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Biondi4Mayor
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Biondi4Mayor said:Thanks Oldies for the link, I love hearing every #1 in order!!!
Greatest Hits related formats' biggest problem is the "age" thing. Then in this regard, testing is like a self-fulfilling prophecy. The primary audience, as David pointed out, will skew "young" enough to avoid the "dreaded" 55+. What it doesn't account for are even younger listeners that would perhaps enjoy and recognize the same music. Back to the self-fulfilling prophecy part, the fact that testing could range from a few hundred to 1200 (I think David mentioned this number a while back perhaps I'm mistaken) is the problem. The playlists are no bigger than this, so essentially the only thing getting testing is what is already being played. Hence my comment on the Honey Cone song earlier, it's stuck on the "black list'' of oldies since it would appear that stations don't have the room to sufficiently test a wider multitude of hits.
About 3 years ago, I joined one of those online fan clubs for our local "oldies" station. I did it because each week there would be a song test of 30 songs that you could rate. For over the 2 years I did that, there was NEVER one song that was off their standard playlist. So, no variety or weeding out of overdone songs was apparent. Knowing this, I made sure to skew my own results. So since there was too much Elton John in my opinion, I would tell it that I "hated" the song, and wanted to "hear it less". But when a song by The Supremes (a group with a multitude of ignored hits in my opinion) would come up - usually only "Baby Love" - I would tell it that I "loved" it and wanted it more "often" - which wasn't true. I wanted variety from both acts, and saw that wasn't going to happen. My point is two-fold:
1. There is little evidence to suggest that tests are testing other similar songs and hits other than a station's current playlist. Therefore, change and addaptation is impossible and numerous songs go unplayed.
and-
2. There is no good placebo that would make testing songs are good, and conclusive scientific experiment. The people know why they are there. It is known that people take more extreme stances in groups - polarization. Therefore, songs will appear to be far more liked or unliked than they likely are. In my case, it did not take long for me to notice that the tests were far from "original", so it was the lesser of two evils - I'll take "Baby Love" for spin number 1,000 over "Crocodile Rock" 's spin number 2,000. But songs like "Love Is Here And Now You're Gone" or "Island Girl" went unplayed and untested.
^^^ Had an editing issue but would like to add---
In regards to the younger crowd I alluded to, today I was in a college bookstore that usually plays a AAA format, only to hear a classic hits station. My point is that perhaps greatest hits formats should then include younger audience members in the testing to guage familiarity. Since the testing group is hand picked, you'll get out what you put in.