Lkeller said:michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:gcreedle239 said:Inside Radio has an article today on the disappearance of Smooth Jazz.
Smooth Jazz didn't die altogether. CC picked up a syndicated format called "The Smoothest Place on the Planet" for KISQ-FM HD2. In my opinion, it sounds better than the old KKSF, which had been voice-tracked for the last few years, anyway. Of course, you need an HD radio...
Unless somethig changes quickly, Smooth Jazz will easily outlive HD radio.
Which would really be too bad, in my opinion. I wasn't particularly interested in HD radio, but the CD player in my car died, and a replacement with HD was only $20 more than the equivalent unit without HD.
I've checked out XM/Sirius on-line and in rental cars. It's superior, but I don't commute to work by car so I can't justify the extra money, given my alreadly healthy monthly expenses for entertainment (you know: cable TV, high speed internet, NetFlix, going to concerts).
HD is free, I get many more music choices, and they're commercial free so far. At least in the Bay Area, HD has become a refuge for fringe formats...or no longer commercially viable formats that some people still want to hear. Aside from Smooth Jazz, CBS picked up the Dance format for MOViN HD2 when the local dance station flipped formats. I personally don't like Dance music, but I'm glad it's there. We also get 50s-60s Oldies on KOIT HD2, a second classical stream, Classic Country, and Classic Hits (70s), among others.
I'm hoping more people will pick up on HD2, and it will morph into a viable money-maker - kind of like the FM band in the 60s.
Llew:
I'm not hoping for HD to die, but it just strikes me as the ultimate chicken/egg kind of thing.
It's cool to listen to because it's commercial-free.
It's commercial-free because not enough people are listening to make it worth anything in ad sales.
Unlike FM, nobody's rushing to make HD a free part of radio receivers. The few automakers that offer it have it as a $300 option. If they can get it down to $20 like your aftermarket unit, that'll be a big step.
BUT:
If it's a failure...if listeners and revenue don't come (and probably fairly soon), there's no incentive for broadcasters to continue.
If it's a success and becomes a revenue generator, then it will have to respond to the same forces that drive FM today...demographics and agency buyers. Which will kill diversity of formats and deep playlists in a heartbeat.
And what then? You'll have what you have on FM now, but with better (depending on how many streams you're running off the bandwidth) fidelity. If FM listeners flock to HD, will FM become a ghetto like AM? Do we turn off analog radio as we have analog TV? If so, we've reduced coverage areas and effectively eliminated service to listeners who get signals today.
Enjoy it while you've got it, Llew (I do on the rare occasions I have a test vehicle with HD)...because either way HD goes, it won't be like this for long.