NightAire said:
David, maybe you can help me explain what JbeJay described about resting groups of songs.
I know this is an extremely common practice in radio, but I've never understood WHY.
Except for a few specific cases, i don't understand it either.
The best way to rest a song is to make sure its horizontal and vertical rotations are ideal. That is, it plays in all other dayparts before returning to the one it just played in. And when it returns to that daypart, it plays in different hours each time. In this manner, the average listener will not hear a song overplayed.
The case for platooning songs is best made with artists that have too many songs. Country has lots of them, and a common practice is to have a few resting and a larger bunch playing. Let's say the station plays 30 Garth Brooks songs in gold, but rotations and separations require that there only be 18 in active rotation... so, every week, we have six songs go to rest and six return from rest. Any given song would simply skip two weeks every fourth week.
In this case of "high density" artists, the alternative is to packet the songs, where two songs occupy one "slot" on the category list, thus playing half as much. Or, using GSelector, songs by an artist are adjusted to play less than other songs in the category... which is the same thing. I'd rather cycle a few in and out than slow down all such songs, but either approach seems to work.
I know of many cases where PD's would rest songs when they were no longer currents and before they became recurrents. If the song was good enough to play, why would you stop playing it for a while? It's not like a good song needs a cooling off period... if the song is burning, slow it down, don't kill it.
If these songs are all previous hits, if these songs are all about equally popular, why wouldn't you dump them ALL into rotation at once and let it be an extremely slow rotating category of decent songs?
That is my belief. and that is why stations may have several levels of gold play, with lesser and lesser repeat frequency based on score and other factors. Key in this is deciding at what score level a song should not be played. Some libraries are too large because they have too many mediocre songs, and that makes the good ones, the ones people turn up the volume on, play less often.
Oh, and i am one of those people who still turns up the volume when Brown Eyed Girl comes on...
Wouldn't that create the same lack of burnout?
In gold based formats, burnout is generally not as much due to a song being played out as from the playing of songs that really should not play much, if at all.
Example (100% anecdotal). About the only music channel on XM I listen to is 60's on 6 because I programmed and played a lot of the tunes... but it seems like (perception) that every time I listen, there is Mary Hopkin and Those Were The Days. I liked the song in the 60's but don't much care for it today; when I hear it twice in a week, I begin detesting it. But, again, put Brown Eyed Girl on and up goes the volume.
It seems like rotating in and out small groups of songs almost guarantees that your P1s are going to burn on each group of songs before your more typical listener gets tired of them and you move them out to rest (and burn another set).
In all the cases of platooning I have seen, the use has been to play way, way, too many songs that are irrelevant and even repugnant. Just because a song was somewhere in Whitburn does not mean it can be played today.
It strikes me as ill-advised as a "trick" I've seen some stations do where they play their overnight songs again the next morning or visa-versa with the idea that it will be different audiences and allow you to rotate through all of your hits in the daytime slots... you better be sure you're not burning out P1s who are up late or up early!
Taking gold from 1 AM to 4 AM and playing it from 10 AM to 4 PM is usually a good practice, as the chance of hitting any of the same people is nil. Widening the window is not really a good idea.
I'm hoping you can shed some light on what has always seemed to me like counter-intuitive and self-destructive practices on the part of so, so many (and many GREAT) radio stations.
This is one of those areas where opinion is often varied. I'm in agreement with you on most of this, mostly because I think that if you feel a need to platoon, you probably have too many songs in the library.