smashedcd said:
Back in my rock days, we were consulted against playing "inferior live versions."
obviously that guy had never heard the original versions of peter framptons music. or the original version of ridin the storm out from reo speedwagon ;D because the live versions of both are wayyyyyyyyyyyyy better than the originals!
It was
only the INFERIOR live versions that got banned. IIRC, we only played the live versions of Lynyrd Skynyrd's "Freebird" (1 of our best bathroom break tunes... "
what song do you wanna he-ah?"), maybe Kiss' "Rock 'n Roll All Night," etc. That REO song, too (BTW, I heard that lead singer Kevin Cronin announced that ex-Foreigner frontman Lou Graham led him and his son to the Lord). The only exception I remember (when we played more than 1 version of a song) was airing both versions of STP's "Plush" (the loud album version, and the then-fresh, "MTV-Unplugged" version where all these people clapped before the song actually ended).
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Agreed on your TV litmus test, Mike from Delaware. Then again, most TV really does suck.
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Back to topic, I can see mixed FF music on secular radio already playing the Daughtry's of the world (Tesh, Delilah, Powerline, etc.). Another possible exception for me is if your market is already flooded with CCM stations and you're trying to stand out as different.
But in the majority of cases. I have great difficulty justifying FF overtaking the CCM format. For instance, I love U2, Creed, King's X, and POD... but while all reportedly have Christians in them, none are Christian bands. Billy Joel's excellent drummer is a Christian named Liberty DeVito. Still, I don't need EITHER the Catholic-ribbing "Only the Good Die Young" OR something innocuous like "Just the Way You Are" taking up airtime better used by the Matt Redmans, Audio Adrenalines, and Plumbs of the world. Don't we have enough difficulty watching out for what the "Christian" artists do or say... without having to worry about the next time Bono lets the "F" word slip or Scott Stapp gets in another fight (and then having to justify why we play songs by _______)?
As for secular radio playing Christian artists, it's all about ratings/money... if the Fray, Evanescence, and Mercy Me weren't so popular, they wouldn't be played. Besides, the U2 listeners won't think about the FF crossover stations, they'll look to their favorite rock station first. Daughtry fans will tune into AC or CHR stations first (too bad the "American Idol" stigma scared off my area's local rockers, I think Daughtry's a good fit for the rock format). I doubt that listeners are thinking about these FF stations as P1's, when they have AC for that.
My mantra is the 15-minute rule: in normal dayparts, anyone tuning in for 15 minutes straight ought to know what to expect when tuned into my station. Outside of weekend specials, two-fers, oldies, blocks of an artist's songs, all-request segments, etc....
is this song indicative of what my station is, and why my listeners tune in? If it's done excellently, then they'll have reason to come back.