I've noticed that today's AC stations will only play the modern remakes of certain "classic" 1970s songs while entirely ignoring the original versions, which (in most cases) were actually much larger hits compared to the remakes. Some examples of such classic songs include:
I'll Be There- Jackson 5 (remake by Mariah Carey)
Lean On Me- Bill Withers (remake by Club Nouveau)
Baby I Love Your Way- Peter Frampton (remake by Big Mountain...this one actually charted higher than the original)
Killing Me Softly With His Song- Roberta Flack (remake by the Fugees)
Of course, stations do this under the guise that "the remakes are the only versions that appeal to the 25-54 demographic a.k.a. younger people". I'm a 27 year old male btw, and I have to ask myself, what is the basis for this claim about younger people's preferences? The answer is: THE THIRD DIGIT OF THE YEAR that the songs were recorded...nothing else!!! In other words, radio folks shallowly assume that a 1990s remake will be AUTOMATICALLY preferred by the majority of 25-54 listeners over the 1970s original...ONLY because of the two digits in boldface. I have no way of proving it, but I'm fairly sure this assumption is entirely wrong in most cases.
For instance, I'd be willling to bet that the overwhelming majority of young people prefer the Jackson 5 version of "I'll Be There" over any remake. Don't get me wrong, I think Mariah Carey did a very good job covering the song, and I'm not being fake when I say that. Point is, with classic songs like this, there is no reason to completely ignore the original in favor of the "less classic" remakes...why can't you play both versions?? This is just one example of the many disastrous mistakes responsible for ruining radio. Interestingly enough, for most of the songs mentioned above, the original versions actually move at a faster pace than the remakes, and fast pace is a characteristic that generally appeals to younger people. Not to mention that the originals are much more melodic and sound much richer in musical terms, but forget these things because according to certain radio know-it-alls, "young people have no sophistication when it comes to music". The problem is that many PDs are actually way out of touch regarding the true tastes of younger people because they are too old themselves. Therefore, they make false stereotypes about the target demographic, causing them to create a product that nobody wants. The downtrends in overall radio listenership figures and individual station ratings are my witness.
On another note, it's these same flawed perceptions that make stations ignore EVERY SINGLE 1960s song out there, even upbeat and "fun" songs like "Stop in the Name of Love" "Chain Gang" "Henry the 8th" "Lightnin' Strikes" etc. Young people like these songs for the novelty, if nothing else. And there are hundreds of other songs from the 60s that would be very "safe" if given the chance...nobody's saying they have to play "Are You Lonesome Tonight" or "Blue Velvet". Ironically, most age 55+ listeners are probably sick of hearing the same old 1960s songs for the last 40 years, but younger people would very likely welcome certain 60s songs as "good variety" for the AC format, especially compared to the alternative: hearing the same CHR songs repeated several times day, 7 days a week.
I'll Be There- Jackson 5 (remake by Mariah Carey)
Lean On Me- Bill Withers (remake by Club Nouveau)
Baby I Love Your Way- Peter Frampton (remake by Big Mountain...this one actually charted higher than the original)
Killing Me Softly With His Song- Roberta Flack (remake by the Fugees)
Of course, stations do this under the guise that "the remakes are the only versions that appeal to the 25-54 demographic a.k.a. younger people". I'm a 27 year old male btw, and I have to ask myself, what is the basis for this claim about younger people's preferences? The answer is: THE THIRD DIGIT OF THE YEAR that the songs were recorded...nothing else!!! In other words, radio folks shallowly assume that a 1990s remake will be AUTOMATICALLY preferred by the majority of 25-54 listeners over the 1970s original...ONLY because of the two digits in boldface. I have no way of proving it, but I'm fairly sure this assumption is entirely wrong in most cases.
For instance, I'd be willling to bet that the overwhelming majority of young people prefer the Jackson 5 version of "I'll Be There" over any remake. Don't get me wrong, I think Mariah Carey did a very good job covering the song, and I'm not being fake when I say that. Point is, with classic songs like this, there is no reason to completely ignore the original in favor of the "less classic" remakes...why can't you play both versions?? This is just one example of the many disastrous mistakes responsible for ruining radio. Interestingly enough, for most of the songs mentioned above, the original versions actually move at a faster pace than the remakes, and fast pace is a characteristic that generally appeals to younger people. Not to mention that the originals are much more melodic and sound much richer in musical terms, but forget these things because according to certain radio know-it-alls, "young people have no sophistication when it comes to music". The problem is that many PDs are actually way out of touch regarding the true tastes of younger people because they are too old themselves. Therefore, they make false stereotypes about the target demographic, causing them to create a product that nobody wants. The downtrends in overall radio listenership figures and individual station ratings are my witness.
On another note, it's these same flawed perceptions that make stations ignore EVERY SINGLE 1960s song out there, even upbeat and "fun" songs like "Stop in the Name of Love" "Chain Gang" "Henry the 8th" "Lightnin' Strikes" etc. Young people like these songs for the novelty, if nothing else. And there are hundreds of other songs from the 60s that would be very "safe" if given the chance...nobody's saying they have to play "Are You Lonesome Tonight" or "Blue Velvet". Ironically, most age 55+ listeners are probably sick of hearing the same old 1960s songs for the last 40 years, but younger people would very likely welcome certain 60s songs as "good variety" for the AC format, especially compared to the alternative: hearing the same CHR songs repeated several times day, 7 days a week.