Re: Conundrum
> Thanks for replying. Knew I could count on you (BTW,
> Radnowski's been pretty quiet lately, hope he's OK).
>
I've had my run-ins with the resident house painter on this board and at the risk of sounding sentimental, I too wonder where the hell he is and hope he's OK too. Maybe he got too close to the paint thinner again.
> I really want to know what people think about this. Would
> you go out of your way to listen to a station like this: I'm
> thinking 64-67 as the core years, with VERY selected 55-60,
> a little bit more featured from 61-63 (Orbisons, Four
> Seasons, girl group, early Motown, God there's some
> grrrrrreat stuff there that gets forgotten or ignored), and
> a sprinkling of 68-72 (post-Sgt. Pepper there was a
> significant change in the sound of the Top 40 charts).
This is a good vintage, TS, read my concerns below.
> By "go out of your way" I mean, which of these might you
> consider:
> -putting up with the hassle and work-in-progress sound
> quality of a stream?
No
> -putting up with the questionable sound quality and signal
> issues of a "fringe" AM signal?
Not likely. See below, re: WLVL, WJJL, WSPQ, etc.
> -paying for hardware and monthly costs of satellite?
No
> -buying an HD radio in your home and/or car?
Not yet
> -supporting any such ventures with your listening time and
> your disposable income (whether by paying directly or
> patronizing advertisers?)
I'd have to be convinced
> This all assumes that 60s-based Oldies is a lost format as
> far as the big-time FM channels are concerned.
>
> Keep those replies coming!
You should have put this post at the top of the page. It’s worthy of debate. I’ve noticed that the deeper into the thread that a post appears, the less it’s likely to be read and even less likely it is to get a reasoned response.
Being 45+, I concur with your thesis, TS and with Rox as well, especially about nich programming. There’s a place for 60’s-based oldies on the radio. But you and I might differ as to what constitutes a 60’s oldie in the first place. Gene Pitney is a 60’s artist. “It hurts to be in love” is an outstanding song in my estimation. You might disagree. A guy might like it, a woman might think it's drek. I like the Beatles and would listen to just about anything they did, from “And your bird can sing” to “You know my name, look up my number.” You might think the Beatles have only a limited place in your 60’s format.
I’m not fond of the Shirelles. Leslie Gore doesn’t knock me out. On the other hand, women might want more of that. See what we’re getting into here? Years ago, a guy I know told me he wanted to buy WJJL. I told him he should have his head examined and that WJJL was worth about 10 cents more than the assets listed in their bankruptcy court filing. Nothing came of it.
What station is going to go all 60’s simply to suit you and me? WJJL? Hardly. WLVL? Can’t hear it south of the county line after sunset. WXRL? Its stone country and paid polkas are making its owner a very comfortable living. WSPQ? Can’t be heard farther north of Amour Duelles road.
The presentation of the 60s format is another issue. High energy? Conversational? Laid back? High personality with jocks talking about how they remember drinking their first beer to “Kicks” by Paul Revere and the Raiders? That’s out. It’s 2006. Controled personality jocks, with liners and flexibility to talk over songs that have lengthy intros? I notice the guys on WHTT use a hybrid approach, sometimes energetic and occasional conversational. It seems to work well. WHTT can sound superb one hour and the next it's playing three bad 70s disco songs.
There are so many issues to define. Having been a program director, you know all too well that a good airstaff needs direction, yet have the flexibility to bend the rules judiciously.
Personally, I believe music on AM is a lost cause. Yes, there are people who post on this board who love AM unconditionally and would listen to music on AM. They have their GE SuperRadios and RadioShack deluxe AM tuners. Most people don’t... they’re listening to a Crapasonic-500-B.
Another issue. 1966 was 40 years ago. While most people listened to music on AM back then, they eventually discovered that music sounded better on FM and moved away from the AM band when stations like the Super Q, QFM97, Rock 102 or WPHD, later WNYS and WHTT played the music they once listened to on AM.
Subsequent generations have no soft spot for music on AM. Therefore, the potential for a successful music format on AM is diminishing with every passing year.
1966 was 40 years ago. Amazing. If you were playing 40 year old music in 1966, it would have been from 1926! Of course, it wasn't rock 'n roll or a variation thereof. Kind of puts this thread in a whole new perspective.
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