I agree with rtetro's opinion. It is GREAT that WPAZ is back on in the hands of a local community group and not doing "cookie cutter" radio or going all religion or all brokered.
But right now it kind of sounds like a college radio station. If it is going to really cultivate a consistant local following, it must develop at least a general direction, if not a strict, tight format.
For example, we have two locally-owned stations in our town, Carlisle, PA. AM 960 does an oldies-soft hits kind of thing and we (WIOO) do Classic Country. Both stations run a lot of features and specialty programming but both have a clear musical identity for the majority of the time. 960 has some specialty shows on the weekends like a Sinatra show and a polka show, plus some weekend religious programming. We carry a daily local news Noon Report and Swap Shop, a late night political show and weekend sports like NASCAR and NFL football. Both stations' "feature" type stuff generates added revenue and is promoted to an audience that tunes in for the basic format a majority of the time. That is what WPAZ needs.
A soft classic hits kind an approach might be just the ticket. Nobody in the Philly area is really doing it, it works on AM with the older audience that is liable to listen to AM anyway, and its a format that can play in the workplace without offending anyone. It can be the "glue" that holds the whole thing together. I would definitely can the hard rock!
I also agree that audio processing is extremely important, especially on AM! A well-processed AM signal can sound very good but a poorly processed one can sound awful. ON FM, about any reasonable limiter will give you "passable" quality but on AM it is really critical! With all the new digital boxes on the market, I'm sure someone has a good used Optimod they'll let go cheap. Just get someone who knows what they are doing to set it up.
And Good Luck! I wish WPAZ years of success...
But right now it kind of sounds like a college radio station. If it is going to really cultivate a consistant local following, it must develop at least a general direction, if not a strict, tight format.
For example, we have two locally-owned stations in our town, Carlisle, PA. AM 960 does an oldies-soft hits kind of thing and we (WIOO) do Classic Country. Both stations run a lot of features and specialty programming but both have a clear musical identity for the majority of the time. 960 has some specialty shows on the weekends like a Sinatra show and a polka show, plus some weekend religious programming. We carry a daily local news Noon Report and Swap Shop, a late night political show and weekend sports like NASCAR and NFL football. Both stations' "feature" type stuff generates added revenue and is promoted to an audience that tunes in for the basic format a majority of the time. That is what WPAZ needs.
A soft classic hits kind an approach might be just the ticket. Nobody in the Philly area is really doing it, it works on AM with the older audience that is liable to listen to AM anyway, and its a format that can play in the workplace without offending anyone. It can be the "glue" that holds the whole thing together. I would definitely can the hard rock!
I also agree that audio processing is extremely important, especially on AM! A well-processed AM signal can sound very good but a poorly processed one can sound awful. ON FM, about any reasonable limiter will give you "passable" quality but on AM it is really critical! With all the new digital boxes on the market, I'm sure someone has a good used Optimod they'll let go cheap. Just get someone who knows what they are doing to set it up.
And Good Luck! I wish WPAZ years of success...