TheBigA said:
Tom Wells said:
Metrics are the death of art, attempting to measure and quantify it makes it shy, feeble, and/or squashes it entirely.
How do you pay for it? Even if you work for free, ASCAP & BMI are now sending bills to Part 15s. There are costs involved. You need metrics to get money. If you have a better way, let me know.
Pay? Donations require no payments. I breathe radio, it just happens. My trainwreck of music is audible to +/- 10,000 in my dense neighorhood.
It is a legal 100 mw pt 15, but I live in what's just about the densest place in the city for population.
I suppose I should send bills to the companies (that still exist) for the commercials I run. I run old commercials that I ENJOY.
No, I won't say which products or companies. I don't promote the station in any way. If someone tunes in, it's their choice to listen or not.
Teddy Lewis is now on with "Where'd you get those eyes?' (1933)
I run a drop-in where a 14 year old snotty-nose punk band member (from a 1983 aircheck) says " And whoever doesn't like us can die. "
It's snotty and fun at the same time. So it's part of the mix.
Now I'm playing King Khan's "Little Girl in the Woods". So if you don't like everything from Louie Prima to the Ramones, with a lot of
1960's grunge, some hits, some groaners, and more ephemera and lost 45's than you can shake a stick at, it's not the station for you.
But in my neighborhood I'm sure there are people who "get it".
Artists are at their best when they follow their own vision. As Bob points out, the music is the sweetest on a station you build yourself.
Now old blue eyes is singing "Summer Wind".
I built it, and run the whole thing as a donation to my community. I take no payments and make no payments.
If someone hears something they like, they may search it out and buy a copy somewhere for their own collection.
And the artist makes more money. That IS how radio traditionally works.
Now on is Cheech and Chong with "Don't Bug Me", into Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazelwood's "Ladybird".
No business at all here, just pure unadulterated radio, and it sure is fun.