scooty430 said:
I got the impression with requests that it was a form of gauging popularity. If they had 100 requests for "You Light Up My Life" but only 5 for "Night Fever" then the former was more popular.
But it was clear back in the day that the DJs had more leeway to just pop a song on the air, especially in smaller markets. DJs also cheated. Read Jim Ladd's book about KLOS and KMET and you'll see how he and the other jocks devitaed from the playlist when the boss wasn't looking. They would even log it incorrectly so as not to get caught.
I do remember trying to get KRTH to play "In the Summertime" by Mungo Jerry for years. It was out of print and I wanted a recording of the song. First off, KRTH would never answer the phone. When they did, they'd say, "Sure, we'll play it." But it wasn't on their playlsit, so it would never get on. This was back in the 80's. Little would I know that in 2008 it would be one of the constantly overplayed KRTH songs!
Today, KRTH will ask for requests, but they even say up front: "It needs to be one of the "GREATEST HITS OF ALL TIME." Then they actually say, "no B-sides or obscure songs, just 'great Oldies'" Kind of funny. They want you to request a song that will be played anyway. A bit of a farce.
I'm just curious. Do they play any Beatles? Then they cannot play "I Saw Her Standing There," "She's a Woman," "Day Tripper," "Eleanor Rigby," "Strawberry Fields Forever," "Come Together," and "Revolution," because they were all B-sides!
If you're playing Elvis, then a number of his titles are off limits because they were B-sides! There are many more examples too numerous to mention here.
Many "hits" that we recognize today actually originated as B-sides, but the DJs played them because they liked those better, and those became the hits.
I am curious why many stations play "All My Loving" by the Beatles, because I have never been able to find any evidence that it was ever a single. (EPs don't count.) I believe even "Yesterday" originated as the B-side of "Act Naturally" before the roles were reversed and "Yesterday" emerged as the A-side.