landtuna said:
I'm talking about a pure definition of Oldies, not the agencies definition. And even that doesn't agree with a major number of stations advertising themselves as "Classic Hits". And it seems some stations are abandoning the agency typecast and declaring themselves "Rock and Roll Oldies" or something similar.....The Oldies genre doesn't necessary mimic old T-40 (which was a wider playlist including Country and Lounge crossovers and, as you mentioned, foreign-language hits ala The Singing Nuns).
Outside of "The Arrow," I've never heard a oldies/classic hits station bill themselves as "Rock & Roll Oldies" Clear Channel has brought back Oldies on a handful of Classic Hits stations (WRIT and KLOU to name two) - and yet they play plenty of 70's & early 80's. Most say "The Greatest Hits" or "The Greatest Hits of the 60's, 70's and 80's" since Classic Hits encompases pop, rock & R&B that was on Top 40/CHR from that era.
I admit, texture and feel should count more than release date for a song to be thrown in rotation. And given CBS-FM's ratings, I think they found a decent mix of music that spans from the 60's to the 80's. On average they play 3 80's tunes an hour out of 10 - still playing plenty of 60's and 70's.
Sunday nights are usually a throwaway - its why most specialty shows are there - so playing "Wild Thing" isn't representative of the station as a whole. Just as "Funny" by The Contours on WOGL Sunday nights isn't representative of what they usually play during the week.