TheFonz said:Looking at the titles of recents posts it looks like '50s/'60s Oldies radio is officially dead. Lots of posts about the music, but nothing about radio. Just wondering if there are still some true '50s/early '60s stations out there. If not, what's everyone doing to get their music fix?
uncleDJ said:Hello my friend,
OH NOOOOOO! It's not quite dead yet!
We've gotten to Anniversary #3 at WINY for the Sunday Morning JUKE BOX GOLD show. It's a huge smash, and it's constantly evolving into radio the way we remembered. All the personality, all the memorable tunes being added (like Wink Martindale's DECK OF CARDS, Perry Como's JUKE BOX BABY, Steve Lawrence's GO AWAY LITTLE GIRL, etc.), and all the relativity that both the music and memories had (and still have) with inclusions of Johnny Maestro's tribute, and sooooo much more.
NEVER GIVE UP on this format; people young and old still love it, still want it. The brick/mortar tombstones out there posing to be music radio have made formats so restrictive and stale that they can't last much longer.
People still want to remember the good old days, and I've proven time and again that audience never dies. We may need to weave things in to freshen up what we do, and my insistence of making the top 10 from every Billboard release from ' 55 through '69 a staple in the studio has given new life and better relevance to the mood, the feel and the emotion of 'the greatest era of AM radio'. Keeping up with the artists still out there also helps, and thankfully I've got several of them (and their backups) as faithful listeners.
The Fonz is a legend, the 50s and 60s are extraordinary decades of achievement and bedrock stability in this industry - better are they than the shaky quakey ground music and radio have inherited through bad decisions, poor direction, questionable talent and artists, and a total lack of the importance of history, even (if not especially) in this business.
I'm still driving this Oldies bus, care to join anyone?
-Bill Alley
WINY's Juke Box Gold - Sundays 6-11A Eastern
AM1350 Putnam CT / winyradio.com
What is your agenda? ???Markieo said:uncleDJ said:Hello my friend,
OH NOOOOOO! It's not quite dead yet!
We've gotten to Anniversary #3 at WINY for the Sunday Morning JUKE BOX GOLD show. It's a huge smash, and it's constantly evolving into radio the way we remembered. All the personality, all the memorable tunes being added (like Wink Martindale's DECK OF CARDS, Perry Como's JUKE BOX BABY, Steve Lawrence's GO AWAY LITTLE GIRL, etc.), and all the relativity that both the music and memories had (and still have) with inclusions of Johnny Maestro's tribute, and sooooo much more.
NEVER GIVE UP on this format; people young and old still love it, still want it. The brick/mortar tombstones out there posing to be music radio have made formats so restrictive and stale that they can't last much longer.
People still want to remember the good old days, and I've proven time and again that audience never dies. We may need to weave things in to freshen up what we do, and my insistence of making the top 10 from every Billboard release from ' 55 through '69 a staple in the studio has given new life and better relevance to the mood, the feel and the emotion of 'the greatest era of AM radio'. Keeping up with the artists still out there also helps, and thankfully I've got several of them (and their backups) as faithful listeners.
The Fonz is a legend, the 50s and 60s are extraordinary decades of achievement and bedrock stability in this industry - better are they than the shaky quakey ground music and radio have inherited through bad decisions, poor direction, questionable talent and artists, and a total lack of the importance of history, even (if not especially) in this business.
I'm still driving this Oldies bus, care to join anyone?
-Bill Alley
WINY's Juke Box Gold - Sundays 6-11A Eastern
AM1350 Putnam CT / winyradio.com
Don't tell Eduardo![]()