Then, what about those younger listeners who actually want to hear older music? Shawn Ross wrote just yesterday that country PDs are hearing excitement from younger listeners when they add older titles. Of course we can't forget a couple summers ago when Running Up That Hill, a 35 year old record, suddenly was everywhere thanks to a Netflix series. Outside of this, I know several people my age and a bit older who love music older than they are.
The biggest lie in the history of the recording industry is "Vinyl went obsolete".Props to BW for some well timed levity. Vinyl sales outpaced CDs again. There maybe hope for humanity after all.
TexasTom: is there any way that you can send the digitzed versions of those airchecks through e-mail, or post them online or on here somewhere?That's my own personal experience. When I was in high school and starting college, there was a lot of older music being played on the FM Top 40 stations that I listened to. Since I recently digitized a whole bunch of old radio recordings, I've been reminded of that. As an example, I have recordings from July of 1981 from 'The New 93' (the station that later became KUBE) right after they went to their live format that include "I Saw Her Standing There" from the Beatles -- a song that 17 years old. A recording from KNWR (TM Stereo Rock automated Top 40) a month later includes the 16 year old "Tell Her No" from the Zombies. "Stairway to Heaven" and "Nights in White Satin" were regularly heard on multiple Top 40 stations in the area in the late seventies and early eighties. My classmates who preferred AOR-formatted KISW could expect to hear quite a bit of sixties rock in that same time frame.
I definitely would be interested, as I mentioned i'm kind of a Seattle-Tacoma radio history buff...At this point, the files are too large to send, and I'll need to do a lot of sorting. That said, at some point I hope to have something to share and would like to find a place to do so.
In the meantime, I see it is possible to attach audio files here, so I've attached a couple of top of the hour IDs from way back. If successful, here's KVI-FM (now KPLZ) from November 1976, KNBQ (now KIRO-FM) from January and February 1977, and KYYX (now KJAQ) from February 1977. These reflect KVI-FM just a few months after switching to Top 40, KNBQ in its final days of a soft contemporary format and just when it was beginning to transition to the Drake-Chenault XT40 automated Top 40 format, and KYYX probably within a few days or a week after it went on the air as a Top 40 station.
If there is interest, I can post more of these as I have time to edit down what I've digitized.
And from the same time period, I found a particularly awkwardly phrased liner from automated Top 40 KNBQ (Q97-FM) in Tacoma: "You know we're glad we're an FM station because we can play all of your music in stereo because of that here at Q97-FM".
"Running Up That Hill" didn't become a hit AGAIN unless you count the UK. Its previous chart run here had it stalling at #30!That can come from exposure like the example you give ("Running Up The Hill" becoming a hit again because it was featured on "Stranger Things"), but to some extent it is also a matter of what was getting played on the radio when we were teenagers.
Right now there are Top 40 stations that are playing quite a few older songs, sometimes going back more than twenty years. To the extent that young people still listen to the radio, that means those older songs are part of what teenagers are hearing today. They may still like those songs twenty or thirty years from now.
That's my own personal experience. When I was in high school and starting college, there was a lot of older music being played on the FM Top 40 stations that I listened to. Since I recently digitized a whole bunch of old radio recordings, I've been reminded of that. As an example, I have recordings from July of 1981 from 'The New 93' (the station that later became KUBE) right after they went to their live format that include "I Saw Her Standing There" from the Beatles -- a song that 17 years old. A recording from KNWR (TM Stereo Rock automated Top 40) a month later includes the 16 year old "Tell Her No" from the Zombies. "Stairway to Heaven" and "Nights in White Satin" were regularly heard on multiple Top 40 stations in the area in the late seventies and early eighties. My classmates who preferred AOR-formatted KISW could expect to hear quite a bit of sixties rock in that same time frame.
Some of that music stuck, and those of my generation still like those songs -- even though radio programmers never quite seemed to believe that those of us who grew up with Top 40 radio liked those songs. Even when those songs tested well, they were dismissed as "not fitting the format".
If radio is still around in 25 years, programmers who see good test results for something like "Running Up The Hill" will dismiss those results the same way.
Yeah, I remember those days on KNBQ -- even as a high school student, I could tell that it was automated and that the DJs didn't have any way of matching their talk segments to the music that was spit out by the automation system.That MIGHT be Mark Pierce, who was working there when I joined in Fall/1978. Very clunky (all reel except spots) automated format -- we didn't have any clue what we were intro'ing or extro'ing so all the comments were VERY generic. No jingles.
Wasn't happy there at all, even though there were some terrific people on the team -- and my attitude led to my involuntary exit interview!! Within about a year, they remodeled the place and turned it into a live Top-40 contender; making me shake my head at my 20-something behavior!!
KNBQ had gold reels from Drake; currents were on one reel that was constantly edited a new material was added or dropped. Of course, that meant all the currents always played in the same sequence and no ability to give some songs more weight in rotation as would be the practice starting in the 1980's. KNBQ wasn't really very "strategic" until Gary Bryan et al came in and turned it into a "real" (and live) radio station. KNBQ recruited their previous PD from overnights at KISW so kind of a case of "you get what you pay for".Just out of curiosity, do you know who they were sourcing their music from? I know that from early 1977 until sometime near the beginning of the year they switched to a different syndicated supplier -- but I'm not sure who it was. They kept that second supplier for less than a year and then they switched again -- and while my suspicion is that at that point they may have been locally sourcing their automated music (as KYYX did in Seattle), I don't know that for sure.