Part of making a song from the '60s work for someone 25, or a new song work for someone who's 55+, is a presenter putting the musical outliers in context. Many of the features on the original WMMO involved themed sets that helped provide a reason for the oddball songs to be there. Every daypart had something like "The 98.9 Theme Park" or "My Three Songs."
Early WMMO also leaned heavily on the vibe of the early FM progressive stations, when music, free thought and spontaneity mattered more than the spots. Imagine trying to recreate that vibe in today's clusterthink.
Craziest two-song consecutive pairing I remember: Sausalito Summernight by Diesel (1980) out of Beep-Beep by the Playmates (1958, probably the only time WMMO ever played it). The conection? It was "Car World" that day on the 98.9 Theme Park, and both those songs are about Ramblers. To a consultant looking at a printed log, that had to look just bizarre. But it's amazing what you can play for spice when it's set up.
Another reason it could happen: When listeners called to request them, Cary had both those songs in a cabinet in his office, and even knew right where they were. Amazing.
Early WMMO also leaned heavily on the vibe of the early FM progressive stations, when music, free thought and spontaneity mattered more than the spots. Imagine trying to recreate that vibe in today's clusterthink.
Craziest two-song consecutive pairing I remember: Sausalito Summernight by Diesel (1980) out of Beep-Beep by the Playmates (1958, probably the only time WMMO ever played it). The conection? It was "Car World" that day on the 98.9 Theme Park, and both those songs are about Ramblers. To a consultant looking at a printed log, that had to look just bizarre. But it's amazing what you can play for spice when it's set up.
Another reason it could happen: When listeners called to request them, Cary had both those songs in a cabinet in his office, and even knew right where they were. Amazing.