Steve N. said:JIBGUY said:In 1969, the country was waiting for an expansion of repetitive-music AM stations. All across the USA, "progressive rock" stations started up. It gave REASON to switch to FM.
Bob, I'm surprised to hear that from you, of all people! Your FM predecessor, the original WJIB, was the first FM radio station that was very popular. BCN had finally started to catch on by around 74 or so with prog rock (IIRC), but was eclipsed in 75 by F-105 (CHR/disco from Ron Robin; the CHR/rock came by 77) and COZ (arena rock, but with some room for prog rock; the uber-tight hard rock format came in 80 with John Sebastian), with ROR (oldies) and EEI-FM (true soft rock, NOT AC), then BOS (disco from Ron Robin), BCN (the strike and after) and Kiss (disco/CHR from Sunny Joe) followed in that order. HUE (until its last pre-Kat/ZLX book in Fall 84) and Wish (until it backed away from pure easy listening) never even made the top 10 (Magic beat both of those stations by Spring 82); even EEI-FM's successor Hitradio made the top 10. By 85, there were only 4 AMs doing well: WEEI (news; now WEZE), WRKO (talk), WHDH (pop hits; now WEEI) and WBZ (pop hits).
WBCN was one of the shots that was heard around the world, it was IIRC only the third progressive rock station in the country and ushered in a whole new era. There may have been other market forces at work but WBCN was the only NEW format that drove the change. WCOZ topped WBCN for a little while in the ratings but eventually died out as it was too tightly play listed compared to WBCN.