Hey gang, fear not...oldies is not dead as a format, nor as a music preference. I've been riding a good wave of 6 years now doing this 'the old fashioned way' - plenty of personality and a great mix of the music - at WINY Radio / Putnam CT on Sunday mornings. Yes, this is Bill Alley.
Following the stuff from the late 40s to the mid 70s this music is always in demand, but the truth remains a 'lock' on the industry - both music and stations - make the mistake that because something is old, it should be relegated to the dustbin. Hear the newer artists - how many (countless!) tributes are done to the likes of Buddy Holly, The Drifters, The Beatles, The Carpenters! (I can't believe one of the greatest duos of all time gets practically no airplay anymore yet COUNTLESS musicians give credit to Karen and Richard!) If the 'newbies' behind the mic pay tribute to these legends, you can bet their fans do too. I know this personally; live events has them swaying and dancing from ages 2 to 102. This music is so durable it can't be killed, and the 'true to heart' radio stations, internet and PBS are living proof (they don't produce collections of entertainment if they don't believe there's money in it - BIG money.) Lest we forget, Bowzer's get-togethers pack venues and sell out (such as the 10,000-seat Mohegan Sun casino arena in Uncasville, CT). That's not insignificant. That's PROOF.
There are top radio stations not far from here doing very well with it; not just the legendary WLNG to which we all owe so much as one of - if not THE - leading oldies and local information station in the USA. Greater Media shocked me in their doing a very fine job with WMTR-AM Morristown NJ. That station is tight, with a far deeper playlist than most stations, and they're getting plenty of attention - not to mention a 65-year birthday celebration. Great station with great stuff, and they keep things local, local, local...which seems to have widened their reach to NYC (Brooklyn, Staten Island mentioned quite a bit). These are just two of many stations I keep up with that satisfy my oldies cravings.
So not all of corporate radio has the death knell for oldies, and the best opportunity for a thriving AM stand-alone (I'm quoting from a recent article in Inside Radio) at this time are two formats: OLDIES and CLASSICAL. Two very enduring, very relevant, and very popular genres - no matter what others think or say. Talk to listeners, more loyal and more affluent than those who support other categories.
One more thing: the Classic Rock handle is actually doing a disservice to oldies as these formats tend to restrict themselves to the top Billboard-charted stuff everyone has heard incessantly. Internet radio has exploded thanks to better music, better artists (especially those locked out of American markets) and expanded libraries. I love Australia / New Zealand radio for that. Music is never tossed; it is archived. They can (and do) come up with songs American stations have relegated to the dust bin, but listeners (and advertisers, movie producers, etc.etc.) remember fondly, reviving stuff again and again. Where is American radio on this wave? Largely, if not overwhelmingly, absent. Populism caters to trends. Oldies revolutionized radio around the world thanks to the artists and the amazing talent behind every local microphone, and Radio has never recaptured that heyday. That's where the biggest shame of all is: so many mics, silenced, the talent and local flavor replaced by far-off, irrelevant voice tracks with most artists that make more tabloid tantalizing than credible, listenable, memorable tunes.