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We also can simply play them on the radio and watch as listeners tune out. I've seen that happen. I've also been to concerts where artists try to work in unfamiliar stuff, and watched as people left the room. The goal in radio programming is to keep people in the room, not give them a reason to leave. If listeners are interested in hearing album cuts, we encourage them to buy the album, and listen on their own personal music device. As I said yesterday, we're not a replacement for personal music devices.
I've been to concerts, and have found that it's not so much the "unfamiliar" stuff that turns off the audience, it's the second rate stuff. Since you're not a musician, you probably won't understand this. When a band records an entire album, some of the songs will be really, really good and others won't be. When the band goes on tour, they'll play only the good ones from past albums, but they'll play all the songs from their new album. That's how they "test" all the songs on the album. The new songs that work, that the audience likes, remain on the set list for future concerts. The other songs are put away and dropped from the tour setlist.
But it's not that ridiculous idea of "familiar vs. unfamiliar". That's hogwash invented by suits who don't know anything about music, except as an abstract product. To audiences, it's "good sounding vs not-good sounding". The only aspect of "familiarity" might be the result of a certain similarity in overall sound because the artists have some sort of a signature sound. Most music fans can recognize what band or solo artist is performing a song they've never heard before if it has the artists' signature sound. When I heard Bruce Springsteen's "The Promised Land" from Darkness on the Edge of Town, I immediately recognized it as being a Springsteen song. It was "familiar" in that respect. At the same time, it was a totally new song I had never heard before. But people who have tin ears won't understand that.