DavidEduardo said:
I don't think there has ever been a Classic Hits station that morphed into Oldies. The process is the opposite... oldies stations that move out of the sales demos become classic hits to make the core audience younger.
To every rule, there is an exception, in this case
Classic Hits morphing to
Oldies. David as usual, is correct, but here's the exception. Admittedly, it goes back a while. In 1986,
WHTT Buffalo was one of the first
Classic Hits stations in the U.S. I was the PD and did PM drive at the time. WKLH Milwaukee, WKLX Rochester and about a dozen other FM stations in medium and large markets were successful doing Classic Hits consulted by Gary Guthrie, who also consulted WHTT. (Long story short, Pryamid Broadcasting copped the WHTT call letters for Buffalo after a CHR in Boston abandoned them.)
Fred Jacobs, at the time, was researching and consulting
Classic Rock, while Guthrie was taking a different approach with a format he called
Classic Hits. The broad based distinction between the two formats, Classic Rock was "artist-group-album-based" while Classic Hits was more "song-single-based." Guthrie's
Classic Hits stations featured hit singles from 1964 to 1980, where a listener might hear (as a rough example) "Baby Love" by the Supremes next to Skynyrd's "Sweet Home Alabama." On the other hand, Jacobs'
Classic Rock stations featured tracks from artists and groups. For example, a track from "Houses of the Holy" next to a track from "Abbey Road." Both gentlemen were passionate about their formats and I'm fortunate to have worked with each of them.
In 1989, the two formats went head to head in Buffalo and WHTT flipped to Oldies, dropping songs that were hits after 1975 and adding songs from 1955-63.
Oldies 104 became one of the dominant Oldies stations in America, programmed by Tom Schuh who guided the market-leading station from 1989 to 2000.
Over the past nine years, the format of WHTT evolved from Oldies to Classic Hits (2003-2007) and now is settled in as a gold and re-current based AC station as Mix 104.1. Granted, it's not your typical evolution, whether it's viewed in the context of 1989 or 2009. I did middays' at WHTT from 2004 to January of this year, when my "position was eliminated."
As David noted, these days, nobody flips to Oldies, but they do flip to Classic Hits, which is essentially features hits from the 70s and 80s, with a smattering of 60s and in some cases, even a few hits from the early 90s.