oldies76 said:
DavidEduardo said:
Again, con brio: Repetition complaints from listeners of the sort "they repeat the same songs over and over" really mean "they play songs I don't like sometimes".
I do not believe that. Most people are sick of hearing frequently repeated tested songs, everyday, every week, every month.
Hearing "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" 7 times a year will not cause complaints on repetition. I don't buy it at all.
Well, the difference is that I have done well over 1,000 auditorium music tests (AMT's) , hundreds of one-on one projects, and supervised hundreds of thousands of callout music test interviews.
In the perceptual settings (one on ones) it is common to question and dig on the repetition / variety issues. Complaints on variety are always discovered to be complaints about the playing of songs the respondent does not like. Follow up questions reveal that "variety" means "playing songs I like a lot each time I tune in" and has nothing to do with "lots and lots of songs."
In AMT's, questions like "which of these stations repeats the songs it plays too often?" along with a list of stations that play for the same demo or target as the station doing the research. Generally, the station with the deepest playlist gets credit for repetition.
Another common question is "which station has the greatest variety in the music it plays?" Listeners generally pick the station with the tightest, best researched playlist, not the one with many more songs.
I had a case in the Hemisphere's second largest market where I was with a Classic Rock station that played 450 songs. A competitor came on playing about 1800 songs or more. In a Classic Rock music test (done in home one person at a time) the 450 song station won on variety, and the 1800 song station won overwhelmingly for "plays too many songs I don't like" and "plays the same songs over and over." (The 1800 song list was made up entirely of songs that had charted. the 450 song station played only songs that still tested)
"Most People" are not tired of listening to stations that play a nicely sized list of well researched songs that does not include ones that are unpleasant to them. Most people, as has been proven over and over in Arbitron, are tired of stations that play the wrong songs or too many songs. And that is as true in NY, LA and Chicago as it is in Mobile and Odessa and Albuquerque as it is in Plymouth and Lake City and Yuma.