I'm having a real problem with the idea of "peak musical awareness" being 16-22, as if a person's formative years meant nothing, musically. Under this reasoning, nothing that happened to me before 1969 should have affected me to any degree, Not the Beatles, Beach Boys, Herman's Hermits, Dave Clark Five, Supremes, Four Seasons, none of that! To extend this, am I not to have been affected by the Kennedy assassination, either or the Vietnam War? Back on topic, I'm sure that a fair amount of records were sold to people under the age of 16 and that a fair amount of 1960s Top 40 stations listeners were as well. Now, if this is the case, it means that at this time, nothing before 1974 should be on the radio because anyone younger than 55 was younger than 16 in 1974. The caveat is that this music is still on the radio, not because people younger than 16, at the time of release, were musically aware but because current 40 year olds might like some of it! I have to say that the whole idea of playing music that people were never passionate about, in the first place, is a recipe for disaster and it's just a matter of time before the whole thing implodes!
Semoochie:
You misunderstand. Here's how I defined Peak Musical Awareness a few posts back:
For most people, 16-22 are the years of peak musical awareness...knowing most of what is popular at the time.
No one's suggesting that's it's an on/off switch, on at 16, off at 22...just that, for
most people, the peak falls in those six years.
Any Top 40 DJ from back in the day can tell you that there were 7-year olds on those request lines. There are songs I like from when I was four. And there are several songs that are current hits right now that I like. That's a 53-year span.
And if you ran a search of this site, you'd find dozens of quotes from me saying the same thing: It's not about the age of the song, nor its chart performance when new. It's about how many people in the core of the demo have it in common as a song they want to hear now.
The thing is this: When you start dealing with large numbers of people, patterns begin to emerge.
The majority of Americans care less about music than you or I or probably most people on this board.
They have far fewer songs that they care about.
The bulk of those songs (not all, but a majority) that they have in common with their peers tend to come from the peak musical awareness years.
Right now, the heart of the 25-54 money demo, 40 year olds, are an exception. They like enough music from before their time and early childhood and enough current music that they haven't developed any group nostalgia for their high school and college music.
But this thread is about upper-demo nostalgia radio, and easy listening and what can be done to save it. And peak musical awareness is an important concept here.
Stations are dying because their formats, which started out 30 years ago as 50+, are now 80+. Boomers didn't magically adopt Nat Cole, Peggy Lee and Perry Como or lush instrumental covers of pop hits when their AARP cards arrived in the mail.
So the nostalgia stations added 70s and 80s AC hits. But as I noted from personal experience, that was music for 40-year olds 35 years ago...you're still really appealing to 75 year olds.
There aren't enough people under 70 willing to listen at the same time on a regular basis to move the needle.
The bulk of 50-70 year old music listeners are tuned to classic hits and classic rock. They're not looking for easy or beautiful, at least not in significant enough numbers to sustain a format.
In the same way that Nat, Peggy and Perry pretty much fell off the airwaves in the 70s, there's a cliff coming (actually, we're past it, and like Wile E. Coyote, we're starting to realize it). Nostalgia stations are either going to have to take a very different approach to their music, or, like KOY, stop playing it altogether.