I realize I risk starting a numbers war ("K123 is the BEST oldies station EVER... they have over 5,000 songs in rotation!" "Oh, yeah? You obviously haven't hear the REAL best oldies station, W789... they have over 10,000 in rotation all the time!!!") but I'm curious how many titles some of the POPULAR oldies stations carry.
To qualify, this can't be some 500 watt station on an island with more tourists than residents. I'm thinking the heavy hitters in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, etc... and the ones that have generated good Arbitron numbers.
I suspect the successful stations are targeted more at the casual oldies listener rather than the rabid fan who'd be happy hearing nothing but alternate takes & obscure B-sides.
Having defined what I'm looking for, I'll ask again: how many titles does an oldies station these days rotate? 300? 500? 1500? Does the successful oldies station really rotation 5,000 titles?
Part two of this question: do you freshen those titles, or can oldies stations be successful playing 500 "evergreen" titles?
Extra credit: does the number of titles you need to rotate to develop a good cume & TSL change from the 50s, to the 60s, to the 70s?
Thanks for the info. I've seeing spitting matches where each poster wants to brag about longer and longer playlists. That's nice, & maybe enjoyable for those of us who are active listeners, but for your typical Anytown USA, I'm wondering how few it takes to keep from burning an audience out in three months.
Perhaps one more question: is every oldies station doomed to either push the era covered by the station forward or slowly bleed audience over a handful of years as people burn on the the hits of yesteryear? Or (as long as you don't mind your audience aging), with the right number of titles can an oldies station hold their audience for, say, a decade with minimal loss?
To qualify, this can't be some 500 watt station on an island with more tourists than residents. I'm thinking the heavy hitters in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, etc... and the ones that have generated good Arbitron numbers.
I suspect the successful stations are targeted more at the casual oldies listener rather than the rabid fan who'd be happy hearing nothing but alternate takes & obscure B-sides.
Having defined what I'm looking for, I'll ask again: how many titles does an oldies station these days rotate? 300? 500? 1500? Does the successful oldies station really rotation 5,000 titles?
Part two of this question: do you freshen those titles, or can oldies stations be successful playing 500 "evergreen" titles?
Extra credit: does the number of titles you need to rotate to develop a good cume & TSL change from the 50s, to the 60s, to the 70s?
Thanks for the info. I've seeing spitting matches where each poster wants to brag about longer and longer playlists. That's nice, & maybe enjoyable for those of us who are active listeners, but for your typical Anytown USA, I'm wondering how few it takes to keep from burning an audience out in three months.
Perhaps one more question: is every oldies station doomed to either push the era covered by the station forward or slowly bleed audience over a handful of years as people burn on the the hits of yesteryear? Or (as long as you don't mind your audience aging), with the right number of titles can an oldies station hold their audience for, say, a decade with minimal loss?