J
JimmyJames
Guest
What are your sources on this, and how does it stack up in rock formats? For example, KROQ vs KMET? How many records were stations like KNAC adding?
BACKnUSSR said:There is more format diversity now than at any point in the history of radio. The fact of the matter is, the more and more you narrowcast formats, the smaller piece of the pie you attract.
SuperRadioFan said:ChannelFlipper said:Don't forget that wonderful station (well you probably don't think so ) KMPC-FM/The Edge "Full Spectrum Rock 'n' Roll" 1987-1989 with Racheal Donohue, Jim Ladd (yes, Jim Ladd) and the late J.J. Jackson. Also don't forget MARS-FM and Channel 103.1.
Super, KMPC-FM/KEDG-FM was the simply the BEST music station I've ever listened to. Only on for about 18 months, ratings as well as luck challenged, but absolutely professionally run by the personalities you mention, an open playlist that literally covered the gamut of Rock much more than the later incarnations of AAA at KSCA and Channel 103.1. It was a rock station first, AAA second. Every jock (not just say Ladd late at night) had a say over their show and it showed. Rachel Donahue in the morning was great - funny, entertaining, without ever being obnoxious and overbearing, and she played music and lots of it. Perfect for the format. I could go on, but will stop here.
I so wish I would have taped some of it. The Sound is a definite welcome surprise with some definite positive attributes, but it can't hold a candle to the old KMPC-FM.
I agree with every word you posted. Remember John Logic the night DJ? He actually was on earlier in the PM before Jim Ladd arrived and took the 6-10pm shift. Logic was on from 10p-2a and was really really cool. One time I called him with a request (which he honored in 10 minutes) and he told me to be sure to let him or any other DJ know if they started to suck.
Another cool thing he did was what no music station does on a regular basis today... Interact with the listeners. Remember "The Midnight Legal I.D."? Logic would invite listeners to call in just before 12m and he selected one to actually do the FCC-required TOH ID. How fun is that? Rachael would do lots of contest stuff as well. I remember when Jim Ladd was on his last night of the station's existence, he reminded the listeners "You GOT it" meaning of course the listeners (the few of them) really "got" what the station was trying to do. Some great songs they played included "You Got It" and "She's a Mystery To Me"-Roy Orbison; "Everywhere that you're not"-Transformer; "Twist in my Sobriety"-Tanita Tikorem (sp?); "Somewhere Down the Lazy River"-Robbie Robertson; "Copperhead Road"-Steve Earl. Oh man they were the best. I too wish I had taped some of that. Yes, I was happy KSCA was on, but they didn't have the edginess I got from KMPC-FM/KEDG.
This stuff is what makes and keps someone a radio/music fan. Its been lost over the years.![]()
scooty430 said:That's quite a load.
Back in the late 80's, you could listen to:
KLOS playing a fairly wide playlist of new and old rock, not just the "well-testing" stuff.
KLSX playing a wider variety of old rock, many tracks that hadn't been heard in awhile
Much of which was duplicated on KLOS.KMPC/The Edge playing some pretty adventurous stuff with "Full Spectrum Rock!"
Not much of that now...is there....?KNAC playing HEAVY FREAKIN' METAL!
KRTH plays more than double that amount NOW....and yes I do remember the 70's at 7....heard it this week in fact.KRTH playing actual oldies, and more than 200 of them. Remember 60s at 6, 70s at 7?....
They traded that in for actual listeners.KNX playing soft rock....later on doing some pretty deep Oldies with Oldies 93.
KROQ playing New Wave, oddball pop from Europe, lots of obscure Depeche Mode and Oingo Boingo, and actually letting DJs choose songs on their shifts.
You left out KQLZ and MARS-FM.That's just rock. I believe there was a commercial JAZZ station (KKGO) and a commericial CLASSICAL station, (92.3) neither of which even exist today.
But it DOES exist today. But because he's a maverick, it could disappear any moment.There was real MOR, Standards... Those also don't exist today. There was a long-standing country station, another format we wouldn't have now save for a maverick with his own station.
BACKnUSSR said:scooty430 said:That's quite a load.
Is it...well lets see....and we weren't talking late 80's...but thats fine.
Back in the late 80's, you could listen to:
KLOS playing a fairly wide playlist of new and old rock, not just the "well-testing" stuff.
KLOS in the late 80's tested EVERY SINGLE song they played. And they didn't play any MORE songs
in an hour than they do now.
KLSX playing a wider variety of old rock, many tracks that hadn't been heard in awhile
Says who? KLSX was one of the tightest Classic Rock stations in the country.
Much of which was duplicated on KLOS.KMPC/The Edge playing some pretty adventurous stuff with "Full Spectrum Rock!"
Not much of that now...is there....?KNAC playing HEAVY FREAKIN' METAL!
KRTH plays more than double that amount NOW....and yes I do remember the 70's at 7....heard it this week in fact.KRTH playing actual oldies, and more than 200 of them. Remember 60s at 6, 70s at 7?....
They traded that in for actual listeners.KNX playing soft rock....later on doing some pretty deep Oldies with Oldies 93.
KROQ playing New Wave, oddball pop from Europe, lots of obscure Depeche Mode and Oingo Boingo, and actually letting DJs choose songs on their shifts.
And thats all New Wave-y isn't it?
You left out KQLZ and MARS-FM.That's just rock. I believe there was a commercial JAZZ station (KKGO) and a commericial CLASSICAL station, (92.3) neither of which even exist today.
Does commercial matter, if we're talking about diversity?
But it DOES exist today. But because he's a maverick, it could disappear any moment.There was real MOR, Standards... Those also don't exist today. There was a long-standing country station, another format we wouldn't have now save for a maverick with his own station.
So what about, HOT AC KBIG, a KROQ that has much more music diversity than New Wave, Hip Hop,
Indie 103.1 which covers a lot of ground that KROQ doesnt trend upon, KYSR doing an adult rock thing,
KTWV, which is more musically diverse than it has ever been, MOVIN, MEGA, JACK.
My point is count up the songs...more today.
The consolidation of radio (whether you believe its good or bad) has indeed led to format diversification its the reason you dont see 3 CHR's or 4 AOR's in major markets much anymore.
With KROQ, MARS, PIRATE, KMET, KNAC, KLOS, KMPC, KCBS and KRTH (and whomever I left out) all doing the rock thing within a few years of one another in the 80's....do you really think LA was DIVERSE.
It was good...for the most part...but diverse? Hardly.
during the 80's.....
JimmyJames said:KBIG used to do a variant of Hot AC that I couldn't find anywhere else - and even included some true dance and cool remixes on Thump Radio.
There's still plenty of good new hard rock out there that a modern version of KNAC could tap into. Not the light and repetitive stuff that KROQ locked onto.
DavidEduardo said:JimmyJames said:KBIG used to do a variant of Hot AC that I couldn't find anywhere else - and even included some true dance and cool remixes on Thump Radio.
yes, because it had 50% or more Hispanic cume and AQH; it was, essentially, an Hispanic core station with some non-Hispanics.
There's still plenty of good new hard rock out there that a modern version of KNAC could tap into. Not the light and repetitive stuff that KROQ locked onto.
KNAC had been losing money for years before Fred Sands sold it to Liberman in late 1994. There were lots of bumper stickers, but not enough measured audience to make a go of a 1 share station... like KSCA, not enough numbers to make it work.
Radioresearcher said:KNAC was niched ... it was so focused on metal at that time - and had a signal that really didn't get into the O.C., the Valley, or Santa Clarita, all key areas for any kind of Rock.
105.5 was not a good signal for KNAC but a Wilson stick is.
BACKnUSSR said:Seems as though no formats ever failed in Los Angeles. They always seemed to just have poor signals.
DavidEduardo said:BACKnUSSR said:Seems as though no formats ever failed in Los Angeles. They always seemed to just have poor signals.
That would be funny if it were not so true.
I can remember sitting in the office of someone with initials BW in the offices next to Forest Lawn in Burbank and hearing the KSCA format described as being excellent, but not able to compete due to the bad signal.
6 months later, that bad signal was #1 in Los Angeles.
Radioresearcher said:DavidEduardo said:BACKnUSSR said:Seems as though no formats ever failed in Los Angeles. They always seemed to just have poor signals.
That would be funny if it were not so true.
I can remember sitting in the office of someone with initials BW in the offices next to Forest Lawn in Burbank and hearing the KSCA format described as being excellent, but not able to compete due to the bad signal.
6 months later, that bad signal was #1 in Los Angeles.
LOL and so right on. David - I do think 105.5 on its own was not a good signal for Rock and the KNAC product wasn't that good. But KSCA was not a signal problem, it was a bad product that didn't work.
Radioresearcher said:LOL and so right on. David - I do think 105.5 on its own was not a good signal for Rock and the KNAC product wasn't that good. But KSCA was not a signal problem, it was a bad product that didn't work.
hbrownpc said:The KSCA signal is perfect for a Spanish-language format, but not for an upscale Triple A audience. That said, the 103.1 signal, which hit the westside and Orange County should have worked better for Triple A. I think it didn't because the station was the Clear Channel mainstream version of Triple A. The Sound seems to be a much better mix, right from the start.
hbrownpc said:The KSCA signal is perfect for a Spanish-language format, but not for an upscale Triple A audience. That said, the 103.1 signal, which hit the westside and Orange County should have worked better for Triple A. I think it didn't because the station was the Clear Channel mainstream version of Triple A. The Sound seems to be a much better mix, right from the start.
SuperRadioFan said:Look the fans of AAA and The Sound in particular are not swayed by its detractors --- but you all knew that, didn't you?
Actually it does. If it weren't a strong product that appealed to a MASS AUDIENCE it wouldn't be the most successful restaurants in the world.It must be fun to pick apart anything that doesn't appeal to the mass market out there. Just because McDonalds has the most restaurants in the World, does that mean its good??
Kripes, we just want a little slice of the pie. There is so little choice on terrestrial radio for fans of The Sound's format, we are going to enjoy it while we can. Yeh David your comments about that statement are SOOOO predictable I won't even predict them![]()
JimmyJames said:Problem with the McD's vs sushi argument.
I can eat at either establishment - in a lot of markets, both remain profitable.
In many radio markets, I don't have the choice. If I don't want a burger, I'm screwed.
Radioresearcher said:I actually still think the 103.1 signals are perfect for a Triple A format. They cover quite a bit of the metros upscale non-ethnic audience. "Channel 103-1" actually had some acceptable 25-54 numbers - not agency respectable - but competitive.