A recipe for an awfully narrow playlist. Why not play '80s and 2000s music that also tests well with listeners in the target demographic?
You might be surprised nowdays. It's 2026.Maybe. But it might play some deeper tracks from the decade. What I'm curious about is if KDAO-FM is including rap material in its 90's mix. Rap, after all, was very high (along with R&B ballads) on Billboard's national charts during most of that decade. (For the record, my guess is in the negative--the station serves an audience of [mostly] conservative white farmers who, even if they purchased rap music when they were younger, are most likely put off by it now.)
Yes, and especially in the first half of the 1990s, there wasn't much in the way of mass-appeal pop hits. You had ballads, rap, dance, and alternative rock. That's what led some CHR stations to shift to Hot AC, with slogans like "No Rap, No Hard Stuff, No Sleepy Elevator Music", filling in the playlist with a lot of '70s and '80s music (including the comeback of Disco).Rap, after all, was very high (along with R&B ballads) on Billboard's national charts during most of that decade.
Press release says a stream is coming, though no established timeline as of yet.No online streaming...maybe that will change? I'll be in an area close to them next week, will have to see what they are up to.
"Hopefully it's not just Mariah Carey and NSync on repeat all day...hopefully they have some deeper '90s cuts with soft rock, crossovers, and less-common pop rock (#20 charters vs. #1s)."
And AI didn't tell them that cassette tapes were already on their way out in the '90s; CDs became the best-selling music format in 1992, and by the end of the decade, portable MP3 players were the hot new thing.So obviously, they used AI for their logo.