Hya Tall Guy 1. At a towering 5'9 I'm kinda tall myself. 26 years as a DJ, music director, fill-in PD , newsman, two major markets, and at 23 years OUT of the industry am probably old enough to be your older brother.
Two things:
1) Imo, the Standards lasted for some 35 years on radio as a renewable format and was still viable into the 70's in refreshing itself for 'adults'. 'Nostalgia' stations turned 35 years of music into 300 song lists.
Oldies, the natural sequel to Top 40, survived about 16-17 years on its own before the initial air in the dragster tires started to wear in the 70's.
The pop music demo window kept moving, and AoR predictably turned into Classic Rock. At the time AoR turned into that big nostalgia stuff for car buttons, current Album Oriented Rock already had turned into @$$#Ole Oriented Rubbish to appeal to an all-male audience of mid teens. Elapsed time for that outturn to manifest was maybe 8 years at the most.
In each pop music case: Diminishing returns. It's the law.
2) A talk-show host on an upstate NY station and a poster to another radio forum detected a notable erosion in listenership at the younger end -- the 12-17 demo. His observation was just about 20 years ago! I haven't seen anyone who has refuted his findings. Naturally, erosion and rust leakage do not improve with time without remedies.
So with, basically, three music companies issuing modern pop music that sounds like cereal filler ...... and with ten radio stations in each major market aiming 25-49, the desired radio-audience candle has been blazing at both ends for quite some time.
Nothing notably new and exciting musical form has been spotted for youth and us older youths. 12-17 (12-24 if you will) used to replenish musical matters on the radio dials. Such influence as that has waned for half abeen waning for a generation.
So for the time being, get used to tolerating 'Hotel California' and its ilk, TallGuy1. There really isn;t likely to be anything better to be coming along soon.
