"Maybe more folks listened to KFRC on 610 than they was actually reflected by the book. The Bay area is a pretty heavy AM area because of all those hills. A lot of their prime target is could still be stuck on AM. I know that I won't listen to an oldies format on FM. It doesn't sound authentic to me."
To me, that's like saying the Tommy Dorsey Band doesn't sound authentic unless you're listening to them on scratchy old monaural 78 RPM records. Everything sounds better in high fidelity stereo, and that's the way practically all music after the early 60s was produced. In the 60s, we listened to the music we didn't want to buy on low fidelity monaural AM radio because that was the only choice we had until FM came of age.
A lot of people are turning back to LP records because they find the sound of digital CDs and down-loaded music sterile, and the sound of pre-digital music richer and more nuanced. I can understand that. But I can't imagine any movement back to monaural sound, or music formats every returning to AM radio.
To me, that's like saying the Tommy Dorsey Band doesn't sound authentic unless you're listening to them on scratchy old monaural 78 RPM records. Everything sounds better in high fidelity stereo, and that's the way practically all music after the early 60s was produced. In the 60s, we listened to the music we didn't want to buy on low fidelity monaural AM radio because that was the only choice we had until FM came of age.
A lot of people are turning back to LP records because they find the sound of digital CDs and down-loaded music sterile, and the sound of pre-digital music richer and more nuanced. I can understand that. But I can't imagine any movement back to monaural sound, or music formats every returning to AM radio.