Of course he did. He was promoting FM.
There is nothing inherently wrong with amplitude modulation.
Impulse noise is the issue.
There is nothing inherently wrong with amplitude modulation.
Impulse noise is the issue.
In Armstrong's initial presentations, he also found fault with the method of modulation.
But Armstrong considered the lack of noise, fading and static to be what made FM superior.
Seems to me that it was modulating the frequency rather than amplitude that solved the problem. No?
Also, for years there was the 'image' of FM as being for fuddy-duddy jazz and classical and BFL listeners only.
Young people didn't seem to adopt it until the underground FM movement in the late 1960's / early 1970's.
By the early 70's, the processing on FM stations progressed to where the announcers and DJ's voices sounded better, which coincided with young people turning to FM for their music.
From what I understand, early FM DJ sound was crisp but stale sounding. Compared to AM, the DJ's sounded asleep. Kind of didn't mix with lively, pounding music.
Also, for years there was the 'image' of FM as being for fuddy-duddy jazz and classical and BFL listeners only.
Young people didn't seem to adopt it until the underground FM movement in the late 1960's / early 1970's.
I have argued that same point here many times. I was 15 in 1968 when WBCN changed from classical (WBCN: Boston Concert Network) to being one of the first underground stations. I had never heard anything like it and kept my ears glued to that station until sometime in the late 80's, it had gone AAR by that time but they still had great DJ's and still played a lot of new seldom heard stuff and broke many new bands. I wouldn't have cared if it was being received on a crystal radio back then it was the content that kept me coming back day after day, in fact it was difficult to receive in the Worc area back then but that didn't stop us. It was new and exciting, you felt like you were a part of what was going on, underground stations totally refreshed radio and FM was lucky enough to get it, AM was entrenched in boring top 40 and FM was languishing with very few listeners playing classical music, FM was ripe at that point for a change. People here keep saying the same thing will happen with HD, haha! Sure, next time there is a huge movement similar to what the antiwar/hippy/youth movement was back in the 60's HD will take off if is first with the new content and the new wave. Hey I'm not saying a new hippy movement it could be a polka movement if that is what takes the country by storm, I'm not holding my breath though.
You have put the cart ahead of the horse.
FM developed new and different formats because the FCC mandated that nearly all the AM/FM simulcasts be ended in January of 1967.
The first "boom" was Beautiful Music, freshened up by the likes of Phil Stout and Marlin Taylor. They removed the light classics, many of the show tunes and started adding instrumental versions of pop songs. And they dominated the ratings for the next decade and a half.
Progressive or "underground" rock also came along, as did variants on existing formats like oldies, Top 40, chicken rock, etc. A few years into the "switch" to FM, progressive rock formats died when confronted with tight playlists on AOR stations, most using the Burkhart-Abrams Superstars consultancy.
All this happened due to an FCC rulemaking procedure.
There is no equivalent in the world of HD. There are already too many stations and too many choices for HD to offer something unique such as FM did in the late 60's.
Also, for years there was the 'image' of FM as being for fuddy-duddy jazz and classical and BFL listeners only.
Young people didn't seem to adopt it until the underground FM movement in the late 1960's / early 1970's.
By the early 70's, the processing on FM stations progressed to where the announcers and DJ's voices sounded better, which coincided with young people turning to FM for their music.
From what I understand, early FM DJ sound was crisp but stale sounding. Compared to AM, the DJ's sounded asleep. Kind of didn't mix with lively, pounding music.
I agree somewhat, FM was forced to change, but the "first boom" of Beautiful Music was not exactly a world shaker or beater. I still argue progressive and even underground (there was a big difference, underground would play jazz, rock and folk all in the same set, the sky was the limit) got the ball rolling and the playlists (at least on WBCN even tough it became an AOR station) did not tighten appreciably until the late 70's. AOR was worlds ahead of the boring krap that's played on top 40 stations nowadays and even was back then.
I don't know about adoption nationwide but when I returned to the Bay Area from Vietnam in 1966 there were a number of my peers who were listening to what we called then "underground radio" (which was usually album cuts from rock or rock/jazz bands). There were four AM pop stations in the Bay Area at that time: KLOK, KFRC, KYA and KEWB. Some of the other MOR AM's played some pop music but not on a full-time basis. KEWB probably had the best overall signal over the entire Bay Area as the others were difficult to listen to at night depending upon your location.
As I noted earlier, it seemed as if the new FM jocks were attempting to sound like those on the classical stations. Aside from their very understated presence they didn't sound any different though.
Those underground or progressive stations did not really get very good numbers in most places. The Beautiful Music stations did.
That's true. The real turning point for FM came when you could hear Top 40 on FM. When people had the choice between 99X and WABC in New York, that started the decline for WABC. It took about 7 years before they flipped to talk. Same with urban music and WBLS vs. WLIB. It didn't take long before listeners to the AM stations realized their music sounded better on FM.
Huh? KEWB had a very defective signal, ...
Then there is the quasi-Top 40 Drake did on WOR-FM in New York...
I used to listen to WOR-FM most of the time after I moved down from Dutchess County (where WABC came in stong) but didn't notice anything unusual about their format. What do you mean by "quasi-Top 40"? In fact, I think I still have a 2-hour off-air program I taped from sometime in 1970.
Note that I said "depending upon where you were located". In Marin and the North Bay we got KEWB far better than any other of the BA pop rockers at night.
That's true. The real turning point for FM came when you could hear Top 40 on FM. When people had the choice between 99X and WABC in New York, that started the decline for WABC. It took about 7 years before they flipped to talk. Same with urban music and WBLS vs. WLIB. It didn't take long before listeners to the AM stations realized their music sounded better on FM.
That may have started WABC's decline but I believe it was WKTU's Disco format that finally did them in.