Is it me or is it something being done to "all" the oldies, found on certain stations? If let's say John Doe wants to set up an oldies format, does John simply go to a website/production company that provides OLDIES and he simply checks the boxes next to the songs he wants, (like you do on a I-phone or Android music player to make a playlist)? I would guess that the oldies that this service provides would have "cleaned" or at least provided the latest version(s) available on CD or latest method of broadcast quality reproduction, so therefore the "Sound" will be uniform on all songs and be able to be "tweaked" to make the music sound "fresh" instead of antique sounding having been recorded in 1958, 1962 or later before more uniform standards were set into place. I've always thought that the oldies from the 50's, 60's & early seventies were dropped from oldies formats due to #1 the aging audience, but also due to the overall sound quality. Competitor stations wanted to provide clear well produced music over their stations and therefore the old 45's and 33's were re-mastered and thus the music began to sound different??? Today perhaps a station can decide to run all the music available through their own computer and tweak the overall output to make a casual listener tuning by the station, and get him to stop and give it a chance. Another thing, why did the Beatles re-master their classics? I liked the old "stereo sound" where the voices and musical instruments were separated on the left and right channels. Other artists in the past did it too... Mamas & Papas, Gary Lewis & the Playboys and etc., some recordings are now in "Mono". COMMENTS???