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. We have involved two of the top names in Jazz as hosts -- RAMSEY LEWIS and DAVE KOZ -- to ensure that the programming is vibrant and compelling."
Bill Harmonic said:Smooth jazz was not introduced in Milwaukee on 106.9 in 1995. The first station was WBZN at 100.7 which was licensed to Racine. It was called "Breezin 100.7" and the consultant was Gary Guthrie.
AnotherCat said:I wrote a response to this Kepler article that Carol is apparently going to print. It's very risky to offer any thought that counters Kepler's dictates now that he totally controls the format and still wants more-more-more, and counters any opinoion that doesn't affirm his own as coming from "jazz afficianados who don't understand the realities of commerial radio" but we shall see. As mainstream A/C has been shifting more toward what used to be Hot A/C in order to accomodate current tastes of 25-44 listeners BA appears to be shifting toward mainstream-lite A/C with a 45-64 focus. After 12 years they have re-branded Lite and UrbanLite artists like Vanessa Williams and Brian McKnight as being smooth jazz by continually using SJ sweepers when introing songs by these artists. So when they totally jump in that direction well...nature abhors a vacuum.
Actually the gist of this piece was also that SJ needed to focus on vocalists that were in their early 20s or younger. To bring the demos down from 55-64 to 35-44 so why is he chasing teens? Do these people really want to hear kids? I don't understand the Kelly Sweet thing at all, except that she has a lot of politics and money backing her. She got 'hold of a decent song but she has about a 5 note range, gasps for breath after every phrase and if you watch her vids on YouTube it's basically like watching a 2nd tier act at a high school talent show. Which is actually what someone I know who saw her opening for Koz said - he said he didn't pop 150 bucks and babysitter cash to watch a high school talent show. She does toss her hair a lot. Meanwhile vocalists who can sing can't crack the code and have to record oldies CDs to keep a toe in the marketplace -Taylor did give Regina Belle some love and Euge has a Jeffrey Osborne song at the end of his CD that is a straight down the center urban ballad. But these artists aren't young and pretty and they don't have big label money behind them so they won't see the light of day.
Then again when you have no competition, have run everyone else out of the marketplace, and have a whole cadre of programmers who follow you in lock step exactly who is going to emerge. The future of real smooth jazz is not on the radio. Younger musicians have realized that radio is over and it's time to build your audience thru other venues. Time for our guys and gals to realize that too.
cklw800 said:Check this. In a recent R&R article Alan Kepler states that the future of SJ is vocals. Vocals by young artists to bring in younger listeners from other formats. More things like Corinne Bailey-Rae, John Legend, etc.
Double D said:cklw800 said:Check this. In a recent R&R article Alan Kepler states that the future of SJ is vocals. Vocals by young artists to bring in younger listeners from other formats. More things like Corinne Bailey-Rae, John Legend, etc.
Very unfortunate to hear that vocals are allegedly SJ's future...as a strong supporter of innovative, fresh-sounding SJ, I couldn't disagree more!!![]()
As an example, if I hear John Legend once more, i think I'm going to vomit...literally!!![]()
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