Firepoint525 brings up some interesting points that got me thinking about a whole bunch of things. We’ve seen more than enough discussions on this particular board reminding us that songs that were once extremely popular don’t assure airplay today on nostalgia formats.
Popular music has always had “fads” or hits in certain years seem to sound alike. About the best way to truly see that is to look at #1 songs in chronological order from 1960-1989. There you can clearly see an overall distinctive sound slowly but surely be replaced with something else that dominates for a while and then something else peaks the interest of music consumers.
There is no denying the disco era was a phenomenon and it produced a very large number of chart toppers but it was also polarizing to those who favored rock. Back in the day, the thinking was you either loved disco or hated it. I also thought there was a third option in that certain listeners wanted some kind of balance with other music as well. Today, there are a number of classic hits formats that take a balanced music approach.
Earlier there was this comment “While I certainly shed no tears over the "death" of disco, I would say that its departure at least briefly left a void on the airwaves.” This poster is also correct. I remember visiting NYC in the early 80's and I believe WKTU was still "Disco 92" but I remember hearing Christopher Cross's "Sailing." I love the song but it was obvious there was not enough disco to go around. But then I started thinking of music tests and the fact that the disco period does represent a time when their core audience was growing up and that music and time has made impressions.
Listeners offer their opinions based on brief audio files they hear. I wonder how much bias or trying to answer what the panelist “thinks” is the correct response takes place. Through PM, I solicited feedback from a knowledgeable and radio-experienced poster concerning a Labor Day countdown I put together. I misspoke a bit about how I utilized a listener panel in that I forgot certain things but I became more aware of how actual tests take place for a real radio scenario. I can appreciate why radio utilizes such testing and the results they bring. But is any system really perfect?
Besides the deeper,more specialized disco hits, artists such as Manilow, Bread, The Carpenters to name a few have had quite a lot of hits but like disco it’s probably taboo to offer any of their music outside of a specialty program. The guy who looks like a football player perhaps actually enjoys disco and/or the softer side of the hits. In casual conversation, he would probably never admit to that. I doubt he would admit to that in a music test. For radio stations, I believe it’s the ratings that decides a lot and there are those who are just better than others in figuring out what songs should be offered and their rotation.
Earlier on, I talked of disco as being music that’s a lot of fun and just makes you feel good. Perhaps, this is a reason a lot of it is found on Saturday nights such as the aforementioned “Forget Me Nots” one of my personal favorites. I go cruises once or twice a year as I will do again at the end of October. Karaoke is usually going on somewhere and disco music usually earns a good deal of play and a wide spectrum of people just get into it and it just makes for a good time.
One of the other posters – Oldies 76 – has often said the right song should be played at the right time. Disco and virtually everything do get those opportunities to shine but this is not an across-the-board practice. You can put me in the camp that music testing does have critical value and importance. But I would hope, some bias has to be weighed in to the responses. I still believe beyond testing, the right company and the right management just know when and how often to feature certain songs. They keep the classic hits format interesting IMHO and I wish more of them existed.