Re: Terri Carr at G-Rock
SoulCrusher said:
One person at G Rock once told me that they're going for a "happy, fun" sound at the station. That's funny - before the grunge explosion, the format was known for having featured many dark and brooding acts, and bands like Staind and Linkin Park (the softer material of both is played often at G Rock) are not exactly what anyone would call happy and fun.
I do have to say that's a pretty ridiculous description of either their image or the image an alternative station should be going for. I do agree that if they're going to play those bands, they should include the harder material too. I mean, LP has had eight major hits, but three of them have been shunned by G-Rock.
I don't mind any of the female-friendly bands I referred to, but the station leans too heavily on the soft stuff for an Alternative and lacks diverse selections in some instances (In Weezer's case: Too much Make Believe and absolutely no Pinkerton, or even Maladroit).
I have heard some Pinkerton cuts on a few ocassions, though at least some of them were during the '90s At Noon. I should also note that while other stations tend to shun Green Day's post-Dookie/pre-American Idiot material other than "Brain Stew" and "Time of Your Life", I hear G-Rock throw on "J.A.R.", "Geek Stink Breath", "Hitchin' A Ride", "Nice Guys Finish Last", and the Warning singles fairly often.
If I had to pick one thing that rubs me the wrong way, it's the exclusion of those acts. They find the time to play plenty of frivolous here-today-gone-tomorrow pop acts but won't play the bands that have something to say. The lyrical content used by Tool, SOAD and RATM is what sets them apart from the bands that are often considered their peers. Add to that the strong chart performance all of these acts have had, not to mention the fact that WRAT (the other Rocker in the market) seldom ever plays these acts, and there really is no reason that I can see why they should be excluded. G Rock's predecessor, FM 106.3, played Tool and RATM quite a bit. The only thing I could think of is that perhaps the folks that run G Rock disagree with the viewpoints of these bands (one possible hint: they do play Bush-loving bands like Fuel quite often).
They play anti-Bush songs by Green Day and Incubus, and even throw on Anti-Flag's "The Press Corpse" occasionally at night. I've also heard some of their jocks bash Bush on a few occasions. So no, I don't think that's the issue - I guess they just have an unfounded concerned about scaring off listeners
mjb1124 said:
G Rock is giving certain older tracks as much as three spins a day right now ("Steady As She Goes" and "When You Were Young" come to mind). That could have something to do with the typical limited album release schedule of the first quarter, but I think they could be a little bit more proactive with the adds. There's a station in Atlantic City (WJSE) that is way ahead of G Rock when it comes to the amount of currents - their big downside is that their general sound is a wild amalgamation of alternative, hard rock and classic rock. It's not unusual to hear Aerosmith followed by The Killers, or AC/DC followed by Taking Back Sunday. It seems that just about every station has a couple of kinks that could be worked on.
I think most Alternative stations are just too restrictive, whether it's a cookie-cutter Clear Channel/CBS station, an overtly elitist "indie" station, or a station like G-Rock that's afraid to play anything too heavy. I'd like to hear a station where Morrissey, The Cure, Oasis, Tool, Korn, Shinedown, My Chemical Romance, and the Shiny Toy Guns could peacefully co-exist, along with all of the artists that pretty much every station current agrees on. I also feel that an Alternative stations should not specifically target either gender.
That said, I do agree that AC/DC and Aerosmith don't belong on an Alternative station, though that sounds like a rather intriguing station in its own right.
One change that they could make would be to start digging deeper into the vault and playing more retro tracks. I really doubt someone is going to call up asking to hear "Smells Like Teen Spirit" on the Retro Request Hour - or most of the gold that G Rock plays, for that matter. Keep the rotation fresh, especially for the people that listen at work. I have to tune out at the office sometimes because things become too stale. Hopefully G Rock will make a note of the requests being made during this time period and use that to influence their regular playlist.
You may be on to something here. So far, the Retro Request Hour has mostly strayed from what they would normally play, and in the past few days they've even been throwing on some gold tracks during regular hours that I wouldn't have expected to hear.
Here's some of the highlights of what they played this morning:
11:36am REM Driver 8
11:13am Beck Sexx Laws
10:59am The Clash The Magnificent Seven
10:44am Moby Body Rock
10:33am Squeeze Another Nail in my Heart
10:22am Garbage Queer
7:58am The Smiths Bigmouth Strikes Again
And here's the Retro Request Hour lineup (yes, they started a few minutes early):
12:58pm Smashing Pumpkins Eye
12:48pm Matthew Sweet Girlfriend
12:45pm Love and Rockets No New Tale To Tell
12:40pm Mad Season River Of Deceit Mad Season
12:36pm INXS Listen Like Thieves
12:31pm Echo And The Bunnymen Lips Like Sugar
12:27pm U2 Sunday Bloody Sunday
12:22pm School of Fish 3 Strange Days
12:19pm The Fixx Secret Seperation
12:14pm Better Than Ezra In The Blood
12:11pm Siouxie And The Banshees Christine
12:08pm Hole Miss World Hole
12:05pm The Plimsoulsl A Million Miles Away
12:01pm Depeche Mode Just Can't Get Enough Depeche Mode
11:57am The Cult Rain
I can only guess that Terri Carr has had some influence here.