We haven't discussed this phenomenon on here in a long time. KVIL, and I think Steve can verify this, would cut songs not only for time, but, would also cut out loud or rockin' instrumental parts. They explained this once in a newspaper article that the listener might find some of these parts "objectionable," especially in an office environment, so they cut them. Example used then: "Easy Lover" by Phil Collins and Philip Bailey. The whole instrumental section in the middle was cut out. I always looked at such an explanation as an excuse for the station to cram in more spots...which, considering the staggering amount they billed then (#3 in billing in the entire nation throughout most of the 80s!), something had to give. Remember when they would even play spoken-word spots over the intros of songs.
(And that somewhat explains the "Hard to Say I'm Sorry/Getaway" phenomenon...KVIL, KMGC, KKWM/KLRX and other lite rock stations over the years would purposely delete the "Getaway" part because it was too 'loud' for the format. But, as the other post-er said, the 45 version only included "Sorry." You had to buy the album to get "Getaway.")
But as time goes on and stations turn exclusively to TM-Century to stock their music libraries, the line between the 45 versions and LP versions of songs gets completely muddled and lost. TM's "stock" version of "Lyin' Eyes" by The Eagles is the short, 45 edit, which the woman "hangs her head to cry," then it jumps to "My oh my, you sure know how to arrange things..." Peter Frampton's "Baby I Love Your Way"s stock version is also the 45 edit, with internal chop-ups and just a fadedown at the end instead of an audience cheering this LIVE song (Robert Bass, this is one of my few complaints about KEOM...playing this butchered version!!) For about 20 years, the stock version of "YMCA" featured replacement lead singer Ray Simpson (and it showed...a poor re-sing) then suddenly everyone has the ORIGINAL version at their station, with the old lead singer in place. The Bone is playing some chopped versions of songs now as well: Yes' "Owner of a Lonely Heart" is the short, 45 edit, for one. I could go on and on, but you get the idea.
But wait until George Gimarc's new music protocol, "Radio SASS," takes root. The LP versions, 45 versions, etc are ALL out the window, in favor of severe editing of songs down to no more than 2 minutes or so. Yes, this includes ALL types of music, including our cherished oldies and classic rock. Check out the
www.radiosass.com site and try the samples.