Retro said:Will they be playing the greatest hits of the 70's and 80's? Somehow I am not so sure the 2 decades are compatable. I mean Culture Club up against Classic Rock? Hmmm.
Steve N. said:Anyway, I seriously see CBS Radio/Boston moving "Back To The 80s Friday Night" to WBZ-FM 103 within the next 5 years, given that Joe Cortese is at 103.3 already. Given that 'ZLX is trying to survive and doesn't need anyone getting confused over which station is classic rock and which is classic pop (as I write frequently, that line is very blurred, given that 'ZLX, 'ROR and 93-7 Mike FM share about 90% of the same music), I think that 'BZ-FM will back off on sharing too much with 'ZLX, etc. As it is, Mix's upper limits is going to have to be around 1988, as its core will tend to be more Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Dave Matthews, Alanis, STP, Blink-182, and similar bands.
Varulven said:80's music might be "oldies" to some generation, but 80's music will never have the spirit of true oldies.
When WODS won't play THE TWIST by Chubby Checker with any consistency, a timeless classic that the
consultants say won't entertain the masses, it is obvious the business people want to force-feed the few
radio listeners left into believing Donna Summer and Eddie Money are the "future" of Oldies.
Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett were not "oldies", nor do Def Leppard or Motley Crue fit the bill.
When you buy Cheerios you don't expect to find Raisan Bran in the box. Radio is a mess these days.
rapking said:Let me know when Oldies 103.3 plays The Fresh Prince ( Will Smith ) , Heavy D and L.L.Cool J ( 80's Hip Hop Music ).
Retro said:Will they be playing the greatest hits of the 70's and 80's? Somehow I am not so sure the 2 decades are compatable. I mean Culture Club up against Classic Rock? Hmmm.
Retro said:Will they be playing the greatest hits of the 70's and 80's? Somehow I am not so sure the 2 decades are compatable. I mean Culture Club up against Classic Rock? Hmmm.
Garrett said:Retro said:Will they be playing the greatest hits of the 70's and 80's? Somehow I am not so sure the 2 decades are compatable. I mean Culture Club up against Classic Rock? Hmmm.
Huh?
Why the heck not?
Since when is one pop rock song more valuable than another one? Just what makes Steven Tyler any better than Boy George? (And don't say "because Steven Tyler is more talented" because that would be a subjective opinion, not necessarily fact, and not necessarily true)
Ciao said:I agree with you on this one.
I think it's generational. The baby boomers were real big into 'arena' rock. They weren't too accepting of rhythmic music. The new generations are different.
Oldbones said:Ciao said:I agree with you on this one.
I think it's generational. The baby boomers were real big into 'arena' rock. They weren't too accepting of rhythmic music. The new generations are different.
Huh? What about Aretha, the "Philadelphia sound" (O'Jays, etc.) and of course Motown? I'm sure there are boomers who only like rock, but then again how much of the generation that grew up on 80s/90s altrock cares for the R&B or pop music of that era? If anything, the boomers are probably more diverse in their tastes simply because playlists were broader when they were growing up & they were exposed to more styles of music.
Garrett said:Retro said:Will they be playing the greatest hits of the 70's and 80's? Somehow I am not so sure the 2 decades are compatable. I mean Culture Club up against Classic Rock? Hmmm.
Huh?
Why the heck not?
Since when is one pop rock song more valuable than another one? Just what makes Steven Tyler any better than Boy George? (And don't say "because Steven Tyler is more talented" because that would be a subjective opinion, not necessarily fact, and not necessarily true)
Varulven said:80's music might be "oldies" to some generation, but 80's music will never have the spirit of true oldies.
When WODS won't play THE TWIST by Chubby Checker with any consistency, a timeless classic that the
consultants say won't entertain the masses, it is obvious the business people want to force-feed the few
radio listeners left into believing Donna Summer and Eddie Money are the "future" of Oldies.
Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett were not "oldies", nor do Def Leppard or Motley Crue fit the bill.
When you buy Cheerios you don't expect to find Raisan Bran in the box. Radio is a mess these days.
Retro said:Steve N. said:Anyway, I seriously see CBS Radio/Boston moving "Back To The 80s Friday Night" to WBZ-FM 103 within the next 5 years, given that Joe Cortese is at 103.3 already. Given that 'ZLX is trying to survive and doesn't need anyone getting confused over which station is classic rock and which is classic pop (as I write frequently, that line is very blurred, given that 'ZLX, 'ROR and 93-7 Mike FM share about 90% of the same music), I think that 'BZ-FM will back off on sharing too much with 'ZLX, etc. As it is, Mix's upper limits is going to have to be around 1988, as its core will tend to be more Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Dave Matthews, Alanis, STP, Blink-182, and similar bands.
Don't you mean WODS? Its not quite the same thing. Back to the 80's Friday Night actually fits on WBMX and is format consistent. I just do not see Culture Club being played with Buchman, Turner, Overdrive at all.