OldNumber7 said:
But the fragmentation of pop music into niche formats during the past 30 years dramatically reduces the mass appeal potential of newer music. This fragmentation is already evident in the lukewarm reaction given to 80s and 90s formats in recent years. It seems contemporary music is continually becoming more momentary, individual and disposable. If this trend continues, I'm not sure there will be much of a market in the future for stations that play older music.
I don't think anything from the late 80s onward will be heard regularly on radio, much less in its own format as the 50s, 60s and 70s were.
Look what happened to AOR stations during the mid to late 80s. Given the lack of quality music, most went to "classic rock" or some hybrids of few currents and mostly older tunes.
If the suits running Crap Ch. continue, the ones that view a person behind a microphone as only a drag on their supposed right to make millions, and rely on automation, VTing and syndicated fare, then radio will likely die a lot sooner than some are predicting in this thread.
If radio's bosses can't find a way to serve it's most loyal customers (those "older" demos that apologists here routinely diss), you think they'll be any more adapt at attracting millions of listeners in the future?
You know, like a store that sells products to a wide variety of customers, from the young to the old. The products marketed to the older "demos" aren't dicatated to pay for the rest of the store's profit (like Oldies radio stations are).
I think any other consumer products co. would be crazy to insult its core buyers. It would lose most of its sales. Younger "demos" aren't going to view favorably aging "brands."
I'm sure Mr. Expert, David, will chime in and correct everybody by saying that's the way it's supposed to work.