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andreajesus
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videokilledtheradiostar said:At 11:45 the other night I heard 9.9 "All of me for all of you" ????? Now that's a stretch. ::
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on CBSFM? That is a stretch (and i LIKE that song!!
videokilledtheradiostar said:At 11:45 the other night I heard 9.9 "All of me for all of you" ????? Now that's a stretch. ::
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Jay F said:When the original batch of oldies stations came on years ago, 60s songs were well rested Many of the titles were not played for years and could not be found elsewhere on the dial. The songs were well known, yet there was still a sense of freshness and "oh wow".
Maybe it's because the songs are played out or maybe it's because musical tastes were fragmented while growing up but I don't think Gen X (which I'm on the upper end of) will react wth the same passion to classic hits stations playing 80s the way baby boomers did hearing 60s or early 70s on oldies stations.
I remember when The Big Chill movie and soundtrack came out over two decade ago, many FM stations nationally switched to oldies after that . It was recognized that 60s music was really special to boomers, it was the music of a generation. Many oldies stations were #1 25-54 at that time.
Johnny_45 said:Way back a bunch of posts to this thread ago, someone wrote:
"If WABC had played records like "Tainted Love" when they should have, instead of the wimp o rama Rupert Holmes fest they turned into,maybe they wouldn't be full of tainted windbags spouting outdated con swerve-atisim that no one cares about anymore...CBS FM,please play "Goody Two Shoes " by Adam Ant and "You Spin Me Round" by Dead Or Alive,thank you so much..."
I agree. Keep in mind that TODAY "Oldies" can be mixed across decades depending on how well they stand up across time. "Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go" passes the acid test: so does "Blue Christmas" --- shoot, why do you think Radio Disney plays "Do Wah Diddy" --- some songs are just universal multi-generational works of art.
Jason Roberts said:Johnny_45 said:Way back a bunch of posts to this thread ago, someone wrote:
"If WABC had played records like "Tainted Love" when they should have, instead of the wimp o rama Rupert Holmes fest they turned into,maybe they wouldn't be full of tainted windbags spouting outdated con swerve-atisim that no one cares about anymore...CBS FM,please play "Goody Two Shoes " by Adam Ant and "You Spin Me Round" by Dead Or Alive,thank you so much..."
I agree. Keep in mind that TODAY "Oldies" can be mixed across decades depending on how well they stand up across time. "Tainted Love/Where Did Our Love Go" passes the acid test: so does "Blue Christmas" --- shoot, why do you think Radio Disney plays "Do Wah Diddy" --- some songs are just universal multi-generational works of art.
No argument that "Oldies" can mix across decades. And yes, some songs are universal, multi-generational. That explains why CBS-FM can still spin a, let's say, "Jailhouse Rock" or "Johnny B. Goode" from time to time.
At the same time, of the older post you showed us, that particular poster forgets that radio in the early to mid 1980's was all about the 25-54 demo, not teens...not 18-34. The younger listeners were leaving AM radio for FM CHR's demonstrably better sound quality (understandably so), while stations like WABC leaned a bit older, (and yes, musically speaking, conservative) to get the 25-54 and capture the agency buys.
But, no...WABC would not have been saved by playing the younger music. As I mentioned above, the teens were vacating AM radio, period due to FM's better sound quality. Today, few under age 45 have ever even bothered to listen to AM, so they generally don't have a clue about what programming is on there.
Today, very few "music" stations on AM really succeed anymore. You might see a few here and there in small towns. But that's about it. I mean, even the famed WSM-AM in Nashville (a 50,000 watt blowtorch) had less than 2 share in the last trend 12+...
scooty430 said:Very true. I remember actually when everyone at my elementary school switched from WRKO-AM to F-105. Within a year, it seemed completely silly to listen to tinny AM. You would only do it if your buddy had an AM only transistor out in your tree fort, or if you were in an old car that only had AM. It died fast. WRKO took the same route as other AMs - it went wimpy. In 82 or so it went all-talk.
Andrew J. Gladding said:You think that's bad... I heard Missing You by John Waite around 1:14 am today. Great song, as light tracks go, but wasn't it released in 1992? Honestly, we're starting to enter a period of time where the quality of songwriting is really questionable.
adma said:scooty430 said:Very true. I remember actually when everyone at my elementary school switched from WRKO-AM to F-105. Within a year, it seemed completely silly to listen to tinny AM. You would only do it if your buddy had an AM only transistor out in your tree fort, or if you were in an old car that only had AM. It died fast. WRKO took the same route as other AMs - it went wimpy. In 82 or so it went all-talk.
Though we must remember that it wasn't just about tinny AM vs clear-sound FM: it was about an overall programming approach--that is, FM was where you could hear "Whole Lotta Love" or "Won't Get Fooled Again" or *ahem* "Do You Feel Like We Do" in all their unedited glory, a lot more Pink Floyd than just "Money", etc. Even the loathed corporate rock of the late 70s/early 80s was a net plus, relative to Kenny Rogers and whatever. It isn't that AM "went wimpy" in reaction; the wimpiness was already in the blood--and coming from the other end, the parental generation was increasingly of the sort that was nurtured on Top 40, so AM stations became parental stations "by default", as it were.
It wasn't just that WABC was killed by being on AM: Rick Sklar's increasingly calcified programming approach would have been DOA even if it had migrated to "where the audiences were" on FM. Though of course, a lot of 80s Oldies fantasists would like to pretend otherwise...
Jason Roberts said:Ah...but was it really Sklar? Or was it the "suits" at ABC radio sales demanding the 25-54 demo be delivered?
You weren't going to get that by playing album cuts and hard rock. The PD has to deliver the audience the boss wants...
Mike Sheridan said:I can think of worse songs than "Tainted Love". Better than hearing "Fire and Rain" for the 2 millionth time!
Or the Bee Gees "How Deep is your love" They must have that in luke warm rotation. loladma said:Mike Sheridan said:I can think of worse songs than "Tainted Love". Better than hearing "Fire and Rain" for the 2 millionth time!
But, better "Fire and Rain" than JT's "How Sweet It Is", or "Handy Man"...
Mike Sheridan said:You guys get it I wonder why most PD's don't? Just because we like a song it doesn't mean we want to hear it every single day. Although I have to admit answering a radio station request line is an education. People calling up asking for the same songs all the time!
I always said that oldies that are played all the time stop being oldies. They lose the "oh wow" factor and become currents that never go away.
Now, just for you, here's "Handy Man"!