Sweet Home Alabama charted #8 in the Billboard Hot 100, which means it got a lot of airplay at the time:
Earlier on I mentioned that A.I. or a simple internet search is not always accurate when it comes to music. It's a reasonable assumption that a #8 song on Billboard would have gotten a lot of airplay at the time. More than likely, that airplay would have been both regional - in the southern states and played on some rock formats. As I also mentioned, I never found the song anywhere in playlists of the two leading hit music stations in NYC. Plus I never heard the song anywhere in my work travels until I got to Jax.
It's one of many situations where chart position on a national survey doesn't matter much if the song doesn't meet certain criteria for airplay. Every once in a while I'd listen to AT40 when it was brand new. I also listened as rebroadcasts many years later. It always amazed me that I never heard of some songs that charted very high.
Earlier, I mentioned WHYI in Miami, Y-100. Initially, the station featured songs that one could say mirrored a lot of hit music across the country. But as time went along and the P.D., Bill Tanner, saw Miami listeners were unique to say the least, the station began evolving in a direction that was responsive to the market served.
From the 1970s, I remember Bill Tanner talk about not adding Kenny Nolan's "I Like Dreamin'" to their playlist. The song was a hit reaching #3 nationally. Many years later when Y-100 had transformed into something truly unique, there were songs that were in their Top 10, even Top 5 that were at the bottom tier of the national charts. In 1982, Shalamar's "Night To Remember," a song I've talked about over the years a lot, was Y100's #1 song of the year, yet it never cracked the AT 40.
When classic hits formats continued to evolve, I noticed quite a lot of songs that weren't even in the Top 20 get good rotations. Now, don't misunderstand, there were also hit songs that charted very high that good good spins as well. I truly believe that music testing changed the trajectory and the thinking process of song adds.
Another song I never heard of was Peter Gabriel's "In Your Eyes." When I heard it, on classic hits, I loved it. The single was released in 1986. By that time I was pretty much only listening to oldies. When I checked the song out, it only reached chart position #26 nationally. But it reached #1 on the U.S. Mainstream Rock survey from Billboard. So there you go! As I've been mentioning, that "rock bucket" was growing at the expense of the other genres.
Anyway, I have long been fascinated with playlists and the reasoning behind the airing of certain songs or not even considering them at all. As with anything, nothing is perfect. For those who don't have a "set it and forget it" mentality, course corrections can be made.