But we're both right and can be both wrong.
The mistake you make is extrapolating your personal taste to others. That is wrong.
But we're both right and can be both wrong.
After you.....
Music fans vs. the industry....Nobody wins. But we're both right and can be both wrong.
Yours is an opinion held by one person. Your songs, your idea of variety, your fascination with charts and lists.
The radio folks like BigA, KM, Michael and others represent lifetimes of experience, learning what works and what does not .
The things that you would like to hear on the radio are the things that don't work.
There is no "right" in what you say except for your own personal world of one.
Yet many small market stations already side with music fans in their presentation.
Once again, LA is NOT a small market. No "small market stations" using that presentation here.
Your off the subject by bringing it up here. Go to the Colorado board.
Read the post. I said many small market stations side with music fans. Never mentioned L.A.
Yet many small market stations already side with music fans in their presentation.
That is also why, in smaller markets, the Drake-Chenault automated formats often out-rated their live, local competitors "back in the day" and why satellite-delivered formats later had the same effect.So the fact that some stations play deep playlists or songs that were really never hits is not unusual... those stations generally have little over-the-air competition, so they don't notice that they could have more listening if they programmed in a better way.
Relying on the charts at the time a song was current in order to determine playability today is flawed, because the average listener (and I once again acknowledge that oldies76 is not an "average listener") only has fond memories of the absolute biggest hits ... and the lesser hits have faded from their memories, for the most part.
So in the 1970s the Billboard Hot 100 reflected wholesale numbers, not retail sales? But...but...Disco Duck and The Night Chicago Died each went to number one and each went gold.
So in the 1970s the Billboard Hot 100 reflected wholesale numbers, not retail sales? But...but...Disco Duck and The Night Chicago Died each went to number one and each went gold. They had to have been bought by at least a million "paying customers"---they just had to be. Come to think of it, Rick Dees used to joke that only seven people bought his Disco Duck album. Maybe he's right!
Michael, I vaguely remember a researcher in the late '70s or early '80s working on a series of reference books that would have supposedly been more accurate than the Joel Whitburn books which are based solely on chart positions. The researcher was planning to take each weekly Hot 100 and tabulate actual sales figures. He reasoned, for example, that a number-one song in December might sell twice as many copies in a week as a number-one song in June, and a song that peaked at #2---think about Creedence Clearwater Revival and Blood Sweat & Tears!---might have ultimately sold more copies than a song that reached number one. The guy was going to rank each year's hits according to actual (or so he claimed) sales figures. I don't remember his name or the name of the books. I don't even know if he ever published any. Do you know anything about this?
For the life of me, I don't know why I didn't think of this additional factor until now.A record that peaked at #10....a "top ten hit".....that's how well that record did in its best week. Meaning that in its best week, there were nine records that were bigger. And the average person could probably only name seven hits that week.
I don't know the answer to that because I have never been in the record business.
We studied Shania Twain's Come On Over, which had 9 singles on it. Sales of the album actually increased as more singles were released. It reached a tipping point towards the end, mainly because the singles weren't as good, and everyone who wanted it had already bought it. We brought up that research when the RIAA came up with their incorrect statement that OTA radio play hurt album sales.
From what I said ahead of the statement of mine that you quoted, it would seem intuitive that singles sales would drop as album sales increased, A. Did your research show any tendency for that happening (especially with the quality of the single releases declining)?