There were some re-releases, especially in the 80s, but there would have to be a reason for the song to get a second shotDoes any station ever reach back to songs they originally (maybe due to different PDs or owners or other factors) chose to opt out of playing?
I agree! In fact, for a variety of reasons a PD today will not look at a station's playlist from a decade or more ago. First, the target audience has changed even if the format has not. Second, in markets with lots of growth, many of today's listeners were not there in prior years. Third, the competition is different.As has been explained ad nauseum, if a song tests well with a particular station's target audience then maybe - but a decent PD worth their salt is not going to "reach back" and look at music that wasn't played by a previous PD or owner, and put it on the air now "on a hunch". If they wanna look at some stuff that wasn't played previously and see how it tests currently with their core demo, then maybe.
It might not be a hunch though. Some songs just got ignored by certain stations by certain PDs, but were definitely hits on a national level (not sure how much that happens today.)As has been explained ad nauseum, if a song tests well with a particular station's target audience then maybe - but a decent PD worth their salt is not going to "reach back" and look at music that wasn't played by a previous PD or owner, and put it on the air now "on a hunch". If they wanna look at some stuff that wasn't played previously and see how it tests currently with their core demo, then maybe.
It hasn't happened much, if at all, for at least 40 years. I can't recall any regional hits here in New England since the '70s.It might not be a hunch though. Some songs just got ignored by certain stations by certain PDs, but were definitely hits on a national level (not sure how much that happens today.)
Does any station ever reach back to songs they originally (maybe due to different PDs or owners or other factors) chose to opt out of playing?
So how does it test? Now? Locally, with that station's core audience? Good? OK, maybe it gets play. No? Then regardless if it was a national hit some time ago, if it doesn't test well with that stations' core demographic now, it shouldn't get play.It might not be a hunch though. Some songs just got ignored by certain stations by certain PDs, but were definitely hits on a national level (not sure how much that happens today.)
I have not seen stations ignore bigger hits in a while. It seemed common during the Jan Jefferies years at Cumulus, and I know there are several threads from the 90s-early 10s of certain stations not playing some very big hits (I think someone said a station ignored "Perfect" by Pink, which went to number 1.) When I lived in Joplin, I requested I Will Wait and they said they did not have it in 2013. I heard it years later as a gold, though on the same station.So how does it test? Now? Locally, with that station's core audience? Good? OK, maybe it gets play. No? Then regardless if it was a national hit some time ago, if it doesn't test well with that stations' core demographic now, it shouldn't get play.
Again, PDs and MDs aren't in the business of expanding their listening audience's musical horizons. They're not in place to educate their listeners musically, or to expose them to music they many not otherwise have realized they might like. They're in place to play what their listening audience has told them they want to hear.
As the person who pulled "Jan Jeffries" out of nights at a 500 watt station in Mobile and moved him to PM drive in a Top 60 market on his way to much bigger things, I can say that Jan made decisions based on the demos he wanted for his hit-based stations. That, in turn, was based on what management wanted demographically.I have not seen stations ignore bigger hits in a while. It seemed common during the Jan Jefferies years at Cumulus, and I know there are several threads from the 90s-early 10s of certain stations not playing some very big hits (I think someone said a station ignored "Perfect" by Pink, which went to number 1.) When I lived in Joplin, I requested I Will Wait and they said they did not have it in 2013. I heard it years later as a gold, though on the same station.
Yep. The only differences might be if a station moved from one variant of a format to another, such as from rhythmic CHR to mainstream CHR or from mainstream CHR to Churban. To those in the business, that is a format change... but to listeners it is "they play more songs I like" or "they don't play my favorites any more".It hasn't happened much, if at all, for at least 40 years. I can't recall any regional hits here in New England since the '70s.
The station in Joplin (KSYN) was always mainstream CHR though.Yep. The only differences might be if a station moved from one variant of a format to another, such as from rhythmic CHR to mainstream CHR or from mainstream CHR to Churban. To those in the business, that is a format change... but to listeners it is "they play more songs I like" or "they don't play my favorites any more".
There are plenty of songs which bombed when originally released but became popular years later due to being featured in a movie, TV series, commercial, or the artist's later success caused their early work to be rediscovered.
If you're a 45 collector, look for promo 45s marked "Rush Reservice", indicating that the song flopped the first time but suddenly gained interest later:
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They refuse to look for unsigned artists and play hits from established artists.The dearth of good new music often causes radio stations to dig deeper to find older songs that were initially overlooked or tested poorly but may now have a positive response.