K
K.M. Richards
Guest
I suppose a true Rhythmic Oldies station would play more titles that never crossed over to the pop charts, while nearly all vocals on The Wave did.
Good supposition ... which is why Hot 92.3 was never a pure Rhythmic Oldies format. As David has pointed out numerous times, the Black population of the Los Angeles market is a single-digit percentage and a format built around R&B songs that never crossed to the Hot 100 would not appeal to the Hispanic audience that was their audience. (Just ask Art Laboe.)
One of the realities in this market is that the Hispanic population -- regardless of language spoken -- is roughly half of the radio audience. Every format, no matter how "white", has to take that into account.
I am pretty sure the last R&B format that played a lot of non-crossover gold was the "Dusties" format on KGFJ/1230 ... and that was thirty years ago.