We Don't Talk Anymore -- Cliff Richard
Hooked on a Feeling -- Blue Swede
Boogaloo Down Broadway -- Fantastic Johnny C.
Surfin' USA -- The Beach Boys
Then Came You -- Dionne Warwick & the Spinners
Mary Mary -- The Monkees
Love Won't Let Me Wait -- Major Harris
I Can Help -- Billy Swan
Bottle of Wine -- The Fireballs
Love Will Find a Way -- Pablo Cruise
Precious and Few -- Climax
Lonely Boy -- Andrew Gold
All I Need -- The Temptations
Playground in My Mind -- Clint Holmes
Glad All Over -- The Dave Clark Five
I Need You -- America
Hot Stuff -- Donna Summer
While I've been typing this list, Jose Feliciano's "Light My Fire" and Dionne Warwick's "This Girl's in Love with You" have played. I think this sort of variety would be consistent with Ed's vision for this station. It's all '60s and '70s and goes well beyond the monster hits of those decades. I used to visit the NH/VT area often back when travel was advisable, and I can tell you that while the past hour's playlist may lean soft, I've heard songs like "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" and "Fire" (Arthur Brown, Ohio Players and Pointer Sisters -- not Jimi Hendrix on my "watch" but you never know) played. If WMEX sounds like this, tens (maybe) of oldies geeks will be ecstatic!
That is a good playlist, and having the three different "Fire" songs in rotation is cool, the only thing is Ed wants to sprinkle some big '50s hits into the mix, representing the whole original WMEX rock'n'roll era. The oldest song I see there is the Beach Boys from 1963. I know that most programmers today would say that '50s music is now "too old" and won't attract advertisers, and from a commercial viewpoint they're right, but at 80 himself Ed doesn't think that way.