996. It was more of a wallpaper alternative (Bush, Chili Peppers, Nirvana, Pearl Jam) but still functioned as basically a KROQ East Coast with more of a focus on Active Rock tracks. In 1998, they branded themselves "Rock Radio" and started adding more active rock cuts (they played stuff of Van Halen III, Metallica and would have "retro rock" cuts like AC/DC, Led Zeppelin) intermixed with the modern rock tracks that, during the 1998-early 1999 point were skewing more towards Modern AC/Pop (Sugar Ray, Goo Goo Dolls, Semisonic, etc.) This led to a rather confusing hybrid as listeners who were fans of the heavier-edged bands were likely to get turned off by some of the more alternative/pop acts. In late 2001, they finally ditched the Retro Rock and started acting SLIGHTLY more like what most stations who report as "Alternative" act like. Ratings continued to suffer even in 2004 when they brought Robert Cross in. In 2005 they made the dismal flip to "Great Rock. Period" which is pretty close to the wonderful format they have now putting The Killers right next to Pink Floyd. It bombed, they became Free-FM, that bombed, they tried to re-brand K-Rock and that bombed again.
In my opinion, K-Rock sounded pretty decent right before the fateful switch to "Great Rock Period." There was a fairly decent (by K-Rock standards) mix of old and new stuff, including some classic alternative. They were also heavy on the "rock block weekends." That didn't last long, however, and we all know the rest of the story...
Hardrocker9 said:In my opinion, K-Rock sounded pretty decent right before the fateful switch to "Great Rock Period." There was a fairly decent (by K-Rock standards) mix of old and new stuff, including some classic alternative. They were also heavy on the "rock block weekends." That didn't last long, however, and we all know the rest of the story...
I agree, this was probably my second favorite time for 92.3, they seemed focused on the alternative music more. Was this about the same time that Long Island was blessed with its own Alternative 107.1 the box? I think K-rock branded themselves "New York's New Music Alternative", just as 107.1 was Long Islands new music alternative. Wonder why the box didn't stick with it and went back to LIR? The box was more edgy.