M
Music Lover
Guest
When I was a kid, I liked some boy bands from the UK. I seek out UK stations like this to hear their hits: http://www.heartbeatfm.net
According to the Wikipedia article about AC, the format had it's roots in easy listening and soft rock. That's why I've always considered it synonymous with soft and lite. It wasn't until the late 1990s that I ever heard of Hot AC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adult_contemporary_music
Reads like it was written by someone who wasn't there. AC began in the late 60s and for its first 15 years, mainly on AM stations like WGAR, Cleveland, KFMB, San Diego and (at certain points) WNBC, New York was just a slightly dialed-back Top 40 minus the five hardest records and with deeper gold. It had much more in common with Top 40 than it did MOR which is why it was called Adult Contemporary.
Reads like it was written by someone who wasn't there. AC began in the late 60s and for its first 15 years, mainly on AM stations like WGAR, Cleveland, KFMB, San Diego and (at certain points) WNBC, New York was just a slightly dialed-back Top 40 minus the five hardest records and with deeper gold. It had much more in common with Top 40 than it did MOR which is why it was called Adult Contemporary.
They have it in line with what Allmusic.com and About.com has.
http://www.allmusic.com/subgenre/adult-contemporary-ma0000004445
This one says it serves the same purpose as MOR: http://www.udel.edu/nero/Radio/readings/acontemp.html
This is another one my family listened to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMAG. When we tuned in, it was during my teen years in the 90s. At that time, the station's playlist was like this one: www.softneasy.com
This is another one that my family listened to when it was MOR and Soft AC but I don't remember too much about it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMKS
Even on the forum at Amazon people are equating AC with soft rock/MOR: http://www.amazon.com/forum/music/r...dPage=1&cdSort=oldest&cdThread=TxPXQ9487Y7JOZ
My baby boomer relatives have even equated old-school AC with easy listening.
All of which is revisionist history, no doubt fueled by the comments of people who did not live the era, understand the metamorphosis of formats or both.
I remember Chicken Rock. In the late 60's, I worked for WGTO, Cypress Gardens, Florida. They played 'Chicken Rock' ....
It was called Chicken Rock because the format was somewhere between MOR (Middle Of the Road) and Top 40. The stations were too Chicken to play songs which might offend some of their listeners who professed to hate Rock & Roll.
I Googled 'chicken rock radio' and found this which I copied from Wikipedia:
Adult Contemporary has existed in one form or another since the 1960s. During that decade, programmers discovered that not all adults disliked rock music. There were some adults who actually liked it and others who would tolerate a little rock music with their adult (MOR) standards.
To appeal to this audience's tastes, radio programmers developed a format called Chicken Rock. The term started as a joke to indicate that these stations flirted with the rock sound but avoided rock's harder edge. Chicken Rockers culled the softer sounding hits from the Top 40 playlists. As a result they appealed to adults who wanted to be "hip" but still claim they did not like rock music.
This is what it looked like before Jhani Kaye and "Continuous Soft Hits" took hold in 1983-ish: (The site shows the format as Top 40, which shows the similarity between the formats:
http://www.las-solanas.com/arsa/surveys_item.php?svid=34784
And here's the Top 40 station in the same market in the same month:
http://las-solanas.com/arsa/surveys...=641&lcnt=30&srt1=tsc_psv DESC&vqry=san diego
Looks like the people on the Amazon forum probably grew up hearing it in the 80s.