michael hagerty said:By the way, I love Year Of The Cat (and the less-successful followups Time Passages and Song On The Radio).
All three of those are heard on Musak FM-1, where I work. Very nice songs, indeed!
michael hagerty said:By the way, I love Year Of The Cat (and the less-successful followups Time Passages and Song On The Radio).
oldies76 said:DavidEduardo said:Why test 50-54? They are not going to add anything to the results that makes the station inviting to 40-44 year olds who have to like the station to tune it in regularly.
Well, since they listen too and they are part of the target (50-54), their ratings in a music test should be incorporated with the others to mix up a station with more "tested well" music from a slightly wider range of years. In other words, more songs. A 50 year old today, familiar with 1977 music would be at an advantage over, say a 35 year old testing that same music. A 50 year old will "approve" older classic hits, than a 35-40 years old would. Just a thought....
michael hagerty said:The shocker is that even a 50 year old today was in high school from 1977-1981 and college from 1981-1985. You're not likely to get a lot of 70s memories out of that guy, either. But he's on his way out. You still need to be asking people 5-10 years younger.
CTListener said:michael hagerty said:The shocker is that even a 50 year old today was in high school from 1977-1981 and college from 1981-1985. You're not likely to get a lot of 70s memories out of that guy, either. But he's on his way out. You still need to be asking people 5-10 years younger.
That's why such former format mainstays from the early '70s like "You're So Vain" and "American Pie" no longer get much exposure on DRC-FM, I suppose. The time is drawing near for most of the '70s music to "age out" of the format just as all but the most transcendent hits of the '60s have. Then classic hits stations will reach a real crisis: the '90s -- all that rap, all that grunge, all those turgid charts where songs routinely stayed at No. 1 for nearly two months and in the top 30 for six or seven. How in the world are you going to get an 800-song playlist with that little hit music to work with? Will '80s music and '90s music even coexist on a single radio station, or will there have to be "rock/pop" classic hits and "rhythmic/urban" classic hits stations?
I wish you would tell semoochie (on that other thread) that. He is fretting about dropping '60s-'70s music now, and dropping '50s music back in '04. I told him that the '50s were largely GONE from oldies radio by '04, but like so many on this board, he wouldn't let the truth get in the way of his pre-formed opinions. :michael hagerty said:As for luck programming the 90s, that's for the active programmers. But again, remember...when aiming for 25-54, you're not trying to get 25 year olds and you're not trying to get 54 year olds. Like archery, you aim for the center. That's 39 and a half (round it up to 40). Someone born in 1973, who graduated high school in 1991 and college in 1995. 90s music will probably be a lot easier to do than the 70s and 80s music was.
The rest of the demo? It's like ripples from a rock thrown into a pond. Successfully grab that 40 year old and 35-45 is pretty much a gimme. 30-50 isn't that big a reach. But those five years on either end, that's hit and miss.
This is (kinda) what I have been saying here and on other threads. Some of those rap hits became hits WITHOUT radio airplay. (They had to--too many obscenities in them!) This is why radio started using "airplay-only" charts. Too many raps (that they couldn't (or wouldn't) play) were making the sales charts.CTListener said:That's why such former format mainstays from the early '70s like "You're So Vain" and "American Pie" no longer get much exposure on DRC-FM, I suppose. The time is drawing near for most of the '70s music to "age out" of the format just as all but the most transcendent hits of the '60s have. Then classic hits stations will reach a real crisis: the '90s -- all that rap, all that grunge, all those turgid charts where songs routinely stayed at No. 1 for nearly two months and in the top 30 for six or seven. How in the world are you going to get an 800-song playlist with that little hit music to work with? Will '80s music and '90s music even coexist on a single radio station, or will there have to be "rock/pop" classic hits and "rhythmic/urban" classic hits stations?michael hagerty said:The shocker is that even a 50 year old today was in high school from 1977-1981 and college from 1981-1985. You're not likely to get a lot of 70s memories out of that guy, either. But he's on his way out. You still need to be asking people 5-10 years younger.
But if the charts were measuring airplay rather than sales by the time those two songs came along, whare was the manipulation? What did Los Del Rio have to gain from 16 weeks of saturation airplay at every CHR in the country (plus all that exposure on Latino-formatted stations)? Didn't everyone who wanted to buy the single have it by the time Week 6 was over, or earlier? Between the rap they couldn't play and the trickle of product that pretty much had to be played for months on end because the labels weren't putting anything into the pipeline, you had about as dire a period as CHR and CHR listeners ever had to suffer through. Please tell me who benefited during those years?firepoint525 said:This is (kinda) what I have been saying here and on other threads. Some of those rap hits became hits WITHOUT radio airplay. (They had to--too many obscenities in them!) This is why radio started using "airplay-only" charts. Too many raps (that they couldn't (or wouldn't) play) were making the sales charts.CTListener said:That's why such former format mainstays from the early '70s like "You're So Vain" and "American Pie" no longer get much exposure on DRC-FM, I suppose. The time is drawing near for most of the '70s music to "age out" of the format just as all but the most transcendent hits of the '60s have. Then classic hits stations will reach a real crisis: the '90s -- all that rap, all that grunge, all those turgid charts where songs routinely stayed at No. 1 for nearly two months and in the top 30 for six or seven. How in the world are you going to get an 800-song playlist with that little hit music to work with? Will '80s music and '90s music even coexist on a single radio station, or will there have to be "rock/pop" classic hits and "rhythmic/urban" classic hits stations?michael hagerty said:The shocker is that even a 50 year old today was in high school from 1977-1981 and college from 1981-1985. You're not likely to get a lot of 70s memories out of that guy, either. But he's on his way out. You still need to be asking people 5-10 years younger.
And some of those #1s in the '90s held on for FOUR months. "Macarena" racked up 16 weeks at #1. And LeAnn Rimes' version of "How Do I Live" somehow stayed in the top 40 for OVER A YEAR! There's your proof that chart manipulation didn't end with the payola days.
firepoint525 said:I wish you would tell semoochie (on that other thread) that. He is fretting about dropping '60s-'70s music now, and dropping '50s music back in '04. I told him that the '50s were largely GONE from oldies radio by '04, but like so many on this board, he wouldn't let the truth get in the way of his pre-formed opinions. :michael hagerty said:As for luck programming the 90s, that's for the active programmers. But again, remember...when aiming for 25-54, you're not trying to get 25 year olds and you're not trying to get 54 year olds. Like archery, you aim for the center. That's 39 and a half (round it up to 40). Someone born in 1973, who graduated high school in 1991 and college in 1995. 90s music will probably be a lot easier to do than the 70s and 80s music was.
The rest of the demo? It's like ripples from a rock thrown into a pond. Successfully grab that 40 year old and 35-45 is pretty much a gimme. 30-50 isn't that big a reach. But those five years on either end, that's hit and miss.
When I think '90s music, I think Hootie & the Blowfish. And while I certainly am not their biggest fan, I would not necessarily tune them out, either. Yet, someone, maybe it was even on this thread, suggested that Hootie did not "test well." If Hootie does not test well, then programming the '90s is going to be a big headache for '90s programmers. Hence my belief that they may opt for sports/talk if their particular market will bear it.
CTListener said:But if the charts were measuring airplay rather than sales by the time those two songs came along, whare was the manipulation? What did Los Del Rio have to gain from 16 weeks of saturation airplay at every CHR in the country (plus all that exposure on Latino-formatted stations)? Didn't everyone who wanted to buy the single have it by the time Week 6 was over, or earlier? Between the rap they couldn't play and the trickle of product that pretty much had to be played for months on end because the labels weren't putting anything into the pipeline, you had about as dire a period as CHR and CHR listeners ever had to suffer through. Please tell me who benefited during those years?firepoint525 said:This is (kinda) what I have been saying here and on other threads. Some of those rap hits became hits WITHOUT radio airplay. (They had to--too many obscenities in them!) This is why radio started using "airplay-only" charts. Too many raps (that they couldn't (or wouldn't) play) were making the sales charts.CTListener said:That's why such former format mainstays from the early '70s like "You're So Vain" and "American Pie" no longer get much exposure on DRC-FM, I suppose. The time is drawing near for most of the '70s music to "age out" of the format just as all but the most transcendent hits of the '60s have. Then classic hits stations will reach a real crisis: the '90s -- all that rap, all that grunge, all those turgid charts where songs routinely stayed at No. 1 for nearly two months and in the top 30 for six or seven. How in the world are you going to get an 800-song playlist with that little hit music to work with? Will '80s music and '90s music even coexist on a single radio station, or will there have to be "rock/pop" classic hits and "rhythmic/urban" classic hits stations?michael hagerty said:The shocker is that even a 50 year old today was in high school from 1977-1981 and college from 1981-1985. You're not likely to get a lot of 70s memories out of that guy, either. But he's on his way out. You still need to be asking people 5-10 years younger.
And some of those #1s in the '90s held on for FOUR months. "Macarena" racked up 16 weeks at #1. And LeAnn Rimes' version of "How Do I Live" somehow stayed in the top 40 for OVER A YEAR! There's your proof that chart manipulation didn't end with the payola days.
firepoint525 said:Not me. I had LONG since given up on top 40 by then. I don't know exactly when stations started using "airplay-only" charts. But I still think that some money HAD to have been passed under the table to keep just ONE LeAnn Rimes song on the charts for well over a year!
Biondi4Mayor said:I don't think it's manipulation. Starting in '92 (I believe, might be off a year or so) Billboard started using Soundscan data, which was a big change in their methodology.
Also, by the 90's, corporate giants had certainly begun to emerge in radio. Therefore, limited, repetitive playlists only got worse. The charts remain mostly the same today, where songs rack up endless weeks at #1. There is much less exposure for new acts trying to break out. Instead, the music industy has become bent on focusing only on particular acts --- meaning the days of walking into a local station and giving them your band's record are over. The artists these days have to make it first, for a promise of airplay. Radio doesn't break out acts in the same way they used to. This would all add up to (in my opinion) a smaller pool of artists, and a smaller pool of songs.
firepoint525 said:And some of those #1s in the '90s held on for FOUR months. "Macarena" racked up 16 weeks at #1. And LeAnn Rimes' version of "How Do I Live" somehow stayed in the top 40 for OVER A YEAR! There's your proof that chart manipulation didn't end with the payola days.
michael hagerty said:...We split Classic Rock off from Oldies when it was believed that Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, which co-existed with the Temptations and the Beach Boys originally on Top 40, couldn't co-exist with them on an Oldies station.
DavidEduardo said:Those listener panels where the listener self-selects themselves to 'participate are simply "loyalty" involvement moves. I don't know of one station that ever implemented anything based on those panels... but it generally made the participant loyal and encouraged them to spread the word that "KZZZ listens to its listeners".
Yeah, right.
10 years ago or so, I switched an AC station in a market of about 17 million to classic rock. We ran full page ads in a paper that had a circulation of over 1.2 million, and printed every song we might play. Listeners were to tune in and score each one. We got an amazing 80,000 back, using collection boxes at a local convenience store chain.
We also did a music test of 100 people. We implemented the 100 person test, and took pictures of the 80,000 newspaper forms to use in sales material. The station debuted at #1 with over a 20 share. And when we tabulated a small random batch of the 80,000 it turns out that the results closely paralleled the "real test."
PirateJohnny said:michael hagerty said:...We split Classic Rock off from Oldies when it was believed that Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple, which co-existed with the Temptations and the Beach Boys originally on Top 40, couldn't co-exist with them on an Oldies station.
Says who? We listened to them on the same station back then. I would still like to hear them all on the same station today. But today I have to listen to two stations to hear these artists that I still like. I'm sure those stations don't like me dividing my time between the two (but I AM 55 now).
On the subject of test groups:
Does familiarity really lead to "like"? When I was younger, 18-35, I liked Buddy Holly and would listen to Buddy Holly records on the radio. I even bought some. He died about the time I was born.
On original Chart reliability:
How reliable were the charts, really? I, for one, never did anything that would contribute to a song's chart ranking. I did not buy current records or call in requests to the local radio station. The "charts" never knew or reflected my likes and dis-likes. And I'm sure I'm not alone in this behavior. I graduated high school in 1975. Looking at Joel Whitburn's info for #1 singles of that year, many songs I liked are not on that list. Maybe I should have bought them and requested them.
Biondi4Mayor said:Loyalty isn't a bad trait in listeners. In fact if a listener went to the website, or called up a request show, it is because they were REALLY LISTENING to the content of the station---not just the music. Therefore, these listeners should have their input valued greater than it is (labeled as fanatics). If you can get a listener to know a station phone number or website, then they are potentially susceptive to remembering information in commercials as well; they'll listen to the advertisers of "their" station as well. The fact you illustrated that typically classic hits listeners listened to an average of 6-8 (i believe that was the number, but correct me if that wasn't it --- this thread got SO long!) different stations scares me even more. These "wishy-washy" listeners then shouldn't be giving the capability of testing songs on a station they could potentially not be listening to 5 out of 6 (or whatever).
michael hagerty said:Biondi4Mayor said:Loyalty isn't a bad trait in listeners. In fact if a listener went to the website, or called up a request show, it is because they were REALLY LISTENING to the content of the station---not just the music. Therefore, these listeners should have their input valued greater than it is (labeled as fanatics). If you can get a listener to know a station phone number or website, then they are potentially susceptive to remembering information in commercials as well; they'll listen to the advertisers of "their" station as well. The fact you illustrated that typically classic hits listeners listened to an average of 6-8 (i believe that was the number, but correct me if that wasn't it --- this thread got SO long!) different stations scares me even more. These "wishy-washy" listeners then shouldn't be giving the capability of testing songs on a station they could potentially not be listening to 5 out of 6 (or whatever).
Here's the flaw in that logic: You've just described the behavior of a minority of listeners. The majority share their listening with other stations.
To give extra weight to people who behave in a manner different from that of the majority will result in choices being made that aren't in line with what the majority is telling us they expect from the radio station.
As for the advertising argument: The ad agencies understand listener behavior. The entire reason demographics are important is that an advertiser, wanting to reach a certain type of listener, will buy the 5, 7, maybe 10 top performing stations in that demographic. That ad will be waiting for that listener on their other favorite stations, as well.
The days of KXXX trying to steal advertisers, one by one, from KZZZ, have been gone for about 30 years. The goal now is to be "in on the buy"...to be one of the stations the account buys time on. And if your demographic performance is what it ought to be, you'll be in on most of the buys, which will fill your commercial log and your bank account.
Biondi4Mayor said:michael hagerty said:Biondi4Mayor said:Loyalty isn't a bad trait in listeners. In fact if a listener went to the website, or called up a request show, it is because they were REALLY LISTENING to the content of the station---not just the music. Therefore, these listeners should have their input valued greater than it is (labeled as fanatics). If you can get a listener to know a station phone number or website, then they are potentially susceptive to remembering information in commercials as well; they'll listen to the advertisers of "their" station as well. The fact you illustrated that typically classic hits listeners listened to an average of 6-8 (i believe that was the number, but correct me if that wasn't it --- this thread got SO long!) different stations scares me even more. These "wishy-washy" listeners then shouldn't be giving the capability of testing songs on a station they could potentially not be listening to 5 out of 6 (or whatever).
Here's the flaw in that logic: You've just described the behavior of a minority of listeners. The majority share their listening with other stations.
To give extra weight to people who behave in a manner different from that of the majority will result in choices being made that aren't in line with what the majority is telling us they expect from the radio station.
As for the advertising argument: The ad agencies understand listener behavior. The entire reason demographics are important is that an advertiser, wanting to reach a certain type of listener, will buy the 5, 7, maybe 10 top performing stations in that demographic. That ad will be waiting for that listener on their other favorite stations, as well.
The days of KXXX trying to steal advertisers, one by one, from KZZZ, have been gone for about 30 years. The goal now is to be "in on the buy"...to be one of the stations the account buys time on. And if your demographic performance is what it ought to be, you'll be in on most of the buys, which will fill your commercial log and your bank account.
Well if stations weren't so narrow and didn't suck so much, there would be little reason for a listener to go elsewhere - which is the main arguement of the thread - tuneout factor, and this is one of the reasons I tune-out.
Minority? Well ratings are pretty much established using a minority of PPM listeners. Didn't David say that LA's #1 station could be defined by only 15 meters...to believe people lose their job over ratings is sickening.
I have often wondered since this topic started if Oldies could find a happy home on public radio in the same way Jazz and classical do. Ratings don't govern every move, it could be on an FM in a big city (not small AM's like David suggested earlier), jocks are allowed to connect with their listeners, and teach their audience something. PBS does numerous Ed Sullivan specials, Motown Box sets etc. I would love to see both Oldies and Smooth Jazz (another format that got kicked to the curb) appreciated with class and distinction --- two things that the corporates can't do!