michael hagerty said:Oldies, you're not thinking that the Whitburn and Bronson books sold to a mass audience in the millions or anything, are you?
Of course not. Specialty reference books appeal to those with such interest.
michael hagerty said:Oldies, you're not thinking that the Whitburn and Bronson books sold to a mass audience in the millions or anything, are you?
Silly me. I thought that AC radio was targeted for her. Classic hits is (supposedly) about the '60s (second half of them, anyway) through the '80s.michael hagerty said:It might help to keep in mind just who the target listener is.
She was born in 1968.
firepoint525 said:Silly me. I thought that AC radio was targeted for her. Classic hits is (supposedly) about the '60s (second half of them, anyway) through the '80s.michael hagerty said:It might help to keep in mind just who the target listener is.
She was born in 1968.
firepoint525 said:Nice try. Classic "rock" bores me, too. For example: 38 Special. When was the last time that you heard "If I'd Been the One" on classic rock radio? No, it's always either "Hold On Loosely" or "Caught Up in You." I'm tired of both.
Try again.CTListener said:You're not typical. I'm not typical. Why should radio be programming to our whims? If classic listeners were tuning out en masse when those two .38 Special songs came on, wouldn't you think the research would have caught on by now and the songs would be gone and replaced by other titles? No, not dusty relics like "If I'd Been the One" but more recent songs by more recent acts that are doing well in current testing.
oldies76 said:michael hagerty said:Oldies, you're not thinking that the Whitburn and Bronson books sold to a mass audience in the millions or anything, are you?
Of course not. Specialty reference books appeal to those with such interest.
firepoint525 said:Try again.CTListener said:You're not typical. I'm not typical. Why should radio be programming to our whims? If classic listeners were tuning out en masse when those two .38 Special songs came on, wouldn't you think the research would have caught on by now and the songs would be gone and replaced by other titles? No, not dusty relics like "If I'd Been the One" but more recent songs by more recent acts that are doing well in current testing.
"Hold On Loosely" (1981)
"Caught Up in You" (1982)
"If I'd Been the One" (1983)
"If I'd Been the One" is the most recent of the three, so that would make the other two more "dusty" and "relicky" by comparison.
firepoint525 said:I don't know if it would be possible for you to miss the point any more than you just did here. You mentioned ALL pre-1964 songs, then trot out the same old tired "time-capsule" b.s. when I mentioned the example (a very prominent one at that) of a '70s artist who only got ONE hit played. At least be consistent in your arguments.
firepoint525 said:Silly me. I thought that AC radio was targeted for her. Classic hits is (supposedly) about the '60s (second half of them, anyway) through the '80s.michael hagerty said:It might help to keep in mind just who the target listener is.
She was born in 1968.
firepoint525 said:Nice try. Classic "rock" bores me, too. For example: 38 Special. When was the last time that you heard "If I'd Been the One" on classic rock radio? No, it's always either "Hold On Loosely" or "Caught Up in You." I'm tired of both.
Who said anything about replacing anything? Why not play all three, only at lower overall rotation to avoid burnout.CTListener said:You missed my point. There's no real difference between a 1981 song and a 1983 song by .38 Special. They were a late '70s/early '80s band. Classic rock stations are now mining the late '80s and early '90s for new adds, not going deeper into 30- to 35-year-old titles. The two songs you cite must still be testing well; otherwise they'd have been replaced by now. And if that were to happen, why in the world would you want to replace them in your playlist with another song by the same act?firepoint525 said:Try again.CTListener said:You're not typical. I'm not typical. Why should radio be programming to our whims? If classic listeners were tuning out en masse when those two .38 Special songs came on, wouldn't you think the research would have caught on by now and the songs would be gone and replaced by other titles? No, not dusty relics like "If I'd Been the One" but more recent songs by more recent acts that are doing well in current testing.
"Hold On Loosely" (1981)
"Caught Up in You" (1982)
"If I'd Been the One" (1983)
"If I'd Been the One" is the most recent of the three, so that would make the other two more "dusty" and "relicky" by comparison.
firepoint525 said:Try again.CTListener said:You're not typical. I'm not typical. Why should radio be programming to our whims? If classic listeners were tuning out en masse when those two .38 Special songs came on, wouldn't you think the research would have caught on by now and the songs would be gone and replaced by other titles? No, not dusty relics like "If I'd Been the One" but more recent songs by more recent acts that are doing well in current testing.
"Hold On Loosely" (1981)
"Caught Up in You" (1982)
"If I'd Been the One" (1983)
"If I'd Been the One" is the most recent of the three, so that would make the other two more "dusty" and "relicky" by comparison.
I am a 49-year-old white male, so (supposedly) classic rock should be just my thing, right? Yet, I give an example of a song from my heyday, yet I am told that I am "out of the mainstream" for classic rock. Go figure.michael hagerty said:"Nice try"?firepoint525 said:Nice try. Classic "rock" bores me, too. For example: 38 Special. When was the last time that you heard "If I'd Been the One" on classic rock radio? No, it's always either "Hold On Loosely" or "Caught Up in You." I'm tired of both.
No, just facts about how people use the radio. Classic Hits skews female. Classic Rock skews male. Most people aren't with either or any other station long enough to get bored or burn out on a station. They're looking for favorite songs more than favorite artists.
Where I come from, that is called "shooting an arrow at the side of a barn, then painting a bulls-eye around it." To everyone else, it is just revisionist history. Why did certain songs, by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, continue to get played on radio, while other songs by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, did not? Because radio continued to play some, while ignoring others. So the ones that they have continued to play over all these years are still familiar with listeners, while the ones that they ignored are not. So radio itself was the kingmaker here.michael hagerty said:Only if the audience keeps track of year of release.
And they don't.
A record they forgot about (because they really didn't care) 30 years ago is more of a relic to them than one they want to hear from any year.
michael hagerty said:RIN3GUY said:DavidEduardo said:My point here is that, while international charts are woefully inaccurate, the songs that did get play and sales in other countries is totally irrelevant to people in the US.
Specifically with reference to ABBA and the Bay City Rollers, what the international charts tell us is that their considerable success in the United States was a significant understatement compared to their success elsewhere. It also validates the continued playing of their music alongside the best of other Classic Hits artists. Even Blondie, an American artist, had to go to Europe to become successful before they could ever be appreciated here.
The majority of the audience neither knows nor cares whether a song was popular in another country or not.
As for Blondie, fans in the US didn't flock to them because they hit in Europe. Their success in Europe convinced their record label to commit significant dollars to promote them back in the US. It didn't hurt that they got a lot more accessible with their music and their image at the same time. That's what made them.
firepoint525 said:Where I come from, that is called "shooting an arrow at the side of a barn, then painting a bulls-eye around it." To everyone else, it is just revisionist history. Why did certain songs, by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, continue to get played on radio, while other songs by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, did not? Because radio continued to play some, while ignoring others. So the ones that they have continued to play over all these years are still familiar with listeners, while the ones that they ignored are not. So radio itself was the kingmaker here.
firepoint525 said:Where I come from, that is called "shooting an arrow at the side of a barn, then painting a bulls-eye around it." To everyone else, it is just revisionist history. Why did certain songs, by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, continue to get played on radio, while other songs by the same act, with the same lead singer, from the same time frame, did not? Because radio continued to play some, while ignoring others. So the ones that they have continued to play over all these years are still familiar with listeners, while the ones that they ignored are not. So radio itself was the kingmaker here.michael hagerty said:Only if the audience keeps track of year of release.
And they don't.
A record they forgot about (because they really didn't care) 30 years ago is more of a relic to them than one they want to hear from any year.
So if the Whitburn books are not a "bible" (fair enough), does that mean that Michael and David are prophets?Turnpike Tuner said:Do I own the Whitburn books? Yes...I'm a music freak and they are great reference materials (especially the One Hit Wonders book). But it is only a reference guide, not a bible...especially given what Mike & David has shed light on as far as what was going on with Billboard during the classic hits era.
firepoint525 said:So if the Whitburn books are not a "bible" (fair enough), does that mean that Michael and David are prophets?Turnpike Tuner said:Do I own the Whitburn books? Yes...I'm a music freak and they are great reference materials (especially the One Hit Wonders book). But it is only a reference guide, not a bible...especially given what Mike & David has shed light on as far as what was going on with Billboard during the classic hits era.
Okay, but most of these hits were on top 40 in their heyday, then moved on to hot AC, then to AC, then to classic rock/classic hits, then on to oblivion, apparently. But the same stations were NOT playing these songs for all that time (unless they constantly changed formats to keep these songs active on their playlist). Obviously, top 40 cannot currently play 38 Special, but in a few years, they also (hopefully) won't be playing Lady Gaga.michael hagerty said:And radio made those decisions by finding out how listeners used the medium and what their expectations were, and then meeting them.
Some records are done as soon as they leave the charts. Others have a few months or years left in them. Some have decades of staying power. Classic Hits is in the business of identifying and playing the ones with decades of staying power that the majority of their listeners can agree on as favorites.
It's a simple concept and an extremely complicated task with a constantly moving target (age-in, age-out, paradigm shifts in current culture, events affecting the image and legacy of Classic Hits artists both in positive and negative ways).