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Great MDs

Not gonna argue with you there that radio lost some of that local touch. The idea is to touch on the local sound, but not to overrely on it. Z-100, as John pointed out, is such a standout CHR b/c it's managed to retain that balanced sound, and yet take a chance on a lot of records other CHRs don't play.
Believe it or not Q-102 Philly was never too regional sounding, when compared to Hot 97 NYC and other Dance stations. Q-102, like Energy 108 Toronto, played a plaethora of great Dance tracks from a pretty broad spectrum, and also played some good Rhythmic and Pop hits. Same deal for B-96 Chicago, which Q-102 was largely modeled after.

Alright, time to go off a bit on a tangence here.
Power 106 and Hot 97 both started out with a lot of Freestyle (1987), and at that time KMEL San Francisco also played a good dose of it. A couple of years later Freestyle was nowhere nearly as big on Power 106 (which at the time was number one in the ratings), KMEL had evolved into one of the first successful major market Urban leaning CHRs (good for second place in the San Fran ratings), and Hot 97 remained a bastion of Freestyle, but its ratings were not as big as that of the top ranked station in NYC - Z-100 (which cherrypicked and played 3-4 Freestyle anthems at a time). X-100 San Francisco debuted on the scene with supposedly a Mainstream CHR but decided to lean on way too much Freestyle, in part b/c of San Jose's new Hot 97-7. Within a year X-100 evolved into an Adult CHR and all the Freestyle disappeared.

So what happened? While Freestyle peaked in 89-90 on the national pop charts, and with acceptance on CHR radio, its power was slipping on the stations that supported it the most (with the exception of Power 96 Miami). Both Hot 97 and Power 106 later made mistakes by jumping too quickly on the "Techno" bandwagon around 91-92, even though a lot of the audience wasn't ready to embrace it to the extent the clubs did. These stations relied too much on a new sound coming from the underground. They weren't focused on simply paying the best records for their stations.
It should be noted though that MANY CHR/Pop stations at the time also failed to realize that times were changing, and simply playing the 40 biggest hits on Billboard's Hot 100 wasn't gonna work anymore. I believe half of all the CHRs in America flipped formats between 1990-93, many of them to Country.
As for Hot 97 and Power 106, by late 92 it was clear they were both evolving into Hip Hop stations.
B-96 Chicago on the other hand stayed the course for a good number of years afterwards. Even though it was a Chicago station, it never relied on House, never relied on records from the emerging Rave scene, never relied on the big Euro-Dance records it was playing off import months before other stations, and never relied on Freestyle. It managed to play all of the above and more, and helped turn Chicago from a Rock town to a Rhythmic town.
So yeah, play some regional stuff, don't ignore it, but try to play the best sounding records overall from everywhere.
 
Ill give you a great example of local talent that did well at both my stations. Joe Zangie and for that matter almost any artits on Tazmania records. To this day we still get 5- 10 requests a day for Joe. We had him in study and the phone lines were jammed for two hours.(we have 8 lines) At WDBK we would cell out theatres and clubs just bysaying hes was going to be there. I think some of the success we had for our show in February was due to him. How many other stations were playing his records? Not that many. If you look in BDS or Mediabase he recently got a few spins during a mix show on Q. He is regional. I think Reina has that with the northeast. SHe gets airplay but not as much as she does in the tri-state area.


Im not sure where you get your information about Q, but knowing the guy that brought the beat back to Philly, Im dont think you are correct. They were breaking in records a lot of the other stations wouldn't touch. That info can be backed up by several labels. Again talk to Bob Burke or Glenn Kalina. Rockell comes to mind with In A Dream. If im not mistaked Hot 97 flipped because they got bought out. Q changed course because of Alice 104.5 and the fact that the PD moved to do mornings there. Its all about playing the hits but some hits are still not hits in some markets. Im also not a big of playing imports unless I know they are not going to get signed here in the states. The reason is simple, unsigned (by US Labels) imports, it becomes more difficult to get the artist to call in to the station or have perform at a station event. Having a format that has been for a long time faceless makes it difficult to push on to the mainstream. How many average listeners think Ian Van Dahl is one person? Most. How many people think Bob Sinclar sang World Hold On? Most I jumped the gun on the latest September track, honestly I should have waited and let Robbins sign it, so they could start to develop a story.
 
I bet there are a lot of ppl who get confused with IVD and Bob Sinclar, but as long as they like what they hear that's all that matters.
As for Hot 97 and Power 106 I'm pretty sure they were always owned by Emmis.

Like you said, Q-102 faced some challenges throughout the 90s. Its sound was actually pretty inconsistent when you think about it. Dance heavy in the very early 90s, then very Rap heavy, then Dance heavy, then Rhythmic heavy, and we're only up to 1993. At some point it went CHR/Pop and became Modern Rock friendly, obviously influenced by MTV, the sound at the time of Z-100 NYC, and local stations Y-100 and 97.5 PST. Then it went back to Dance in mid 95 only to go back to CHR/Pop a few years later.
So those regional records Q was known for only appeared for a limited amount of time in each period.
For a long time now Q-102 has been Philly's hit music station. Its ratings may not be stellar, but its got heritage, and now with the new PPM methodology its cume is close to 1.5 million listeners (!!!)
I really do agree with you that stations like Q should be trying harder to incorporate some Dance music onto its paylist, but then again neither you nor I are at the helm there, or at rhythmic Wired 96.5 (which is prolly even more ideal for Bob Sinclar, September, or Enur).

PS most ppl don't realize this, but Q-102's very first MD was Elvis Duran...
 
I think I understand where the Hot 97 buyout confusion comes from - Back in 1994 (or was it 95?) Emmis bought out rival 98.7 Kiss FM. Both Hot and Kiss were battling it out for the Hip Hop audience. Emmis made a brilliant move by turning Kiss into an Adult R&B, which reflected well in the ratings. It also helped catapult Hot 97's ratings as it became the market's only Hip Hop outlet.
I should point out one correction on my part: Back in 1987 WQHT was Hot 103 - it made the switch over to 97.1 a couple of years later.
 
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