Another great, but unexplored possibility for those who love the oldies are non-commercial stations, even in some cases, LP-FM's.
A non-comm has no one to answer to, in many cases, but those who support it...the business owners who underwrite and the listeners who send their money in as members.
Did you ever wonder why PBS plays all those oldies shows that they do? Hmmm? Maybe there's a connection there.
I'm programming an LP-FM station in a small resort town that plays music from 1955-1985. Saturday morning is local with news programs, a swap shop and even a bluegrass show. Sunday morning we start the day with 2 hours of pre-rock standards from 1950 to 1965, then do 2 hours of the Beatles.
The rest of the week is normal programming (with 3 syndicated oldies shows rounding out the weekends). Yes, it's run by computer most of the time, but updated daily. And soon, we will be adding voice tracked DJ shifts.
We started with 12 underwriters and now average around 90. We sound as good as a commercial station, but there's no commercials, just underwriting. But we have been favorably compared to stations in bigger markets 70 to 100 miles away.
You can argue all you like, but it's not corporate radio that's "killing" the format. It's demographics. But, if you take away the format from commercial radio and put it on a frequency that is just looking for listeners and to be a community voice, the format, even in our new hybrid formula, works quite well.
BUT...I program the station to "best practices". We don't try to have "the biggest oldies library in America". We play the hits. But, we operate with a playlist around 550 titles, with a universe of around 1,500.