I have one and it's still not simple enough.You are thinking of Jitterbug, which has simple phones targeted at the 75+ crowd.
I have one and it's still not simple enough.You are thinking of Jitterbug, which has simple phones targeted at the 75+ crowd.
Stewart has recorded several albums of "Great American Songbook" material in this millennium and they have sold well. The arrangements are faithful to the originals. If you're programming a music service that includes standards in 2023, there's no reason to exclude Stewart.But on the stations I listen to online, he is mostly a singer of standards. The primary exception is "Have I Told You Lately" which seems to qualify as a standard. "Tonight's the Night" and "This Old Heart of Mine" and maybe "Maggie May" are on America's Best Music.
But on the stations I listen to online, he is mostly a singer of standards. The primary exception is "Have I Told You Lately" which seems to qualify as a standard. "Tonight's the Night" and "This Old Heart of Mine" and maybe "Maggie May" are on America's Best Music.
Stewart has recorded several albums of "Great American Songbook" material in this millennium and they have sold well. The arrangements are faithful to the originals. If you're programming a music service that includes standards in 2023, there's no reason to exclude Stewart.
Here is something you should be aware of (and I say it with no intent to offend!): You are what we call in research an "outlier".I grew up during the disco era. I wasn't familiar with The Beatles and even once I heard them, I didn't really like them. Once i discovered standards, that was my music, along with the softer music from the disco era and even some disco.
Here is something you should be aware of (and I say it with no intent to offend!): You are what we call in research an "outlier".
An Outlier is a person who is an a group that is generally less than a couple of percent of the group under study who differs significantly from the normal range of behaviours of the group.
An example: a song scores between 70 and 85 among 99 out of 100 people asked about it today. That on person scores it as a 40, meaning "I dislike it a lot, but don't outright hate it". The same person is observed being out of the normal range on a large percentage of other songs.
So, because those strange scores distort slightly the median score for the song, that person's results are removed from the test and discarded. And that is because paying attention to that person's tastes will actually lessen our station's appeal to the 99% (in this imaginary case) who like us, like our song and are core listeners.
So why did we even get that person into the test? They answered that they like our station, and listen a lot. What we could not tell is that the person was a "settler". That is another research term for someone who listened to us as their most used station, but only because it was seen as being "less bad" than all the others. Those people are not able to be pleased by OTA radio... not now, not then, not ever. In fact, it is probable that no curated music source will totally please them.
I'm not even sure I'm following what you're saying. No, it's not likely Abba fans are listening to Nortena and vice versa.I would think that within the contiguous United States, there are more radio listeners who would choose to listen to standards or to disco, rather than reggaeton music or narco corridosm which are played as "norteno" music by stations with a regional Mexico format. In the U.S., I think that highly sexualized reggaeton, or violence-promoting banda gangster music is the outlier music -- not disco, nor standards.
Even in Mexico, where banda gangster music or narco corridos are popular, lawmakers are trying to address the issue of promoting it in schools to school children. That happened in the state of Sinaloa, home of notorious fentanyl trafficking. Both the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels are very dangerous.
My guess is that people who listen to disco music like ABBA, or standards by artists like Rod Stewart, Michael Buble, Diana Krall, Barry Manilow, etc. are more prevalent in the contiguous U.S.A. This situation might be different in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean radio markets.
( And I do realize that Bad Bunny is booked into Coachella, and not standards artists). But there is still a market for standards and disco, especially among the boomers and Generation X listeners.
It depends upon the market and whom you are surveying. Survey can kind of be set up to reflect bias confirmation.
I'm not sure that vchimp is so much of an outlier in the U.S.
This is controversial, to be sure. But I think that standards will exist long after reggaeton has passed by. Standards are pretty much enduring in North American culture. They might be updated by newer artists. But the genre remains the same.
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Sinaloa lawmakers seek ban on narco ballads, reggaeton in schools
Lawmakers in Sinaloa have proposed banning narco ballads and reggaeton music in schools, arguing that they send “decadent messages” to children.mexiconewsdaily.com
I agree with Chimp. Stewart didn't have the voice of a Standards crooner but the music and lyrics did.Stewart has recorded several albums of "Great American Songbook" material in this millennium and they have sold well. The arrangements are faithful to the originals. If you're programming a music service that includes standards in 2023, there's no reason to exclude Stewart.
I'm not even sure I'm following what you're saying. No, it's not likely Abba fans are listening to Nortena and vice versa
There are more Hispanics in the USA... over 50 million... than there are people who are still alive and like standards. And disco is as dead as Beautiful Music.I would think that within the contiguous United States, there are more radio listeners who would choose to listen to standards or to disco,
Regggaetón is a blend of salsa, and even older bomba from Puerto Rico with Jamaican dancehall and other beats. It can bee deeply romantic, highly social content laden or just about girls, fast cars, yachts and guns. And drugs.rather than reggaeton music or narco corridosm which are played as "norteno" music by stations with a regional Mexico format.
Not all reggaetón is as you describe. And reggaetón universal in Latin America, not restricted to one social class from a part of one nation.In the U.S., I think that highly sexualized reggaeton, or violence-promoting banda gangster music is the outlier music -- not disco, nor standards.
Most of that music is prohibited on radio in Mexico.Even in Mexico, where banda gangster music or narco corridos are popular, lawmakers are trying to address the issue of promoting it in schools to school children. That happened in the state of Sinaloa, home of notorious fentanyl trafficking. Both the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels are very dangerous.
ABBA was vastly more popular in Puerto Rico than in the US, but the English language music that was most popular was at least partly rhythmic, and disco was huge and did not die in 1980 as it did in the US.My guess is that people who listen to disco music like ABBA, or standards by artists like Rod Stewart, Michael Buble, Diana Krall, Barry Manilow, etc. are more prevalent in the contiguous U.S.A. This situation might be different in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean radio markets.
Maybe some disco artists, like BeeGees and Donna Summer, but those artists redefined disco and they were broader than the genre, which only lived about 5 years.( And I do realize that Bad Bunny is booked into Coachella, and not standards artists). But there is still a market for standards and disco, especially among the boomers and Generation X listeners.
A good research project design takes much time to develop to avoid bias in the wording and even the voices and accents of recruiters and interviewers.It depends upon the market and whom you are surveying. Survey can kind of be set up to reflect bias confirmation.
He is an ultra-outlier. You run across "out of demo" music tastes perhaps 0.5% of the time or less.I'm not sure that vchimp is so much of an outlier in the U.S.
I don't see any significant interest in standards outside the original fans and a few of their family members. Standards as a radio format pretty much died 20 years ago... along with its listeners.This is controversial, to be sure. But I think that standards will exist long after reggaeton has passed by. Standards are pretty much enduring in North American culture. They might be updated by newer artists. But the genre remains the same.
I suspect the legislators are way out of the demo that likes reggaetón and who have most likely never listened to the most popular songs.![]()
Sinaloa lawmakers seek ban on narco ballads, reggaeton in schools
Lawmakers in Sinaloa have proposed banning narco ballads and reggaeton music in schools, arguing that they send “decadent messages” to children.mexiconewsdaily.com
I mean absolutely no disrespect to vchimpanzee, but if you've read some of his past comments and posts about his tastes in music and what he does and doesn't like, then you'd understand that DavidEduardo is correct -vchimp would indeed be considered an "outlier" if you put any stock at all into the research and testing that's done when considering which formats and playlists would be most successful with the greatest number of listeners in a given market. It's one of the reasons vchimp admittedly has some difficulty finding stations that appeal to his particular taste in music, especially in 2023. That's not a bad thing and certainly not a reason to belittle or demean him as everyone's tastes are different, and no one's personal preferences are "wrong", but some do have tastes and preferences that fall well outside the greater group - and it's that "greater group" that stations and their advertisers are most interesting in reaching. If it helps, keep in mind that many of us have openly admitted that we couldn't program a station with the music WE want to hear and listen to and have a terribly successful product, either - which again illustrates why doing the proper research is important.But my point is that David, who has been very, very successful in radio, says that Chimp would be classified as an outlier. I realize I am being audacious, but I don't agree with that assessment of Chimp.
So I was gonna be a smart*** and find a photoshopped photo of a cell phone with a rotary dial on it and post it as a reply----and then I find out one really exists:I have one and it's still not simple enough.
Rod Stewart put out five "Great American Songbook" albums of standards from 2002 to 2010, all of which were big sellers; Volume III in 2004 reached #1 on Billboard's album chart.(Except that WLML lists Rod Stewart. Why? I always considered Rod Stewart to be a rocker. But maybe they see him as singing standards, the same way that Lady Gaga sings standards with Tony Bennett).
Carly Simon is much better at singing standards than Rod Stewart.
The 'business of radio', nearly distilled into a single thought.<...>
but some do have tastes and preferences that fall well outside the greater group - and it's that "greater group" that stations and their advertisers are most interesting in reaching. If it helps, keep in mind that many of us have openly admitted that we couldn't program a station with the music WE want to hear and listen to and have a terribly successful product, either - which again illustrates why doing the proper research is important.
Regardless, he sounds good to me after hearing him for years. And he gets played a lot on the standards stations I listen to.I agree with Chimp. Stewart didn't have the voice of a Standards crooner but the music and lyrics did.
Maybe.Carly Simon is much better at singing standards than Rod Stewart.
Forty years ago, possibly.That is so sad. It's also cynical. In an ideal world, every listener should be treated as a welcome listener. It's sad to treat older people that way, because most older people know when they are being disrespected -- and they have feelings too, and it hurts to be treated rudely and coldly. That is really a tactic of exclusion and maginalization.
Yet, I think that @Kelly A @DavidEduardo and many of the other industry pro's that have participated here over the years have provided details in other threads that activity doesn't equate to "generally-speaking" purchasing power of those that are retiring.Many in the boomer generation are still very active seniors and active consumers. They may not purchase as much as the demographic of age 25-55, but they are still very active. When I worked for the U.S. Census, we were told that 10,000 boomers will retire every day in the U.S., until the year 2030.
You're right, but neither David nor I ever said that consumers over 50 don't have purchasing power. What we've said very consistently; is that many advertisers which broadcasters rely on for their existence, are primarily interested in reaching a younger audience. It's just business, nothing personal. Heck, David and I both fall into the 50+ bracket, but we also understand our place in the advertising demo orbit.At the end of the day, the 'business of radio' isn't about us in this age group. It's about those in that prime demo that buy things.
Absolutely. There certainly are advertisers who want to reach older folks. Right wing talk radio has been profitable because advertisers know that's where a certain demographic lives. Same with classic TV 'diginets'.More things than those of us 60+ buy.
When I turned on WERT today, it said Carly Simon was being played but I heard Rod.Carly Simon is much better at singing standards than Rod Stewart.