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Short Songs (~3 minutes unedited)

Roll to Me by Del Amitri is famously just over two minutes long and frequently heard right at the tail end of hours on radio stations where the presenter has messed up their back timing and needs to hit the TOTH.
I don't know if I'd call it "the presenter has messed up their back timing" but rather the hour was short due to scheduled music and spots not timing out for any number of reasons. We had a list of fill songs to use for that exact occasion. Nowadays flex scheduling allows stations on autopilot to add/drop predetermined categories as the hour goes, but it used to be the last song of our hour was a drop song if we were over, and we had a list to rotate through if we were under. But it was hardly because anyone "messed up"
 
And, of course, in 2022, back timing into live network news is rarely done, because relatively few music stations air network news at all, and those that do often delay it by a little bit so they don't have to bother back-timing.
 
And, of course, in 2022, back timing into live network news is rarely done, because relatively few music stations air network news at all, and those that do often delay it by a little bit so they don't have to bother back-timing.

However, automation systems aim to hit set times on their clock for national spots, followed by locals. If a station is running a national format or using out of market VT, it's important to hit those times, even without network news. Especially at the end of a shift.
 
And, of course, in 2022, back timing into live network news is rarely done, because relatively few music stations air network news at all, and those that do often delay it by a little bit so they don't have to bother back-timing.
At my current station, I load network news (directly from the computer) into the rotation (Christian talk station). Since I know the play times of nearly everything, I can usually hit it so close to the top (or bottom) of the hour, so that it still sounds professional. When I started (back) at this station, I questioned whether the news would be several hours old by the time that it aired, but I was told that it automatically updated. Just recently returned to this station after a long absence, so I still have a lot to learn!
 
I can't find it now, but the Oak Ridge Boys once had a one-minute version of their song "Baby When Your Heart Breaks Down." I believe that it appeared on one of the CDXs. I can only find a more standard version of it on youtube. Apparently the one-minute thing was intended as some sort of gimmick.
 
However, automation systems aim to hit set times on their clock for national spots, followed by locals. If a station is running a national format or using out of market VT, it's important to hit those times, even without network news. Especially at the end of a shift.
Right. This is the difference to back-timing within 5 or 10 seconds, and back-timing within a couple minutes.
 
However, automation systems aim to hit set times on their clock for national spots, followed by locals. If a station is running a national format or using out of market VT, it's important to hit those times, even without network news. Especially at the end of a shift.
On stations I have listened to, there have often been instrumentals before the top of the hour. This was with satellite formats.

One station which dropped the satellite and had network news often started a song and then seconds later had the legal station ID. I never understood why they couldn't figure out how to make everything come out even.
 
On stations I have listened to, there have often been instrumentals before the top of the hour. This was with satellite formats.

One station which dropped the satellite and had network news often started a song and then seconds later had the legal station ID. I never understood why they couldn't figure out how to make everything come out even.
When I was coming up in the biz instrumentals for backtiming were for wimps
 
I can't find it now, but the Oak Ridge Boys once had a one-minute version of their song "Baby When Your Heart Breaks Down." I believe that it appeared on one of the CDXs. I can only find a more standard version of it on youtube. Apparently the one-minute thing was intended as some sort of gimmick.
I remember hearing that on the radio! It was on a promo CD sent to radio stations in 1999, with "Got a Minute?" on the cover:

 
I don't know if I'd call it "the presenter has messed up their back timing" but rather the hour was short due to scheduled music and spots not timing out for any number of reasons. We had a list of fill songs to use for that exact occasion. Nowadays flex scheduling allows stations on autopilot to add/drop predetermined categories as the hour goes, but it used to be the last song of our hour was a drop song if we were over, and we had a list to rotate through if we were under. But it was hardly because anyone "messed up"
I think it was probably just me who used to balls it up! Normally by letting an interview segment run over (we were a local full-service station and would often have people in the studio or on the phone for a chat between songs). At the end of the hour, it would often be a case of fade a song half-way through or play a 2-3 minute selection, and we had a folder of songs around that length that fitted our (relatively loose AC/classic hits) format to pick from. Roll to Me was in there, a couple of Beatles tracks and a lot of Motown and what we call Northern Soul.

We had to hit the hour exactly on time, because we took satellite news. From memory, the TOTH into the satellite news always had to go on at exactly xx:59:38 - there was a sign on the wall!
 
I wanted to buy an mp3 of one the songs in the BROS movie, I thought the movie just used a special edit of the song to fit the scene.

A little research found that the song is only ~2 minutes long, IMHO, odd for a disco/dance type song:


Kirk Bayne
 
That's true. In the days when it was important, juggling the final songs so you hit the TOH as the song length went :00 was key.
One of my favorite things behind the board. Now nobody cares.
That skill is something only Radio geeks cared about. It's obsolete now just like rotary dialing phones or the printed Yellow Pages...
 
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