Goodtimesandgreatoldies said:
I just checked the True Oldies Channel`s website at
www.trueoldieschannel.com. They state on the website that they play NO 1980`s and stop with most 70`s songs at 1974. They also say that they have a huge Oldies library of over 5,000 played in no particular order. This is what makes them special. Check out the website for yourself!
I don't know how they can say that they play NO '80s songs, when I can look at their playlist, and see that they've played "Uptown Girl" by Billy Joel, "Maneater" by Hall & Oates, and "Down Under" from Men at Work.
The problem with most "oldies" stations is that they got frozen in a 1960s time-warp. I don't care what anyone says, music from the early 1980s is now 25 years old, and
should be considered oldies, because that is what they are! Those 1980s oldies are now
older than the "oldies" that I listened to growing up! If oldies stations had progressed with their audience, and introduced those "newer" oldies to their listeners, they'd still be rockin' today!
Here in Nashville, the last oldies station here was finally beginning to get that message. They started playing late 1970s artists like Peter Frampton! Good job! But then they threw all that away, and went "classic hits" on us! :

They were playing music from
my generation (1975-1985 or so), but they shredded their playlist down to just the same handful of songs that any similar station would be playing! The problem with the "classic hits" format is that it leaves the listener wanting more. Okay, so you play "Rock This Town" by the Stray Cats. How about also playing "Sexy and 17" by them every once in a while? If you're going to play to
my generation, then you must play
MY generation's music! That means
ALL of it, not the just the handful of songs you feel like playing! :

The "classic hits" station lasted maybe a year or so with that format (and its narrow, tightly controlled playlist) before finally admitting that they failed, and changing formats (again!). This certainly flies in the face of everything David always says about tightly controlled playlists, and playing the same dozen songs over and over and over again! It didn't work in Nashville! :
So play the oldies, but don't center the playlist on the 1960s. The main focus of an oldies station now should be around 1975, with a roughly equal amount of the playlist coming from either side of 1975.