I know WMAG Greensboro NC (iHeart) and WKQC Charlotte NC have no problem with playing some Christian songs. I haven't counted how many songs are each type.
I know WMAG Greensboro NC (iHeart) and WKQC Charlotte NC have no problem with playing some Christian songs. I haven't counted how many songs are each type.
"Christian" without regard to style of music. I am referring to the message.
Do you mean "Christian" as in "Little Town of Bethlehem" or "Silent Night" or "Christian" as being more contemporary but with a reference to Jesus and His birth?
"Christian" without regard to style of music. I am referring to the message.
I also don't regard "Christian music" as being something contemporary. For me it has to be called "Contemporary Christian". "Christian music" to me can be Southern Gospel, or classical music, or a traditional hymn, or whatever you call the music on BBN.
I know WMAG Greensboro NC (iHeart) and WKQC Charlotte NC have no problem with playing some Christian songs.
Looking over the WMAG "recently played" list, I see no examples of Christian songs. It looks like the basic iHeart music list played across the country. I see Jingle Bells, Winter Wonderland, Baby Its Cold Outside, Happy Xmas (War Is Over), etc. No Silent Night, no Little Town of Bethlehem, or anything like that.
So WLTW, WALK FM, and WBEB have never played Lauren Daigle? She's a Christian artist and I find it hard to believe that they would just ignore such a hit like "You Say."I think it depends on the market. In the Northeast, I've almost never heard a "Christian artist" on WLTW, WALK-FM, WBEB, whether it was during the regular format or the Christmas format.
Of course, Amy Grant Xmas songs play all the time. She got her start on Christian radio before crossing over to pop. Even if these stations no longer play Amy Grant hits, her Xmas albums remain popular.
And that leads to the question, how many secular titles do Christian Contemporary stations play when they go all-Christmas? It seems the commercial stations (WFSH Atlanta, KLTY Dallas, WAWZ New Jersey) go about 50/50 between artists like Andy Williams, Nat King Cole and The Carpenters vs. Christian artists. But others say K-Love plays no secular Christmas songs.
Which version? Love 105 in the Twin Cities plays both the original version [Eartha Kitt], and the Madonna version.There's only so much "Santa Baby" that I can stand until I toss the radio out of the window.
Our local i-heart station plays almost no sacred or Christian Christmas songs. No carols, no orchestras and absolutely no choirs unless it is a Gospel choir. All they play is the same secular songs over and over just by different artists. multiple versions of Rudolf, Frosty, Here Come Santa Claus, Santa Claus is coming to Town, winter Wonderland, let it snow, Santa Baby, Last Christmas etc. Just once I'd like to hear Joy To the World, Away in a Manger, Silent Night etc. I would be shocked if I ever heard a decent choir singing anymore (unless it's that tired old Drummer Boy by Harry Simone) There's only so much "Santa Baby" that I can stand until I toss the radio out of the window.
Yes, I know that their versions of some Christmas songs were classics, but talk about breaking the format! :O
I'm sure the format police types cringe every year, but the ratings continue to respond. So they hold their nose and go with what works.
At least so far, they have yet to play Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer. I'll give them that.![]()
The iHeart holiday library frowns on novelty songs. The closest they come is You're a Mean One Mr. Grinch.
No "Snoopy's Christmas"?
No "Snoopy's Christmas"?
As far as any references to Peanuts goes: Vincent Guaraldi, yes. Royal Guardsmen, no.
Too bad, because the message of the Snoopy song is true to the Christmas spirit, while Guaraldi's tune is just a catchy keyboard ditty. It draws on the famous World War I "Christmas truce" story. It is 51 years old, though, and I'm sure iHeart is weeding out older songs every year.
One more song to inquire about: "Do You Hear What I Hear?" Despite the nonsensical presence of a talking sheep in the first verse, it's not a novelty song and has to do with the holiday rather than the weather. Still being played by iHeart, and if so, by whom? Simeone Chorale? Crosby? Ames? (That one's my favorite.) Mathis? Or newer versions?
Our local i-heart station plays almost no sacred or Christian Christmas songs. No carols, no orchestras and absolutely no choirs unless it is a Gospel choir. All they play is the same secular songs over and over just by different artists. multiple versions of Rudolf, Frosty, Here Come Santa Claus, Santa Claus is coming to Town, winter Wonderland, let it snow, Santa Baby, Last Christmas etc. Just once I'd like to hear Joy To the World, Away in a Manger, Silent Night etc. I would be shocked if I ever heard a decent choir singing anymore (unless it's that tired old Drummer Boy by Harry Simone) There's only so much "Santa Baby" that I can stand until I toss the radio out of the window.