Also advertising on that station are an assisted living facility and a company that lets people stay at home instead of going there.
It is unfortunate.We don’t have an oldies station here in the Bay Area unfortunately
Even KFRC played some early 60s songs as recently as 2004 (610 AM flipped to religious KEAR, and the FM kind of came and went mostly un noticed before becoming a simulcast of KCBS in 2007).
That timeline assumes an adequate catalog of new music with lasting appeal to supplant the old music that ages out... and unfortunately that is no longer the case.And given that "as recently as 2004" is now 21 years..."some 60s songs" would logically now be "some 80s songs".
That timeline assumes an adequate catalog of new music with lasting appeal to supplant the old music that ages out... and unfortunately that is no longer the case.
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It’s Not Our Imaginations…Modern Music Really Does Suck
It’s Not Our Imaginations…Modern Music Really Does Suck At first I thought it was my old-age bias, thinking “why was my 50s-80s music so much better?”. Well it turns out that music during the …scottvern.medium.com
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10 Reasons Why Music Sucks So Hard Right Now
It's no secret - music really sucks right now, and I have 10 reasons why no one is making great music anymore. Read more to learn why all the icons are gone.www.benjamingroff.com
Just for clarity:Even KFRC played some early 60s songs as recently as 2004 (610 AM flipped to religious KEAR, and the FM kind of came and went mostly un noticed before becoming a simulcast of KCBS in 2007).
Just for clarity:
KFRC(AM) became KEAR(AM) on April 30, 2005. The oldies format continued on KFRC-FM (99.7). The old KEAR (FM, 106.9) became KIFR, "Free FM", a male-oriented talk format that CBS had rolled out in a few other markets. It generally was a flop.
KFRC-FM (106.9) fired its air staff on October 20, 2008, continuing automated for a week (with hourly CBS Radio newscasts!) until beginning the simulcast with KCBS(AM) on October 27, 2008 at 7:40 am.
I'm writing this in a hurry, so I haven't nailed down exactly when the classic-hits format came to KFRC-FM (106.9).
The call-letter record at fccdata.org gives an indication, though: the 99.7 calls changed to KMVQ and the 106.9 calls changed to KFRC-FM on May 22, 2007. As I recall, the "Movin'" format came to 99.7 around that time, with 106.9 becoming classic hits.
But the point does stand that the floodgates have been opened. We no longer have record labels curating and developing talented artists and putting the effort into producing their work, crafting it into radio-ready singles, and promoting it. Now anyone can record a song in their bedroom, throw a pre-packaged beat or AI-generated backing track on it, and release it to the entire world on social media. And all that record labels really do anymore is cherry-pick artists who have already gained traction on their own, lock them into restrictive contracts, and squeeze money out of them until their 15 minutes of fame is over.I love "scientifically proven" (your first link). That doesn't matter. All that matters is finding 300-800 songs spread across a couple of decades that people in their mid-late 30s to their mid-late 40s love, like or won't push the button to tune out from.
But the point does stand that the floodgates have been opened. We no longer have record labels curating and developing talented artists and putting the effort into producing their work, crafting it into radio-ready singles, and promoting it. Now anyone can record a song in their bedroom, throw a pre-packaged beat or AI-generated backing track on it, and release it to the entire world on social media. And all that record labels really do anymore is cherry-pick artists who have already gained traction on their own, lock them into restrictive contracts, and squeeze money out of them until their 15 minutes of fame is over.
The president of Warner Music Group even admitted as such, in an interview where his advice to new artists was for them to do all the work on their own that record labels used to do for them:
One thing we do know. Anyone who watched "The Orville" knows that hundreds of years in the future, people were still listening to what we call oldies now.Which says that music from the 2020s is going to be problematic for Classic Hits stations in 2040-2055. And I have NO idea if radio's even going to be a thing at that point. I'd probably bet against it.
One thing we do know. Anyone who watched "The Orville" knows that hundreds of years in the future, people were still listening to what we call oldies now.
Was. It became as serious as the original "Star Trek".b) "The Orville" was a comedy.
Which also got much more wrong about the future than it got right.Was. It became as serious as the original "Star Trek".
Perhaps. But the producers et al. did at least try to make a good faith effort to base much of the fictional "Star Trek" technology on science that was at least somewhat plausible theoretically. Of course, as time went on, many of those theories that were thought plausible in the 1960s were since either scientifically disproven altogether, or modified to take new knowledge into account. This happens, and it doesn't make Star Trek wrong. It's just the way science works.Was. It became as serious as the original "Star Trek".
Which also got much more wrong about the future than it got right.
Perhaps. But the producers et al. did at least try to make a good faith effort to base much of the fictional "Star Trek" technology on science that was at least somewhat plausible theoretically. Of course, as time went on, many of those theories that were thought plausible in the 1960s were since either scientifically disproven altogether, or modified to take new knowledge into account. This happens, and it doesn't make Star Trek wrong. It's just the way science works.
Did they mention if it was being played from a wax cylinder record? I have to admit it would be pretty cool if they have one of those old players in the studio, but most likely it was just a recording of it.Any run-of-the-mill oldies station can play a song 100 years old. Serenade Radio goes above and beyond playing a song from 1905!
Yes.Personally, I was always impressed with the episodes in "Star Trek: The Next Generation" where the late Gene Roddenberry was able to explore plots involving humanity, ethics and compassion. It was far superior a series compared to the original, and many of those storylines have parallels in the real world today.