Forty years ago, there was a very close relationship between radio and records. That doesn't exist anymore. I can go into all the reasons, about changes in the music industry, ownership changing from US companies to foreign companies, etc. Bottom line is there are some genres where there still is a close relationship between radio and records. Alternative is not one. Labels are not investing time or money into alternative promotion anymore. They just throw the spaghetti against the wall over at Spotify, and they're happy with that.Why do you think 91X is successful after 40 years,
People like you wonder why it's not the 80s or 90s anymore, and the reason is one half of the equation is gone. It took time and money from record labels to make all of that music everyone remembers to become hits. All those Weenie Roasts and KFOG music festivals were paid for by record labels. They're not doing that anymore. That's why you end up with new music you believe is good not getting played. If it had label support, that wouldn't happen. I deal in genres where new music gets label support, so I can see the difference.
Why do you think Public Radio stations like The Current, KEXP, etc are playing a lot of new music alternative is supposed to be playing? Are you telling me THIS is a viable currents playlist for alternative?
I think alternative right now is better suited for non-commercial radio. The non-commercial structure is based on audience support, not advertising support. Current alternative music doesn't attract advertising support. That's partly why the labels don't support it. There's no return for them.
The research is flawed, this is why alternative has become dull like AOR was in the 70s. \
If you don't like what the research says, it must be flawed. In other genres, the labels do their own research and present it to radio as part of how they get new music played. But that isn't happening in alternative. Radio makes the same money regardless of th music it plays. Only the music industry benefits when its music gets played. They need to take a more proactive role, as they once did.
Gee, it's like back then program directors were ALLOWED to program, and not corporations instead.
As I've been saying, there are supposed to be two groups involved. Radio & records. What happens when the side that represents the music goes away?