TheBigA said:
Tim said:
No, because the radio industry has spent 30 years promoting "more music, less talk" to their audiences, and now most of the music-station audience agrees: just shut up and play the music.
Back 30 years, the reason they said "more music, less talk," was because the listeners wanted it. Radio has to deliver what the audience wants. If they wanted chatty DJs, that's what radio stations would do. But they don't. When people want talk, they seek out talk stations. When they want music, they want fewer interruptions.
Some perspective:
Album rock radio (especially) utilized "music personalities" (people who were experts on the artists that they played) to present the music. That is to say, tell you the album the track came from, who is in the band, who the guest guitarist is on the track, when the act is coming to town, etc etc. The crowd that listened to AOR (at least in the earlier days) was more musically savvy and desired these bits of information. Some of the hipper AORs would play imports not available in the USA, which required setup and explanation. Also, a good AOR deejay would blend the music in themes or some kind of connection in order to make a compelling presentation. He/she may also interview the act and maybe even MC the live concert. There was a complete, local, cultural connection.
As much as I miss that kind of presentation, there really is no need for it today.
RDS on your radio tells you the song that is playing. The station's internet site will tell you if you don't have a radio with RDS, plus will probably give you links to other information. When I stream on my smartphone, not only does the song title come up, but (in many cases) a picture of the album cover is shown, linked to a page all about it.
With the internet, once you know a song title and artist, you can go to Wikipedia and learn all about them, or maybe the band's own website which will give you bio, tour dates, etc.
Remember: This is important: NONE of that existed back before the internet and streaming/RDS. Without a deejay to frame a lot of the music, the listener would be lost.
Yes, stations always pitched "more music". But equally as important back then (and MORE SO in Cleveland if you look at the pre-internet era ratings) a completely "plugged-in station" was the leader. WMMS destroyed M105 in the ratings even though M105 played lots more music. That's because WMMS was the "go to" station for your connection.
You don't need that today. Radio stopped doing it and the internet picked up the ball.