Why is it that those of us who liked oldies when they were new (like you've said about yourself) wouldn't like hearing new songs in that same style today? Obviously, you liked hearing new songs when they were first introduced back on Groovy QV, right? When you were listening to Groovy QV back in the day, did you change the station when they played a new Top 40 song? If you still like that kind of music, why would you change the station if you heard a song that fit right in with the ones you knew, but that you were hearing for the first time? Did you just get old and set in your ways? Didn't you like hearing new songs back in the days of Groovy QV that fit right in with the other songs they played? If you liked hearing new songs that fit in with the rest of the Top 40 back in the days of Groovy QV, why would you not like hearing new (or at least, new to your ears) songs that fit in with the rest of the oldies being played today?
And please note, I'm not trying to be obtuse about this, but I'm asking why, not to simply be told "that's just the way it is". If that is the way it is, there must be a reason why it's the way it is. Why do people who used to be excited about hearing songs for the first time back in the day now switch the station when they hear songs for the first time?
You make a good point, Realist. I think we're not as 'open-minded' about music today as we once were. We're in a society today of instant gratification...if we like it, we buy it. There's no compromise. I think the same philosophy applies to music. Remember that we also had fewer formats back then. If you want to listen to an AC station, you can find about six sub-brands of that. There's more choices out there than ever before, and with our car radios that have some 20 presets on the tuners, it's all that easier to hop between channels, until we find something that strikes our fancy. We want what we want when we want it...and we get it. Why? Because someone out there will figure that it's a market waiting to be capitalized on and, thus a demand is created. Supply the demand. This is how stations make money today, by supplying the next 'new' format that's going to cater to the 'fad' of today. We have had lots of stations in this town that have had 'gimmick' style formats almost all of their existence (104.7 is a great example of that) and don't really have any identity to speak of. But that's my two cents.