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Songs that didn't get much radio airplay

Songs

Mike, you always fail to do your homework.

I've been VERY outspoken on how CBS screwed-up the whole CBS-FM/NYC thing. Don't they teach reading at your high school?


>
> Well you're not even a "stupid expert" let alone a real one.
>
> Too many suits listening to people like you is what causes
> goofs like WCBS.
>
> Mike Dane
> WSTB-FM 88.9
> SundayOldiesJukebox.com
>
 
Re: Songs

> Actually, the blame for the demise of oldies stations
> consists of these factors:
>
> 1) failure of most to move out of the 60s slowly and into
> the 70's and later.

This one is pure baloney. If you want the older demo group
you keep the 50's, 60's and early 70's. if you want a
younger demo then you drop 50's and move up into the 80's.
But even this is not a guarantee. You start moving to far
past '75 and you lose me and I'm only 46. And I know a lot
of people my age and younger that agree.

> 2) 55+ demos are not desirable to advertisers in rated
> markets and radio has no control of this.

Now this one is right on the money. The advertisers make
the final choice, but a good salesman would be remiss to
not point out that the older demo has more disposable
income than the younger but won't part with it frivously.
Another problem is that most Sales and Advertising people
are younger (i.e. cheaper) and could not care less about
the older demo's. Most of the younger sales people couldn't
sell ice water in hell either.
The only remidy for this that I have figured out (and it's
not a guarantee) is if you own stock in a company go to the
shareholders meeting and let them know. I do that myself.

> 3. the songs in the format are inncreasingly tiresome to
> even the core, leaving very few that are playable... and
> reducing the core of listeners who care about he music.

Of course they're tired. 450 songs over and over and over
are going to get tired and tiresome.
>
> The solutions given by folks like you, such as increasing
> library, going further back into the 50's,e tc., are all
> either impractical (getting older demos is not a solution)
> or proven over and over to fail (increasing the library with
> songs that do not test well).

I forget the exact number but between 1955 and 1972 there
are somwhere around 11,000 songs that hit the top 100.
Add to that the bubbling under songs, oh and don't forget
all those songs you say got played due to the payola and
kept another song from the charts, add those too and you
have a very respectable block of music to work with.
A large selection of songs and good rotation will keep the
songs from getting tired and you listeners happy. We hear
it all the time from listeners.
As for testing songs, Well David to be honest, I have forgotten
more about good oldies than you and cat will ever know, and guys
like Chris Quinn, Cousin Brucie and Norm N. Nite knows more than
I ever will. You guys don't have a clue which songs you should
be testing. If you were to sit down and test all 11,000 songs
(or what ever the number is)you would come up with a playlist
with a large core and that had plenty of other great songs that
should/would be put into lighter rotation for the "wow" factor
and to help break things up a bit.

>
> All this data comes from two sources: the listeners and the
> advertisers. None of it comes from consultants. In fact, it
> appears that it takes a consultant to make the average
> person here see reality.
>
I would believe the Advertisers saying it but not listeners.
My personal experience proves to me otherwise and the reaction
when WMJI dropped 50's proves the same. It got so bad that they
sarted a sunday night show featuring 50's songs and requests.
I've also noticed that they've added some 50's songs into the
playlist again. Not a lot but some. Heard Elvis just a bit ago.

Any relationship between a consutant and reality around here
is purely coincidental.

Mike Dane
WSTB-FM 88.9
SundayOldiesJukebox.com
 
Re: advice

Well unlike you Cat, I talk the talk and walk the walk, and
prove it every Sunday night. We might be a small station but
we keep growing and I, at least am on the air somewhere (#73
market to be exact).

> But, David- you might as well hang it up. It's like talking
> to a brick. The so-called wannabe experts are really
> clueless and you can blame them on us everyday radio people

Mike Dane
WSTB-FM 88.9
SundayOldiesJukebox.com
 
Spanish IS a format ........

according to Radio-Info.com!!! HAHAHA yeh I know I'm stating this with tongue planted in cheek... Look at the left-hand columns--- under "Format" the word "Spanish" is the fifth word after "Oldies"! Maybe the mods should modify it ... My suggestion: Make an entirely new heading --- "Spanish"

> > Excuse me but KOVE Houston/Galveston is a spanish format
> > station, not an oldies station.
>
> Spanish is not a format, it is a language.
>
> KOVE is an oldies station.
>
 
Re: Songs

Actually I do my homework. It's because of people like
you that don't that we have fiascos like WCBS. "drop the
50's and add late 70's and ealy 80's." And what happens?
They head to the basement. they were #10 in the arbitrends
in June of '05. Now wehre are they?

> Mike, you always fail to do your homework.

Oh and when your in the top of the class, the homework's
easy.


Mike Dane
WSTB-FM 88.9
SundayOldiesJukebox.com
 
Re: correction

> I have heard it ["Shilo"] a lot around here over the years.
>

WDRC-FM Hartford plays it. But then, they play "You Got to Me" and "Cherry, Cherry," too. Not "a lot," but not only on specialty shows either.
 
advice

Right- keep up the front. When you've done it as a real fulltime career for 25+ years like many of us, then perhaps you can pretend you can tell us to "walk the walk".

> Well unlike you Cat, I talk the talk and walk the walk, and
> prove it every Sunday night. We might be a small station but
> we keep growing and I, at least am on the air somewhere (#73
> market to be exact).
>
> > But, David- you might as well hang it up. It's like
> talking to a brick. The so-called wannabe experts are really
> > clueless and you can blame them on us everyday radio
> people
>
> Mike Dane
> WSTB-FM 88.9
> SundayOldiesJukebox.com
>
 
format

That's discrimination. Where is the format heading for ENGLISH?

LMAO :)

> according to Radio-Info.com!!! HAHAHA yeh I know I'm
> stating this with tongue planted in cheek... Look at the
> left-hand columns--- under "Format" the word "Spanish" is
> the fifth word after "Oldies"! Maybe the mods should modify
> it ... My suggestion: Make an entirely new heading ---
> "Spanish"
>
> > > Excuse me but KOVE Houston/Galveston is a spanish format
>
> > > station, not an oldies station.
> >
> > Spanish is not a format, it is a language.
> >
> > KOVE is an oldies station.
> >
>
 
Re: Neil

> That is something you need to take up with Arbitron since
> that is how it is described in the arbitrends.

No, it is not. Arbitron has 7 or 8 formats under "Spanish" such as...

Spanish Oldies
Spanish AC
Spanish CHR
Spanish Variety
Spanish regional Mexican
Spanish news talk
Spánish Urban
Spanish Tropical

And each is simply the equivalent of the English format in Spanish.

Nowhere does Arbitron use the language as the format descriptor.
 
Re: uh,wrong... again.

> > forgive me for asking, but are they:
> >
> > Spanish CHR
> > Spanish AC
> > Spanish Rock
> > Spanish Talk
> > Spanish (fill in the blank)?
> >
> > "Spanish" is a language. What derivation/format are they
> > within the language?
> >
> Acording to Arbitrons Arbitrends Spanish is also a format.
> Look it up. Of course I wouldn't expect you to know that.

The only problem is that you are wrong. The Arbitrends program does not give formats at all. Maximiser does, and there are about 8 different accepted formats _in_ Spanish.
 
Re: Songs

> As I said above, as far as Arbitrons Arbitrends are
> concerened it's Spanish with no sub-genre. You don't
> like it take it up with them.

As stated before, Arbitrends does not show formats.

> I even tried to check
> KOVE's web site but it is non functional.

Sure it is. Go to www.univision.com, select Univsion Radio at the left, and under Houston select "Recuerdo 106.5" from the market list. "Recuerdo" is, by the way, the closest Spanish equivalent to "oldies."

Or, click on...

http://www.univision.com/content/channel.jhtml?chid=9655&schid=9768
 
Re: Songs

> > Actually, the blame for the demise of oldies stations
> > consists of these factors:
> >
> > 1) failure of most to move out of the 60s slowly and into
> > the 70's and later.
>
> This one is pure baloney. If you want the older demo group
> you keep the 50's, 60's and early 70's. if you want a
> younger demo then you drop 50's and move up into the 80's.
> But even this is not a guarantee. You start moving to far
> past '75 and you lose me and I'm only 46. And I know a lot
> of people my age and younger that agree.

You still do not understand. No agency account wants 55+, so there is no way, even if Hades becomes an ice rink and fields a hockey team, to keep 50's and most 60's music today.

And a good programmer witht he right tools can move an oldies station into the 70's and even the 80's. I did it in LA with my programming team, and the numbers grew and the average age loweered.
>
> > 2) 55+ demos are not desirable to advertisers in rated
> > markets and radio has no control of this.
>
> Now this one is right on the money. The advertisers make
> the final choice, but a good salesman would be remiss to
> not point out that the older demo has more disposable
> income than the younger but won't part with it frivously.

Agency account buys are placed by buyers who have absolutely no say for the target demos. That decision was made in the marketing division of the client, as I have said dozens of times, and all the buyers do is put out a call for rates in the target demo.

In LA, the lrgest radio ad market in the world, there have been no 55+ buys so far this year!

> Another problem is that most Sales and Advertising people
> are younger (i.e. cheaper) and could not care less about
> the older demo's. Most of the younger sales people couldn't
> sell ice water in hell either.

Irrelevant and immaterial. 60's oldies staitons can survive still in suburban and unrated markets as the customers are not agencies and direct accounts can be approached, often with good success. But in the larger rated markets, agency buys offer no sales access at the time of demo selection. Period.

> The only remidy for this that I have figured out (and it's
> not a guarantee) is if you own stock in a company go to the
> shareholders meeting and let them know. I do that myself.

The idea of someone standing up to defend Gary Glitter and Fats Domino is mirthful. I would go just to join in the laughter.
>
> > 3. the songs in the format are inncreasingly tiresome to
> > even the core, leaving very few that are playable... and
> > reducing the core of listeners who care about he music.
>
> Of course they're tired. 450 songs over and over and over
> are going to get tired and tiresome.

There used to be more, but they are burning out. Unless one moves into the 70's and beyond, the format dies. Most oldies listeners are tired of the format, not just the songs. And, still, you can not play songs that most do not want to hear anymore just to increase the list.
> >
> > The solutions given by folks like you, such as increasing
> > library, going further back into the 50's,e tc., are all
> > either impractical (getting older demos is not a solution)
>
> > or proven over and over to fail (increasing the library
> with
> > songs that do not test well).
>
> I forget the exact number but between 1955 and 1972 there
> are somwhere around 11,000 songs that hit the top 100.

And only a couple of hundred are still hits.

> Add to that the bubbling under songs, oh and don't forget
> all those songs you say got played due to the payola and
> kept another song from the charts, add those too and you
> have a very respectable block of music to work with.


Around 400. And the demos are still going to be 55+.

The rest of the songs are, today, stiffs.

> A large selection of songs and good rotation will keep the
> songs from getting tired and you listeners happy. We hear
> it all the time from listeners.

All 11 of them? Bad example.

> As for testing songs, Well David to be honest, I have
> forgotten
> more about good oldies than you and cat will ever know, and
> guys
> like Chris Quinn, Cousin Brucie and Norm N. Nite knows more
> than
> I ever will. You guys don't have a clue which songs you
> should
> be testing.

The correct answer is that we do not know what songs will test. So every time we test (I do 12 oldies tests a year), we add what iff songs. we also add songs that have rested, and songs that were marginal. We test and retest, only discarding a song if it is such a klunker that it never gets close to the "maybe" bar. Oh, we test up to 1500 songs per test, and are, manybe, the only oldies stations to do that.

Since nobody but the listeners knows which oldies will be desirable or hits today, we test them all, over and over and over. But as time goes on, we see that the bulk of the 60's library has no hope in any time in any market. After a song stiffs 4 or 5 times, we know it is a goner.

> If you were to sit down and test all 11,000
> songs
> (or what ever the number is)you would come up with a
> playlist
> with a large core and that had plenty of other great songs
> that
> should/would be put into lighter rotation for the "wow"
> factor
> and to help break things up a bit.

You would ocme up with a very tired group of respondents.

Humor aside, you can test everything relevant and do it in multiple groups, although you are talking about over $120,000 the first time you test. And you get 400 to 500 songs. If you move out of the 60's, you can go to the high hundreds in hit songs.
>
> >
> > All this data comes from two sources: the listeners and
> the
> > advertisers. None of it comes from consultants. In fact,
> it
> > appears that it takes a consultant to make the average
> > person here see reality.
> >
> I would believe the Advertisers saying it but not listeners.
>
> My personal experience proves to me otherwise and the
> reaction
> when WMJI dropped 50's proves the same. It got so bad that
> they
> sarted a sunday night show featuring 50's songs and
> requests.
> I've also noticed that they've added some 50's songs into
> the
> playlist again. Not a lot but some. Heard Elvis just a bit
> ago.
>
> Any relationship between a consutant and reality around here
>
> is purely coincidental.
>
> Mike Dane
> WSTB-FM 88.9
> SundayOldiesJukebox.com
>
 
Re: advice

> Well unlike you Cat, I talk the talk and walk the walk, and
> prove it every Sunday night. We might be a small station but
>
> we keep growing and I, at least am on the air somewhere (#73
>
> market to be exact).

Cat is a programmer. I am a group programmer. We are both at commercial staitons that have to justify thier existence very trend and book.
 
Re: advice

> Right- keep up the front. When you've done it as a real
> fulltime career for 25+ years like many of us, then perhaps
> you can pretend you can tell us to "walk the walk".

Mike hopped a budget Air Egypt flight to Cairo and is off swimming in de Nile.
 
Re: Songs

> Actually I do my homework. It's because of people like
> you that don't that we have fiascos like WCBS. "drop the
> 50's and add late 70's and ealy 80's." And what happens?
> They head to the basement. they were #10 in the arbitrends
> in June of '05. Now wehre are they?

They suck. The solution to the problem is the issue at CBS-FM. They had to change, but picked the wrong option or did a wrong implementation of it.
 
ooh

Save your breath, David. Jethro Tull had an LP "Thick As A Brick"- same concept with the skulls of the wannabes.


>
> No, it is not. Arbitron has 7 or 8 formats under "Spanish"
> such as...
>
> Spanish Oldies
> Spanish AC
> Spanish CHR
> Spanish Variety
> Spanish regional Mexican
> Spanish news talk
> Spánish Urban
> Spanish Tropical
>
> And each is simply the equivalent of the English format in
> Spanish.
>
> Nowhere does Arbitron use the language as the format
> descriptor.
>
 
press 2

I tried but I keep getting the Paki phone bank.


> Press 1 for English :>)
>
> > That's discrimination. Where is the format heading for ENGLISH?
> >
> > LMAO :)
 
advice

And still has not figured out it's more than a river in Egypt.

(and likely never will)

>
> Mike hopped a budget Air Egypt flight to Cairo and is off
> swimming in de Nile.
>
 
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