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Easy Listening Radio Station in the New York City area

I been listening to some easy listening radio stations online, was wondering if such a station could return to New York City radio ? I think WRFM, WTFM and WPAT were the last stations doing an easy listening format.
 
The NYC area lost it's only (to my knowledge) Smooth Jazz station a few years ago. One of the issues was that the 20-somethings on the Sales Team couldn't "sell" it to their peers. So what did it become?? ??? YET ANOTHER "rock" station. ::) Sigh. How original. :-\

I think this is an issue with EZ Listening, as well as another factor: Is there ANYONE still making this music, anymore?

Personally, I think there SHOULD BE BOTH of those formats in the Big Apple... but my thoughts aren't worth the electrons I just wrote them with. ;D
 
JohnnyOhJohnny said:
What Frequency would be good for a BIG BAND-Standards format? I think it would do good here. ???

None. We're not even talking about a demo that's "too old" here, we're talking about a demo that's been DEAD for years.


WPHA said:
The NYC area lost it's only (to my knowledge) Smooth Jazz station a few years ago. One of the issues was that the 20-somethings on the Sales Team couldn't "sell" it to their peers. So what did it become?? ??? YET ANOTHER "rock" station. ::) Sigh. How original. :-\

You don't sell to peers in NYC. Agencies buy. Agencies didn't buy smooth jazz, so smooth jazz went away. On the other end of the spectrum in Lancaster, PA where it's almost all local ad buys, a well seasoned sales staff wasn't enough to sell Hall's Smooth Jazz 92.7 WSJW. It's not the sales staff. Why buy smooth jazz when you can buy an AC station and get a wider swath of the demo?

it's called BROADcasting for a reason. Formats need to be broad to reach a broad audience due to limited spectrum. Even while stations need to offer things that will make the medium unique in a fragmented media environment, stations still need to offer something for everyone.

Theater of My Mind said:
Sure, as long as it's on the AM band once the whole FM dial is taken over by talk formats.

One FM Talk station in NYC is hardly a takeover.
 
The closest would be 103.1 The Fox in the Hudson Valley or Lite 100.5's Pillow Talk show in Connecticut. AC stations within 50 miles of NYC suck.
 
How bout' www.wduv.com do you mean a station like this...go listen live and take a look at the play list for the lat 6 hours...
Check it out...
 
WPHA said:
The NYC area lost it's only (to my knowledge) Smooth Jazz station a few years ago. One of the issues was that the 20-somethings on the Sales Team couldn't "sell" it to their peers. So what did it become?? ??? YET ANOTHER "rock" station. ::) Sigh. How original. :-\

Really, you're going to go there? RXP was NYC's only modern rock station. The irony of taking it there coming from 'YET ANOTHER' Godcaster seems really too big to ignore.

Losing smooth jazz wasn't unique to NY, it happened in several markets relatively around the same time. I'm far happier we didn't entirely lose QXR.
 
WFAS 1230 AM in Westchester County plays soft pop. So does WALK 1370 AM on Long Island.
It is not the primarily instrumental music that was featured on those old easy listening stations, but it is as close as one is likely to hear at this time.
 
This is just a drop in the bucket, but Clear Channel recently relaunched their "Lite FM" station in Dayton, Ohio on a new frequency and with a much softer and older music mix. In fact, you can't even call them "Soft AC", because I haven't heard them play anything newer than 1998 or so. But it does bring back fond memories (to me, at least) of the way NYC's own "Lite FM" used to sound 15-20 years ago:

http://www.945litefm.com/
 
Yes I was referring to an easy listening station like WDUV which plays many easy listening artists from the 60s 70s and 80s...

butchfm said:
How bout' www.wduv.com do you mean a station like this...go listen live and take a look at the play list for the lat 6 hours...
Check it out...
 
If you're talking about bring a traditional style easy listening back to the air may I suggest the following:

First, have it feature original recordings and limit the number of remakes to no more than about one-third of the entire on-air library with absolutely NO CUSTOM RECORDINGS! Artists to feature on such a station should include:

Henry Mancini
Dan Fogelberg/Tim Weisberg
Acoustic Alchemy
Jonathan Cain
Chris Geith
Frank Mills

just to name a few.

I can't see this format making it on FM anymore; unless, of course it's a small station. Even then, it would have a tough go. The question is which AM frequency might work? 620 might work; so could 930, 970, 1050, 1130 (bring the WNEW calls back), 1280 (bring the WOV calls back), 1330, 1380 or 1560.
 
The place for an easy listening/standards station is in the non-commercial educational end of the FM band.

The likely audience for the format has aged out of the demos that advertisers want, but as a non-profit the format could be cheap to do and could probably be supported by donations from devoted and grateful listeners. That's what has happened with jazz and classical, the model would also work with easy listening/standards. The FM fidelity and stereo would also be part of the appeal.

The format's commercial potential is too small to waste a full commercial FM signal on, and AM just doesn't have the needed fidelity.

Years ago, while traveling through New England I used to pick up a non-commercial Beautiful Music format from a monastery in the Hartford area. I don't know if it is still around.
 
TimeIsTight said:
The place for an easy listening/standards station is in the non-commercial educational end of the FM band.
Bob Bittner has also been able to carve out a successful niche on the AM band for his commercial-free, listener-supported easy listening/adult standards stations 740 WJIB in Boston (in AM Stereo!) and 730 WJTO in Maine.
 
satech said:
TimeIsTight said:
The place for an easy listening/standards station is in the non-commercial educational end of the FM band.
Bob Bittner has also been able to carve out a successful niche on the AM band for his commercial-free, listener-supported easy listening/adult standards stations 740 WJIB in Boston (in AM Stereo!) and 730 WJTO in Maine.

But how many people could build up the library and have the patience to get those stations up and running and then going until they started breaking even? At least Bitner had acquired WJIB-FM's library when he started and had a set of call letters familiar to Boston EL listeners. You can't really use "FM" calls on AM and WPAT's calls are still in use in the area, so there isn't any New York EL calls that could be used, AFAIK.
 
Flip 93.1 WPAT to easy listening, and it'll be the third station in the country called "Easy 93.1"

I heard Easy 93.1 from Miami during an e-skip opening in July and rediscovered all the songs I heard on AC stations a decade ago. It's the only AC station I can listen to for hours
 
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