I haven't listened to WRAT much in the last few months due to the improvement in G Rock's programming. I also started listening a lot less after they played Hinder's "Lips Of An Angel" more times than any decent person should ever be subjected to. While I'm definitely happy to see that they have maintained pretty much the same entire airstaff for their entire run thus far, it should be noted that WRAT's programming quality has headed downhill as of late.
You could possible chalk it up to Greater Media placing their chicken rock template on the station ever since they acquired it - the station did offer a good deal of surprises under the previous ownership. Another issue is the fact that the playlist has been stuck in the rut of playing so many of the same acts in fairly heavy rotation ever since they signed on - Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, Rush, the token hair rockers, etc. I mean, nothing against these acts, but one can only hear the same songs over and over again before they tune out.
I would say the main problem is in the category of new music. A very limited selection of Currents (about 20, and that's being generous) combined with a lot of acts that hardly qualify as rock. The other night I actually heard them playing the new Santana song. Yes, the same Santana that collaborates with whatever lame pop tarts are real popular right now. Amazing guitarist, but his best work is at least 30 years behind him. ... In addition, they're still playing Daughtry's "It's Not Over" (a song that's a year old) 14 times a week. Yeah, that's right, Daughtry - the guy that was on American Idol, probably hoping to become the next Justin Timberlake before Clive Davis decided to mold him into the next Nickelback instead. Wuss rock at its worst, and it receives more spins on the Lites and Magics of the world than any rock stations anyway. Not to mention that it's an exact clone of Fuel's "Hemorrhage (In My Hands)" with new lyrics. I thought Rock music was supposed to be dangerous - this guy actually manages to make Michael Bolton look tough. ... They're still playing Nickelback and Hinder (also toothless pop rock acts) incessantly. ... Linkin Park's "What I've Done" still gets 14 spins a week (Daughtry, Hinder, Nickelback, Linkin Park - who exactly is WRAT targeting anyway? For a Rock station, they are way too female friendly.). ... There's other songs that have been in the rotation for 9 months that still receive heavy spins (Finger Eleven, Breaking Benjamin, Papa Roach's "Forever", etc.) ... They're finally playing Atreyu for the first time now that they've put out a song with no screaming that sounds like a cross between Def Leppard and Papa Roach. ... What I find just as disappointing is what they're not playing. They won't touch anything on the heavier side of rock (Killswitch Engage and Five Finger Death Punch are both big, why not play them? Oh yeah - wouldn't want to scare away the Daughtry and Nickelback fans. Never mind the fact that nearly every other station in Monmouth/Ocean already plays them.). They aren't playing Hurt, a band with two members from New Jersey who aren't receiving spins anywhere else. No Drowning Pool, Mudvayne, Sevendust... WRAT has just turned into a very soft Rock station. I would even say that it's softer than WMMR, who have been leaning a little heavier in order to stay on top of WYSP.
I'm not trying to be negative in any way - this is all just constructive criticism. I just think the station is playing it too safe. WRAT markets itself as edgy with its station IDs, but the majority of the music they play is the antithesis of edgy. There's nothing wrong with playing a good amount of familiar material, but after a while the same old thing becomes stale and causes people to tune out, and I think that's why WRAT always fluctuates in the ratings as much as it does. And would anyone honestly be upset if they played less of the soccer mom fluff in favor of some edgier acts that no one else is playing? This is what would help return WRAT to their former glory (routinely receiving 4 shares even with its modest signal). Let's face it, this market needs a Rock station, and rather than trying to compete with all these Adult Contemporary stations by playing so many crossover titles, WRAT should just focus on being a good Rock station - that includes living up to their claim of "playing it all" and not being afraid of spinning some heavier titles.
You could possible chalk it up to Greater Media placing their chicken rock template on the station ever since they acquired it - the station did offer a good deal of surprises under the previous ownership. Another issue is the fact that the playlist has been stuck in the rut of playing so many of the same acts in fairly heavy rotation ever since they signed on - Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, Rush, the token hair rockers, etc. I mean, nothing against these acts, but one can only hear the same songs over and over again before they tune out.
I would say the main problem is in the category of new music. A very limited selection of Currents (about 20, and that's being generous) combined with a lot of acts that hardly qualify as rock. The other night I actually heard them playing the new Santana song. Yes, the same Santana that collaborates with whatever lame pop tarts are real popular right now. Amazing guitarist, but his best work is at least 30 years behind him. ... In addition, they're still playing Daughtry's "It's Not Over" (a song that's a year old) 14 times a week. Yeah, that's right, Daughtry - the guy that was on American Idol, probably hoping to become the next Justin Timberlake before Clive Davis decided to mold him into the next Nickelback instead. Wuss rock at its worst, and it receives more spins on the Lites and Magics of the world than any rock stations anyway. Not to mention that it's an exact clone of Fuel's "Hemorrhage (In My Hands)" with new lyrics. I thought Rock music was supposed to be dangerous - this guy actually manages to make Michael Bolton look tough. ... They're still playing Nickelback and Hinder (also toothless pop rock acts) incessantly. ... Linkin Park's "What I've Done" still gets 14 spins a week (Daughtry, Hinder, Nickelback, Linkin Park - who exactly is WRAT targeting anyway? For a Rock station, they are way too female friendly.). ... There's other songs that have been in the rotation for 9 months that still receive heavy spins (Finger Eleven, Breaking Benjamin, Papa Roach's "Forever", etc.) ... They're finally playing Atreyu for the first time now that they've put out a song with no screaming that sounds like a cross between Def Leppard and Papa Roach. ... What I find just as disappointing is what they're not playing. They won't touch anything on the heavier side of rock (Killswitch Engage and Five Finger Death Punch are both big, why not play them? Oh yeah - wouldn't want to scare away the Daughtry and Nickelback fans. Never mind the fact that nearly every other station in Monmouth/Ocean already plays them.). They aren't playing Hurt, a band with two members from New Jersey who aren't receiving spins anywhere else. No Drowning Pool, Mudvayne, Sevendust... WRAT has just turned into a very soft Rock station. I would even say that it's softer than WMMR, who have been leaning a little heavier in order to stay on top of WYSP.
I'm not trying to be negative in any way - this is all just constructive criticism. I just think the station is playing it too safe. WRAT markets itself as edgy with its station IDs, but the majority of the music they play is the antithesis of edgy. There's nothing wrong with playing a good amount of familiar material, but after a while the same old thing becomes stale and causes people to tune out, and I think that's why WRAT always fluctuates in the ratings as much as it does. And would anyone honestly be upset if they played less of the soccer mom fluff in favor of some edgier acts that no one else is playing? This is what would help return WRAT to their former glory (routinely receiving 4 shares even with its modest signal). Let's face it, this market needs a Rock station, and rather than trying to compete with all these Adult Contemporary stations by playing so many crossover titles, WRAT should just focus on being a good Rock station - that includes living up to their claim of "playing it all" and not being afraid of spinning some heavier titles.