Got a chance to take over a station in central Florida and any tips on convincing sponsors that music on am is viable??? Format will be classics of the 50/60's with a strong lean towards Boss or crusin'.
missammusic said:Got a chance to take over a station in central Florida and any tips on convincing sponsors that music on am is viable??? Format will be classics of the 50/60's with a strong lean towards Boss or crusin'.
TheFonz said:missammusic said:Got a chance to take over a station in central Florida and any tips on convincing sponsors that music on am is viable??? Format will be classics of the 50/60's with a strong lean towards Boss or crusin'.
As a listener, I believe AM could be viable if it was programmed with music that was originally recorded in mono. That means you would probably want to program the 1950s thru about 1965. I would certainly want to listen to FM for anything that could be heard in stereo. Don't be afraid to program some early '50s pre-rock Pop.............there's some good stuff in there. If you are in Central Florida you would probably attract a lot of retirees. And that's about the only group with money in their pockets these days. Mention THAT to advertisers.
CC brags not - I'm in his market and 1600 rocks if you want oldies. 8)missammusic said:Thanks for the tips. I will check out your format. The good thing going for me is having been in the biz for almost 40 yrs and know alot of the jocks from the "boss" era who are raring to get their pipes back on the air. I feel the same way, we grew up on am and in fact research has shown that you can listen to am longer since there is no high end to wear out your ears.
Good Ideas. If I may elaborate on what to do with what I'd call a "Graffiti-Gold" - like format; not only include pre-1964 pop songs, but also throw in some surf-rock, a little Carolina 'Beach' music, doo-wop, R&B classics and maybe some rockabilly. I'd also throw in some early rock 'n' roll and R&B pre-1955.TheFonz said:missammusic said:Got a chance to take over a station in central Florida and any tips on convincing sponsors that music on am is viable??? Format will be classics of the 50/60's with a strong lean towards Boss or crusin'.
As a listener, I believe AM could be viable if it was programmed with music that was originally recorded in mono. That means you would probably want to program the 1950s thru about 1965. I would certainly want to listen to FM for anything that could be heard in stereo. Don't be afraid to program some early '50s pre-rock Pop.............there's some good stuff in there. If you are in Central Florida you would probably attract a lot of retirees. And that's about the only group with money in their pockets these days. Mention THAT to advertisers.
Whoops hit post too earlyLibertyNT said:I went through Albuquerque not too long ago. 1600 was a pretty good Oldies Station.
My station is heavily based on the 50's and 60's. I have Nearly 1,000 songs From 1954-1975
LibertyNT said:Whoops hit post too earlyLibertyNT said:I went through Albuquerque not too long ago. 1600 was a pretty good Oldies Station.
My station is heavily based on the 50's and 60's. I have Nearly 1,000 songs From 1954-1975
Where I was going with that was I have Specialty shows that run throughout the week. all still oldies based, to livin' up the station a little bit. In my opinion its not just about the music, its also about the presentation and hosts. An Oldies station needs personality.
I couldn't agree more. Covering the entire 50's decade and the early 60's would be the way to go.TheFonz said:Don't be afraid to program some early '50s pre-rock Pop.............there's some good stuff in there.
To expand on my last post, look at the past copies/pdf files of XM Satellite Radio's IT playlist of the 50's and the 60's up to the British Invasion to get ideas on expansive playlists. Online stations to check out that follow (to some extent) the type of format that you are looking for would be Radio Bop (although some of the songs Harold plays should be moved to the Radio Bop 60's online station). Three other online stations to get ideas for playlists would be Hy Lit Radio (which covers much of the second half of the 50's-with a great deal of doo wop, the entire 60's, up to the early 70's, Alan's Golden Oldies (whose station owner Alan Price has every song that has charted on the Billboard Hot 100 survey, and Chuck Benjamin's Tunedex Memories station.klutch00 said:"Graffiti-Gold" - like format; not only include pre-1964 pop songs, but also throw in some surf-rock, doo-wop, early rock 'n' roll and R&B pre-1955.TheFonz said:
Don't be afraid to program some early '50s pre-rock Pop.............there's some good stuff in there.
I would be careful about mixing the soft-pop with more up-beat records. I think that you could group the Carpenters, Bread, Neil Sedaka and James Taylor with groups like the Platters, Drifters, Michael Buble, Harry Connick, the Force MDs, Manhattans; thereby creating a MOR format for today. My concern is that if you throw in too many diverse genres, you might turn a number of people off.amfmsw said:I just stumbled on this thread...haven't been here in quite some time after being thrashed constantly by some. But I can tell you with 35 years of radio experience, the 'obscurities' are death, certain death for a station. Why would you play a song no one knows or has limited appeal when you could be playing one that everyone loves or remembers? I've been there. I've seen it fail. I've seen it kill sales, lose jobs and force format changes. When in doubt, leave it out. No one ever turned off your station for an off-the-wall b-side song you didn't play.
As a format in this day and age, I would soften it with 70's AC pop, like The Carpenters, Neil Sedaka's latter hits, Elton John, and late 60's artists like Spanky and Our Gang, Fifth Dimension (the entire library of their hits) Mamas & Papas. You don't want to sound like a stodgy old fart. You want to sound upbeat and happy and fresh, playing the hits the "oldies stations' have abandoned. Check Facebooks' William Dann's "Seldom Heard Hits of the 60's and 70's" page. We all post stream of conciousness songs we just forgot about...hell, that page alone could make a format! Mix that with the Del Vikings and The Skyliners sounds, stir in some Cameo-Parkway...now you're cookin'. Just my thoughts....
Dittokenb said:Forget the 70's stuff, classic hits stations have them covered. Do the 50's & 60's. E-x-p-a-n-d the playlist. Don't just stop at 1,000 songs. Play music from the era that made on the top 40 between 11-20 instead of just the top ten hits that have been played into the ground. I would grow the list to 2500 songs. I'd eliminate the overplayed (hits) like Do Wah Diddy, Wipeout, Wild Thing and etc. Expand the Elvis cuts to She's Not You, Just Tell Her Jim Said Hello, Viva Las Vegas, Such A Night, Ain't That Lovin You Baby, rather than just playing Jail House Rock, Hound Dog and etc. Make your oldies station stand out. Have a count down survey on Saturday Mornings with a different month, date and year every Saturday. You could feature actual stations lists from the rock-n'-roll era or meld a list of your own to feature the top 30 or top 40 of that week. You could also have old commercials featured in the countdown that were out at the time...