As a side note Fred Cote programmed his 99.9 KOLA right from the back of R & R and the KMET reporting charts.
How can you say such a thing? Don't you still have an upside-down KMET bumper sticker on your car?![]()
To Super and LARadio: Balderdash! .... for both good and bad, it is now gone and can never be (nor should be) replaced. It is something that belongs to it's own time place.
But all that said, what is wrong with letting some old rockers take a stroll down memory and try to recall the good times in the midst of the calamitous mid-life crisis, which is of course the result of the life choices many of their listeners made during those times, that has been brought to bear in the here and now? Throw the geezers a bone! ..... reliving those moments sure beats another Sound "Triple Play Weekend" where you get to hear Santana Sing "Evil Ways", "Black Magic Woman" and "Oye Como Va" back to back.
I would add to your beefs that the playlist was basically the Sound's current playlist, albeit with anything post 1986 removed. KMET definitely was tightly formatted, but there were TONS of other songs played back then.
Good to read that KMET is coming back to life as an internet tribute station. Hope other great stations, like WNEW FM NYC (KMET's sister station, also MetroMedia) folowing the same way to the internet.
Nonsense! You always can create a station how it was, but also if it was still around to day and how it sounds these days. Yes, you don't have the jocks and it's not on FM, but the vibe and the music, station ID's is a good impression how it sounds these days. There are lot of tribute stations on the net. So it's possible.
Well put.
In a collision of media eras, I streamed the Dr. D show on the plane yesterday. His stories were indeed riveting, and like you, despite listening to his show every week from perhaps age 8 to 16, I learned new things. I've always wished the good doctor would have a non-novelty based show - his knowledge of music history and radio history is fantastic, and he is just a class act on the air. Total joy to listen to. He made his name on the novelty tunes, but there is a whole other side to him, and not hearing that is a loss.
I would add to your beefs that the playlist was basically the Sound's current playlist, albeit with anything post 1986 removed. KMET definitely was tightly formatted, but there were TONS of other songs played back then.