I like the Jelly Roll single that is currently receiving widespread Rock radio airplay quite a bit.
I remember seeing Staind’s Aaron Lewis in Shreveport many years ago…he’s now doing countryYou may recall about a year ago I mentioned that some alternative acts were reinventing themselves as country acts because they couldn't get enough label support in alternative?
Jelly Roll is an example of the opposite of what you were talking about. He’s struggled to get country radio on his side for years so he pursued rock/Alt radio for “Dead Man Walking” and got it. This led to “Son of a Sinner” getting country play.Interesting. That song, Dead Man Walking, is on a Nashville based country music label.
Jelly Roll is an example of the opposite of what you were talking about. He’s struggled to get country radio on his side for years so he pursued rock/Alt radio for “Dead Man Walking” and got it. This led to “Son of a Sinner” getting country play.
Jelly Roll was classified as “Alt-country” for his first few years as an artist, whatever the hell that means. Jason Isbell and Brandi Carlile are also classified as such, as were Giovannie & the Hired Guns before they went straight-up Southern rock with a dash of punk for their current album era.He looks more like an alternative guy, not a country guy. Apparently he's tied in with Florida Georgia Line and a lot of others like that.
Jelly Roll was classified as “Alt-country” for his first few years as an artist, whatever the hell that means.
I’ve been listening to KROQ the last week. And I’m not implying this can be corrected overnight. But, it’s essentially the same playlist from 2008-09, with a couple of new songs by Cannons in their playlist
I stand corrected! That’s good to hear. I guess that was the magical formula all along? Its ok to add new artists, but don‘t forget who got alternative to what it is? I think we were force fed to believe RHCP, FF, etc aren’t cool anymoreI'm not sure about that. I just looked at their playlist on Mediabase, and they're playing a lot more currents, and they're playing them more often, than at any time in recent memory. You mention Cannons, and they're #2 on the playlist. But they're also playing new releases by the Foo Fighters & Chili Peppers on average of 50 times a week. Under Kaplan, they would never have played either of them.
I stand corrected! That’s good to hear. I guess that was the magical formula all along? Its ok to add new artists, but don‘t forget who got alternative to what it is? I think we were force fed to believe RHCP, FF, etc aren’t cool anymore
What is not being mentioned, again, is that alt listeners are fragmented and what one group likes, another tolerates and still another hates. It is very hard to find consensus song.I stand corrected! That’s good to hear. I guess that was the magical formula all along? Its ok to add new artists, but don‘t forget who got alternative to what it is? I think we were force fed to believe RHCP, FF, etc aren’t cool anymore
KROQ needs to find songs that listeners want to hear today, not back then.What is not being mentioned, again, is that alt listeners are fragmented and what one group likes, another tolerates and still another hates. It is very hard to find consensus song.
In other words, the "who got alternative to what it is" is an inaccurate presumption as there is little commonality today and the subset of alternative listeners is not monolithic any more.
Easier said than doneKROQ needs to find songs that listeners want to hear today, not back then.
What is not being mentioned, again, is that alt listeners are fragmented and what one group likes, another tolerates and still another hates. It is very hard to find consensus song.
Or whether there are enough songs all the groups accept to build a format around.First thing that needs to happen is they need to understand which of these groups they are going to target.
Or whether there are enough songs all the groups accept to build a format around.
Perhaps the idea is that there is a more general acceptance of new songs than library titles and they can hope to help make them mass appeal within the genre.As I said earlier in this thread they're playing more currents, and playing them more often, than anytime in recent memory.
I don't even dare ask "why?"And a few of them were on Kaplan's "do not play" list.
I still hope it’s enough for KROQ to survive. Keep the new stuff on the main channel and use the HD2 channel for all the songs the listeners grew up with back in the day.Perhaps the idea is that there is a more general acceptance of new songs than library titles and they can hope to help make them mass appeal within the genre.
I don't even dare ask "why?"