Wow, someone who believes the same way! Oldies is where the money is. http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,87516.0.html
Keeping things in perspecitve, Slim Whitman sold a lot of albums via late-night tv in the early 80s. I don't recall country stations jumping on that bandwagon.firepoint525 said:I should mention that I recently saw a Time-Life infomercial hosted by Bobby Rydell pitching Cds of the songs of the late '50s and early '60s. Generally, a lot of the teen idol stuff, dance crazes, and doo wop. From the first generation of rock and roll up until right before the British invasion. If they're still selling it on TV, there must still be a market for it. But I should point out that most of the people in this infomercial appeared to be about my mother's age!
This infomercial I saw was at 6:30 in the evening, before that generation goes to bed! ;D And it was an assorted artists collection.Oldbones said:Keeping things in perspecitve, Slim Whitman sold a lot of albums via late-night tv in the early 80s. I don't recall country stations jumping on that bandwagon.firepoint525 said:I should mention that I recently saw a Time-Life infomercial hosted by Bobby Rydell pitching Cds of the songs of the late '50s and early '60s. Generally, a lot of the teen idol stuff, dance crazes, and doo wop. From the first generation of rock and roll up until right before the British invasion. If they're still selling it on TV, there must still be a market for it. But I should point out that most of the people in this infomercial appeared to be about my mother's age!
My kind of tunes, thanks, I'll check it out.radiobop said:Hey, guys, check out my internet stations: Radio Bop (www.radiobop.com) playing 50s/early 60s Rock 'n Roll ("Your Never-Ending Nonstop Sock Hop!") with everything charting on the Billboard Top 40 from 1955-1965 in our playlist...playing pre-Rock 'n Roll era pop/R&B/country charted hits from 1944-1954
Harold Levine
Program Director
radiobop said:Hey, guys, check out my internet stations: Radio Bop (www.radiobop.com) playing 50s/early 60s Rock 'n Roll
FRR said:Rock without a lot of talk.
amfmsw said:Yes, in 1966 I was 10, and listening to my stations, buying the Rascals 45's, but also listening to my older brothers' Buddy Holly, Harptones, Rays, Bobby Rydell, Del Vikings, and more. As long as it was Rock, I listened. #22, I agree to the point that the rotation of10 these songs is a science, but the choice of 10000 top 40 songs down to 3only 300 over and over and over and over is not science. It's stupidity.