M
mountaineer
Guest
Great Training Ground!
Backtiming IS almost a lost art--since most music fomatted stations today don't use network newscasts... so don't have to meet them. But the people doing talk radio still need to be able to talk their way up, huh?
Hey, something about this WIYQ thread that struck me is how small-town stations like that were terrific places to learn. Youngsters could cut their teeth in an environment that wasn't so pressurized--they could afford to make mistakes and learn from those mistakes.
Today, so many small-town stations are automated and/or networked that there are very few opportunities for kids to learn, anymore. If you can't get started in towns like Ebensburg and Huntingdon, where can you? Not sure many of us oldsters would make it in today's radio world.
Anyway, it was great to hear them reminiscing about getting their chops down at a place that was able to allow them to do it.
> > backtiming a true radio skill........always a high five
> when you back timed a cold ending song into the id...we used
> abc contemportary radio for years always backtiming to
> 54:30.......we had a BT category songs with long fades, al
> stewarts time passages some pablo cruise etc........england
> dan was a favorite...well a lost art form.....to those
> seemless net joins...let's raise a glass of stout.....
>
Backtiming IS almost a lost art--since most music fomatted stations today don't use network newscasts... so don't have to meet them. But the people doing talk radio still need to be able to talk their way up, huh?
Hey, something about this WIYQ thread that struck me is how small-town stations like that were terrific places to learn. Youngsters could cut their teeth in an environment that wasn't so pressurized--they could afford to make mistakes and learn from those mistakes.
Today, so many small-town stations are automated and/or networked that there are very few opportunities for kids to learn, anymore. If you can't get started in towns like Ebensburg and Huntingdon, where can you? Not sure many of us oldsters would make it in today's radio world.
Anyway, it was great to hear them reminiscing about getting their chops down at a place that was able to allow them to do it.
> > backtiming a true radio skill........always a high five
> when you back timed a cold ending song into the id...we used
> abc contemportary radio for years always backtiming to
> 54:30.......we had a BT category songs with long fades, al
> stewarts time passages some pablo cruise etc........england
> dan was a favorite...well a lost art form.....to those
> seemless net joins...let's raise a glass of stout.....
>