J
Jersey Maiden
Guest
mikerock said:F "Q-104.3, DHA, WEFX, WRKI and The Peak" for giving us total crap rock radio.XCountry285 said:it sucks being white and male and not having a rock station at all to serve you and struggling throughout town to find one. DHA is no help and neither is the Peak and the Q is only good when it's playing Nirvana or Pearl Jam (Neither of those are classic rock anyway).
What don't you and Xcountry like about DHA? Do you prefer alternative or is it because they play classic rock? They play some of the same artists as RXP like STP, RCHP, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, AC/DC, Tom Petty and Foo Fighters to name a few. While I hadthem on my presets for a long time, I never knew what an awesome morning show they had until RXP went belly up. While I want them to come back, I'm thankful there's someone left in the area playing Foo and RCHP. On the other hand, DHA's sister station in Philly, MMR has the same format but sprinkles in alternative artists like Coldplay and Weezer once in a while. I find it weird that DHA isn't doing the same. While they have attracted some RXP listeners (their Middlesex-Somerset-Union share went up by 0.5 in August), you would think that they'd want to get more of them by making their playlist more like MMR's.
I've watched how narrow rock fans have become, and it really pains me.
I wish alternative and hard rock can be on one station but the Balkanization of the format means it will never happen again. I've heard complaints that some of RXP's playlist was out of place but personally, comparing it to Philly's 104.5 (and we're not even getting into subgenre combos like the now defunct Grock and Krock circa 2003), it wasn't broad enough. On the other hand, I don't think Ipods are the only thing breeding an intolerance for anything we don't like. I'm sure it started once presets were invented. I have little patience for commercials so I don't know what I'd do without them. This and "familiar favorites" are getting played to death. It's not a one-way street.
On the other hand, do genre purists really chip away that much at the ratings? I heard Trans Siberian Orchestra a few weeks ago on the Q and was thinking the whole time that it wasn't classic rock but still kept it on until the song was over. If someone likes AC/DC but thinks they don't belong on an alternative station, are they really going to switch because of that?
One more thing about country, it's crossing into a lot of formats these days. AC, CHR, even urban (man Jason Aldean is a beast at rapping!) If it's crossing over to hip hop, that's even more reason to think there would be an audience for country in New York.
What is far more interesting to me is how many non-commercial stations have also ignored those same formats.
Lots of college stations play alternative and dance although those tracks are much more obscure than what commercial ones play. But otherwise, you're right that non coms are mostly ignoring those niche formats.