A
adma
Guest
I don't want to electrify this thread the way I've electrified others, but just to state the fact that some of the really early stuff gained life in the 80s--eg. "Do You Love Me" from 1962, which might also qualify as a 1987 hit thanks to "Dirty Dancing".
Still, because I can't resist, just another benign reminder: generally speaking, the 80s-conditioned among us haven't necessarily been as "fixed" in their formative identification with a uniform pop/hit/Top40/CHR radioverse the way their elders/elder siblings tended to be. They've been perked by other influences and resources: MTV, et al--even by the fact that "rock history" existed and was, well, sorta cool. Their tastes aren't necessarily so obtusely "of their era", much less "of their contemporary hit radio era" (or even "their domestic pop radio market", re some of this talk about stuff that wasn't a hit on NY hit radio at the time).
It's like some of you are assuming an 80s listenership that is *extraordinarily* formed by their hit-radio past, to the point where certain popular songs that weren't pop radio hits at the time *still* leave them as uneasy as they leave programming purists uneasy. A listenership that borders upon radio geekery in its own right--but presumably, not so much or so pestily that you'd be shushing them away to satellite.
So, I'm not objecting to the way things have come w/WCBS so far; I'm just cautioning a lot of you re your audience/demo/market assumptions. Sometimes, it seems like there's a programming mentality out there that still thinks there's an audience that doesn't know "Whole Lotta Love" has an o*g*sm break...
Still, because I can't resist, just another benign reminder: generally speaking, the 80s-conditioned among us haven't necessarily been as "fixed" in their formative identification with a uniform pop/hit/Top40/CHR radioverse the way their elders/elder siblings tended to be. They've been perked by other influences and resources: MTV, et al--even by the fact that "rock history" existed and was, well, sorta cool. Their tastes aren't necessarily so obtusely "of their era", much less "of their contemporary hit radio era" (or even "their domestic pop radio market", re some of this talk about stuff that wasn't a hit on NY hit radio at the time).
It's like some of you are assuming an 80s listenership that is *extraordinarily* formed by their hit-radio past, to the point where certain popular songs that weren't pop radio hits at the time *still* leave them as uneasy as they leave programming purists uneasy. A listenership that borders upon radio geekery in its own right--but presumably, not so much or so pestily that you'd be shushing them away to satellite.
So, I'm not objecting to the way things have come w/WCBS so far; I'm just cautioning a lot of you re your audience/demo/market assumptions. Sometimes, it seems like there's a programming mentality out there that still thinks there's an audience that doesn't know "Whole Lotta Love" has an o*g*sm break...