There were two waves of Oldies format stations. The first started around 1971 or 1972 and died out around 1976.
There was a difference between the original oldies stations and the second generation oldies stations.
WCBS-FM was from the first generation and started along with stations such as WMOD, WFYR, KHJ-FM, WROR, WAXY and many others. The first generation stations played songs that charted deeper and they played more fifties.
I travelled a bit back then and there was a time when I heard only one small oldies station outside of New York. It was a low powered AM station in Orlando, FL that played all fifties. Maybe a few early sixties, but almost all fifties. I looked for another oldies station but WCBS-FM was the only one, and they programmed the station just as the first generation stations were programmed. Also WLNG was playing 50% oldies in Long Island. They were a quasi oldies staion and positioned themselves as contemporary.
Some played current songs, but others did not. WCAU-FM played Future Gold and put a survey in record stores around 1976. I have two of them. WCBS-FM did not have a survey issued. WAXY did not play current songs.
The second generation oldies stations in the early nineties only played pre-1970 songs. I do not remember any playing 1970 records. They played bigger hits and did not play certain big hits. Never any currents. The influence of the consultants is there in them.
WCBS-FM did not change for a long time. They played deeper songs and played Future Gold twice an hour into the mid-eighties. An example of a deeper song. I listened to an aircheck from 1990 yesterday, and during a regular show, Bobby Jay played Popsicles and Iceicles by The Mermaids. I also remember them playing local songs such as The 81 and It's Gonna Take A Miracle into the mid-nineties.
They were the only first generation station left when all the others were second generation and said, "Good times and great oldies."
I read in a column by the first PD at CBS-FM that there was serious consideration to a change to Hot Hits around 1981. But they decided not to change the format.
> Since the majority of oldies stations nowadays play hits
> from the '60s and '70s, what did "oldies" stations play back
> then? Were there even any oldies stations around? When did
> the first station like this pop up?
>
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There was a difference between the original oldies stations and the second generation oldies stations.
WCBS-FM was from the first generation and started along with stations such as WMOD, WFYR, KHJ-FM, WROR, WAXY and many others. The first generation stations played songs that charted deeper and they played more fifties.
I travelled a bit back then and there was a time when I heard only one small oldies station outside of New York. It was a low powered AM station in Orlando, FL that played all fifties. Maybe a few early sixties, but almost all fifties. I looked for another oldies station but WCBS-FM was the only one, and they programmed the station just as the first generation stations were programmed. Also WLNG was playing 50% oldies in Long Island. They were a quasi oldies staion and positioned themselves as contemporary.
Some played current songs, but others did not. WCAU-FM played Future Gold and put a survey in record stores around 1976. I have two of them. WCBS-FM did not have a survey issued. WAXY did not play current songs.
The second generation oldies stations in the early nineties only played pre-1970 songs. I do not remember any playing 1970 records. They played bigger hits and did not play certain big hits. Never any currents. The influence of the consultants is there in them.
WCBS-FM did not change for a long time. They played deeper songs and played Future Gold twice an hour into the mid-eighties. An example of a deeper song. I listened to an aircheck from 1990 yesterday, and during a regular show, Bobby Jay played Popsicles and Iceicles by The Mermaids. I also remember them playing local songs such as The 81 and It's Gonna Take A Miracle into the mid-nineties.
They were the only first generation station left when all the others were second generation and said, "Good times and great oldies."
I read in a column by the first PD at CBS-FM that there was serious consideration to a change to Hot Hits around 1981. But they decided not to change the format.
> Since the majority of oldies stations nowadays play hits
> from the '60s and '70s, what did "oldies" stations play back
> then? Were there even any oldies stations around? When did
> the first station like this pop up?
>
<P ID="signature">______________
[email protected]</P>