It's hard to believe No Boston Rock Radio station ( non-College stations) plays New Rock music. I remember Boston had a lot of good rock stations that played new Rock music ( WFNX,WCOZ,WAAF and WBCN ) .
The college stations often played new rock first anyway, even back in the heyday decades ago. If songs got a good response on college radio, the commercial stations picked them up, WFNX and WBCN often did right away.But yeah, aside from Eli mentioning that the HD subchannels, the only place you're gonna find new rock is on the college stations.
It's hard to believe No Boston Rock Radio station ( non-College stations) plays New Rock music. I remember Boston had a lot of good rock stations that played new Rock music ( WFNX,WCOZ,WAAF and WBCN ) .
There is!There might still be some new rock on the automated "WAAF" music feed on 104.1 WWBX HD2 on an HD radio...
I don't recall off the top of my head when WAAF threw in the towel, but I'm pretty sure it was within the last 10 years or so. Rock has been in decline (at least as far as new music goes) for the better part of this century. I'm sure the lack of general interest in new music, combined with the less than ideal signal is what did them in. A little surprising considering what a rock town Boston/eastern Mass has always been, but times change.Sounds like to me it wasn't the tight playlist buy a bad signal and few buys on the revenue end. Lack of revenue always means a change if not in format, in management.
I worked at FNX, granted years before it was sold. The sale wasn't about expansion of The Phoenix. No expansion happened. In fact it was downsized and then closed within a year.That was then, this is now. It's a sign of the times.
WFNX got sold to Clear Channel to fund in my opinion, a unwise print media expansion. WBCN for Sports Radio and WAAF for Christian music. WCOZ was long gone before I started listening to radio.
But yeah, aside from Eli mentioning that the HD subchannels, the only place you're gonna find new rock is on the college stations.
And even the college stations aren't the rock strongholds they used to be. When I left Connecticut at the end of 2021, WESU Middletown (Wesleyan University) was playing more current R&B and hip-hop than current rock, and WWUH (University of Hartford) and WHUS (UConn) were also de-emphasizing rock.But yeah, aside from Eli mentioning that the HD subchannels, the only place you're gonna find new rock is on the college stations.
That was back in the day when there was actually good rock music.
At one time, rock stars would willingly go to radio stations to promote their music. Today, that would seem beneath them.
Rock stars don't need radio to act as an intermediary anymore. They cut out the middle man and deal directly with their fans. Their fans PAY to be members of fan clubs, where they get personal goodies from their favorite artists. The fans also are part of social media groups where they interact with other fans and the artists themselves. Where would radio fit in that ecosystem?
Do you just like to hear yourself talk, even if it means making stuff up?
I would have thought some resources could have been brought in to revitalize and update 92.9 when they had the chance.
They did. They brought in WRIF's morning show. But it didn't have any effect.
That's because Boston isn't Detroit.
It is amazing that Boston, with all its colleges and universities, can only support a Classic Rock station and an Adult Alternative station.
Dave & Chuck were piped in for mornings long before Alt 92.9 became Rock 92.9. They were part of the prior format for a good 18 months, I want to say.They did. They brought in WRIF's morning show. But it didn't have any effect.
In most cases it's usually the morning show is what attracts the audience at active rock stations, not focusing on music.
Examples include WMMR, WMMS, and KISP.
The WRIF morning show was not the thing they needed though. I'm talking more along the lines of music research, promoting bands, etc. For example, if a new Jack White song is doing well at WMMR, then WBOS could have added it.They did. They brought in WRIF's morning show. But it didn't have any effect.
In most cases it's usually the morning show is what attracts the audience at active rock stations, not focusing on music.
Examples include WMMR, WMMS, and KISP.