YOU kids are having way too much fun for today's radio....
So, this is thread is actually a really interesting topic. Dealing with an oldies format that has "no new music" has it's issues. I want to maybe get everyone to talk about a perplexing issue of what I call "obvious overkill" vs. "tried and tested." These terms lead to such groups as the Eagles, Fleetwood Mac and Hall and Oates. There are obviously a ton of charted HITs from these groups. But, I contend the smart way to process these hits are to look at each song and attempt to "play them," but not run an already run song back into the ground for the billionth time. "Don't Stop," "Dreams," "Tusk" and "Landslide" are good examples of a band with numerous songs that could be part of an oldies format. The songs all test ok. "Don't Stop" is a song that tests, but also has been overplayed. The way to avoid tune out, in my opinion is to program it to not play the song during the same jock's shift each week and only play it three or four times a week. It's there, but not every 18 hours. "Landside" tests positive. But, it does not have the extreme burn out factor. It get's close to the same number of plays a week. It has less fatigue. Of course groups or artists with just one or a few hits that have stood the test of time require air play to complete the format, so it lessens the options if it was obviously a one hit wonder.
No matter what song you play, you always know there are people who love the song and those that hate the song. It's the ones in the middle that are actually the most tough listeners. So, I guess my thought on this is that often, slightly lower charting oldies seem to be more humane on listeners ears than those in the Top 5 that have been played every day some where on a station in a market for 40+ years. Some hits you still want to eagerly hear. Other hits have just become hard to hear again. But, you have to play them if you are a greatest hits-style format. Then, there are songs that charted for maybe a week or two and disappeared. Those are the songs we in the business may know, but the listeners would have no idea what the song is or why we are playing them, so they tune out. Gotta play the hits, but you have to figure out how to not overplay the overplayed. A little time out of rotation is a conversation for another time.