DavidEduardo said:Keep in mind that the music you hear on any metro area music FM is likely reserched locally, and the songs that are "too negative" are eliminated.
I've only been 'researched' only once in my life and that was by a country station I never listened to BUT....how would you even know a "negative" song if you never researched or played it? That's my point....how could a survey possibly properly cover the entire RnR genre?
DavidEduardo said:As we move to having all the top 50 markets under PPM in the next two years, radio will be even more aware that a single mistake will drive listeners away, and they do not come back until the other station makes a mistake. So playing "oh wow" songs is likely to decrease as they are so, so dangerous.
I can't speak for what may or may not happen with PPM but if music radio doesn't change rather quickly there won't be enough of us "older folks" to measure at all. For the first time in my life I no longer listen to the radio...even in the car. I expect from comments on this board and other folks I know this isn't my choice alone. That said, there are very, very few songs I once listened to on the radio that would cause me to switch my listening habits for anything more than a few minutes. When I returned from Vietnam in '66 the Rolling Stones "Satisfaction" was the most recent annual #1 and I hated that song. Now, some 40 years later not only can I stand listening to it but actually play it on my own playlist.
"Mistakes", unless they are constant, probably won't affect listeners all that much as most of us, even in large metro areas, don't have but one or two stations to pick from within one genre.
DavidEduardo said:But what is 70% of the listeners hate Freddy Cannon? The station, with research in hand, is not going to do that as very few will like the playing of Cannon, and many can easily go away.
Realistically, do listeners really hate one particular artist enough to switch stations? I can understand if KOOL played a rotation of Barbra Streisand or a bunch of bubblegum in their 60's Oldies, Most people would think it didn't fit. But hate? Well....OK....maybe bubblegum.
DavidEduardo said:Since radio can not afford to specifically please you except as a fringe listener to a more under-55 format, there is no way that a song by Fats Domino will be played since one has to be at least in their 60's to have much fondness for it.
Two points:
1. I am 63 and retired and have more discretionary money to spend than at any other time in my life. Maybe not for P&G products but definitely for local services which seems to be most of the ads on radio.
2. My sons and daughters had never heard Fats Domino before they watched Forrest Gump. All they wanted to know after the movie was "who is that guy", not believing he was most popular in the late 50's. I now have three CD's of his music in my house, none bought by me. Much the same thing happened when one of my sons got interested in military history after joining the Marine Corps. His interest in WWII morphed into a love of Big Band/Swing, music he never heard before. And he was just out of his teens at that time.
My point, of course, is that playing music of a previous generation is somewhat risky but is more likely to spark an interest for most people (unless they are tweens or young teens whose "culture" won't permit deviation). I think I would trust the judgment of people (PD's or jocks) who live/lived the music rather than a hired gun who tries to be all things to all people. After all, the "experimentation" doesn't have to be done during drive time but rather when listeners are not using the radio as background noise.
DavidEduardo said:When advertisers start seeking 55+ (and the trend is just the opposite) then radio will come after your with format offerings. Until then, just answer the question, "Who is going to pay for it?" and you will know why satellite and MP3 players are your best solution.
I'm not disagreeing with your summary, in fact, I agree with it. When radio quit serving me I bought myself a 30GB CD/MP3 player and live happily thereafter. But because I grew up with 1950's and 60's radio, when it was exciting, I still miss the connection a listener has with the on-air talent. I can deal with segmentation (all 60's all the time etc.) but can't deal with the overwhelming landslide of commercials and inane banter that is most of music radio today.