R
Radio_Realist
Guest
myMHz said:It's always the same thing..."Play something different....whaaa whaaa"
Then when a station does, the core audience, you remember them right? The ones that don't know that the radio boards are around...the ones that can't remember the call letters of a station even though they are told them every 5 minutes, they are gone. Radio is for the mass audience...I myself would love to hear some different stuff but I know it ain't gonna happen, it doesn't sell. That is what it all comes down to...what sells.
Actually, the real "same thing" is that classic rock fans ask stations to play a little bit more "different" music, so the response is always as if we had requested nothing but deep cuts 24/7.
For example (and I'll use imaginary examples so the discussion doesn't turn into nit picking about the examples), The Classic Band recorded 10 albums during their existence, of 12 songs each, and had 15 charting hits from those albums when they were new. Of the 15 charting hits, 9 of them continue to to test well. So, programmers put one of those 9 into heavy rotation for a week until those who leave the station on all the time at work get sick of the song, then they put another one of the 9 into heavy rotation until it gets burned out, and so on.
What we classic rock fans would really like is not for a station to play the 105 "deep cuts" that didn't chart. We're just asking stations to not over play the 9 hits that tested well one at a time for a week, Instead, mix them up more so none of them get burned out.
We'd also like to hear those 6 songs that were hits but that didn't test as well every now and then. The trouble is, radio professionals don't seem to grasp the concept of "every now and then". Playing one such song every other hour is not going to destroy a station's ratings. But, if we ask them to play a hit song like that once every other hour, the response is always as if we asked them to play nothing but such songs all the time. If a station's ratings would go down the toilet just because over the course of a 24 hour day, they played 12 songs by artists who are common on their station already, and that were hits when they were new even if they might not test as well today, then that station is pretty shaky to begin with.
Personally, I wish there were more classic rock station programmers who knew music well enough to be able to tell the difference between a deep cut that should have been a hit but that wasn't promoted right by the record label back in the day, but that's asking for something that isn't possible. I also wish there were classic rock station programmers who understand that "classic rock" describes a sound, not an era. I wish there weer programmers who decided what songs to play based on what the song sounds like instead of when it was recorded, but I realize that is also too much to expect.