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List of Web-Only Easy Listening/Soft Rock Stations

This thread is about WEB-ONLY stations.
This is not about traditional radio.
I'm suggesting that the programming professionals remove themselves from this discussion.
 
This thread is about WEB-ONLY stations.
This is not about traditional radio.
I'm suggesting that the programming professionals remove themselves from this discussion.

Perhaps I should remove myself from the board, too. That's a very narrow perspective to take on a RADIO board.
 
This thread went on for several pages of the music fans arguing amongst themselves. It wasn't until David and his whole way of life was attacked that he stepped in.
 
This thread went on for several pages of the music fans arguing amongst themselves. It wasn't until David and his whole way of life was attacked that he stepped in.

Avid Listener has a thing against lists. That's why I wanted all but one thread closed and deleted, so that there will be less confusion.
 
At home, I can play kid-friendly AC on the computer. But, I don't have anything capable of streaming Internet in the car. I don't carry around a bunch of CD's unless someone else is driving because I'm just not very skilled with that. That's why I would love to have a station like WDUV on FM in my neck of the woods.
 
I was trying out an iTunes station based upon Celine Dion recently. A station based upon her brings up songs that have pop rock qualities. Being a pop rock person, that's part of what attracts me to an old-school AC.
 
labels

When I check out a station's stream information on Shoutcast, what qualifies it to be labeled as soft rock or light/lite rock and what qualifies it to be labeled as adult contemporary?
 
When I check out a station's stream information on Shoutcast, what qualifies it to be labeled as soft rock or light/lite rock and what qualifies it to be labeled as adult contemporary?
I don't think you'll get a straight answer because WEZV in Myrtle Beach chooses to call itself soft AC (there's nothing C about it) and formats that include Phil Collins call themselves easy listening.
 
I figure many soft AC stations use the "easy" terminology because most people identify the format as easy listening, not soft rock, lite rock. I used to use "lite hits" to describe my station, but most people who hear it refer to it as an "easy listening" station, so I said..."ok...if you say so..." ;)
 
This one is labeled soft rock, easy listening, lite rock http://65.49.77.146:8012/index.html

This one is labeled Adult Contemporary http://50.7.77.114:9042/index.html

This one is labeled Soft AC, AC, Adult Contemporary http://167.160.160.203:8000/played.html (note: this one is currently having some server issues)

But I hear a good chunk of overlap musically.
Those are the genres assigned to the shoutcast streams. The descriptors are at the discretion of whomever sets up the stream info.
 
Per Allmusic.com, explains why I hear so much musical overlap between the various stations I've mentioned as recommendations on these boards:

Adult contemporary is essentially a continuation of the soft rock style that became popular in the '70s, with a few adjustments that reflect the evolution of pop-music production techniques. Adult contemporary has the same lush, soothing, highly polished qualities as soft rock, and it works the same "middle of the road" territory -- in other words, it largely lacks the grit of even the slicker varieties of rock or soul music, but it's too indebted to those original sources to qualify as traditional pop or easy listening. The main dividing line between soft rock and adult contemporary is that the latter commonly features synthesizers (and other electronics, such as drum machines) as an important component of the music's smooth studio sheen. Both as a style and a popular radio format, adult contemporary was heavy on romantic ballads, but there was also room for catchy pop/rock (often updating styles -- early rock & roll, smooth soul, Beatlesque pop -- that adult contemporary's main audience had grown up with) and thoughtful singer/songwriter sensibilities. Some artists stayed in adult contemporary territory with pretty much everything they did, but the format also provided a home for ballads by dance-pop and urban soul singers (and, sometimes, those styles' most popular artists could land some AC airplay with their more typical work). Adult contemporary was usually melodic enough to hold listeners' attention, but agreeable and inoffensive enough to work equally well as background music; most critics reviled it as sonic wallpaper or overly safe, sentimental glop, but that didn't prevent it from becoming one of the most popular radio formats of the '80s. Adult contemporary's visibility dwindled just a bit in the '90s, mainly because the rigidly compartmentalized state of radio and the decline of Top 40 programming during the decade meant that AC artists couldn't necessarily rely on as much hit-making exposure outside of their core adult audience. Still, there continued to be a heavy demand for the kind of ambience adult contemporary radio provided, and it remained a well-entrenched style into the new millennium. Some of adult contemporary's core artists over the years include Elton John, Billy Joel, Sting, Air Supply, Michael Bolton, Phil Collins, Lionel Richie, Chicago, and Celine Dion.

http://www.allmusic.com/subgenre/adult-contemporary-ma0000004445



I can't think of any AC stations actually calling themselves “Adult Contemporary” on the air, or “Contemporary”-anything. Aside from the brand names like “Lite” and “Magic”, most just call it “Soft Rock”, "Light/Lite Rock", “Today’s Hits and Yesterday’s Favorites”, “City/Town Name’s Variety Station”, or the even more generic “City/Town Name’s Music Station”.


In my neck of the woods, at the time I was growing up, some AC's concentrated on ballads like the www.softneasy.com station does. Other AC's would play ballads but wouldn't shy away from playing more upbeat, but still relatively conservative, songs, such as "Like A Prayer" by Madonna, such as what the www.kliteonline.com station does. That's why I don't consider soft-leaning AC's that mix like K Lite does to be "trainwrecks".
 
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