This has been on my mind for years now:

Why do most radio stations insist on playing the same selection of songs over and over?

I imagine it must be a copyrights thing? Pay for usage of this particular catalogue for a year?

Don’t those DJs get absolutely sick of it after a while?

  • Digit@lemmy.wtf
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    15 days ago

    Time to switch to a radio station that’s not bought by some big money agenda?

    I recently got back into somafm again, after many many years hiatus.

  • notsosure@sh.itjust.works
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    16 days ago

    In the 80s, I used to be a DJ at a radio station, and had the midnight to 6 a.m. shift. In the beginning, everything was OK, we had a catalogue of about a thousands songs that I could choose and pick from. Commercially the station wasn’t successful so very soon to catalogue was reduced to 500 songs, then 250, and then to 100 songs, and then to a dozen songs. It was horrible, I had to come up with ideas how am I getting a story up about this stupid handful of songs. I started reading f****g poetry out loud, my own poetry because we couldn’t buy any other stuff. I’m not a poet ! My salary also dropped. In the end, I had TWO songs that I could choose from: BTO’s You ain’t seen nothing yet and a shitty B side by Shakin’ Stevens. SIX HOURS to play just two songs, if it had been at least three songs, I could’ve mixed them, but you cannot mix two songs! Bloody hell.

    • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      That makes no sense? Why not play small bands that would be happy to have their music on the air for free?

    • Mantzy81@aussie.zone
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      16 days ago

      Does the word “B-b-b-baby” give you PTSD flashbacks?

      I didn’t have it that bad but I had to spend a whole night as a temp factory worker throwing hay into a machine to shred it into pet bedding and they had Culture Club - Karma Chameleon on repeat for 10hrs.

      Liked the song before that night. I refused to work there again after that night.

      • BeUnique@lemmy.zip
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        16 days ago

        I had a boss in an office that decided to have an Alice in Wonderland themed pot luck. She turned on the movie on repeat. Then she just never turned off the movie. It was on a screen on low volume right in front of my desk for weeks. She had an office, I didn’t. Eventually I sent her an email saying it was phycological torture after like week 3 to have the same movie playing on repeat for 8 hours Monday thru Friday.

        I also worked at a video store once that we had to play the promotional DVD on repeat. It was about 2 hours long of footage over and over and we couldn’t turn it down.

        • kersploosh@sh.itjust.works
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          15 days ago

          My sister worked at Abercrombie & Fitch back in their late-90s/early-00s peak. Every month or two, corporate would send a CD to be played in store during open hours. A 60-minute (or less) loop of company-sactioned pop music, all shift, every shift. I wasn’t the one working there and I still felt miserable on her behalf.

    • pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      Oi mate, you got a loicense for that track?

      If the station is failing and the track selection was that dire (2 fucking songs??) I’d be contacting small labels / indie labels asking for written permission to play their music and if they can send you a CD or record or whatever. Guarantee you’d get several bites from small artists that want their music heard. Hindsight 20-20 and all though.

  • DoucheBagMcSwag@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    16 days ago

    Because record label media companies own 98% of radio stations via iHeartRadio, Clear Media and Audacy.

    They want them to brainwash the media with their newest releases from their artists to convince them that it’s good music by playing it non stop adnauseam

  • Shindo66@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    Radio is a dying market that’s going away like so many other things. They don’t know what to play anymore. My car picks my phones Bluetooth up when I turn my car on and I can play anything I want. Radio stations dont know what to do because what’s classic rock anymore? They’ll play like a nickleback song, then back in black by AC DC and then… here’s pink floyd simply because they dont know what to play. Talk Radio with a million commercials can’t compete with podcasts. No one cares about top 50 stations anymore. What’s left? And who even cares? Car dealerships lose because now they can’t yell at you about deals that don’t really exsist.

  • KC_Royalz@lemmy.world
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    14 days ago

    My wife and I went for a drive the other day and whatever station I was on was playing songs I loved from the 90s. And then I checked the station. Classic rock.

    Then today the faint came on my Spotify and even though I listen to them quite a bit it suddenly hit me that I discovered them during the height of limewire, about 6 years after I graduated highschool so I still consider them new. Looked up when their song came out. 25 years ago. Fuck!!!

  • FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website
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    16 days ago

    Radio playlists are a science like marketing. Half the budget is wasted, you’re just never sure which half.

    Stations have a target audience. They will have focused grouped this. They know their favorite music, how long on average they listen, and how much they will expect to hear certain artists. The DJs are mere announcers, they have little to no choice in what they play, and they are grateful to have a job. So like anybody working in retail during Christmas, they can tune out the music in their heads.

    • ascend@lemmy.radio
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      16 days ago

      Yeah it sucks, when I started commuting longer I started to out on the radio as I got kind if bored of my music, at first it was awesome, then like a moth th passed and I couldn’t stand it anymore, listening to ads just to hear a repeated song again.

      Its like they put the same block of songs at the same time if day so when you are in traffic each day you just hear the same shuffled playlist

  • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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    16 days ago

    GeorgeFM doesn’t. It plays great music, they have segments during the weekend with a bunch of stuff you’ve never heard. It’s great. You can get it on the Rova app I think

  • NutWrench@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    Radio stations used to have actual, human DJs. They were smart, funny and they knew what people really wanted. After the ClearChannel takeover, almost all of those stations are automated. The music playlists are decided by corporations and have no connection to the real world.

    • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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      16 days ago

      Jack FM was a joy to listen to - at least in the early days - because they got rid of DJs. They wanted the effect of listening to mp3s on shuffle. I have never enjoyed DJs and I think it’s pretty common. Just play music and back announce the tracks.

      • b34k@lemmy.world
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        15 days ago

        Good DJs can play a set and back announce the tracks. Jim Ladd on KLOS comes to mind as a DJ I would specifically tune into back in the early 00’s. This was because of the awesome sets he’d produce, intermixing top hits with b-sides and deep cuts, truly expanding my knowledge and love of classic rock.

    • Ildsaye [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      16 days ago

      And the Clearchannel takeover was set loose by the Telecoms Act of 1996. Prior to that, it was illegal in the US to own more than 7 units of media - any combo of radio or TV stations, magazines, newpapers, etc. There was too much media for the billionaires to own it all under the old regulations.

    • kersploosh@sh.itjust.works
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      15 days ago

      Shout out to KEXP 90.3 FM Seattle / KEXC 92.7 FM Alameda/San Francisco. All real live DJs all the time, picking amazing music across genres.

      • LazyPsychonaut@lemmy.zip
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        11 days ago

        I’ve never listened to KEXP on the air but their YouTube channel is amazing. It’s how I’ve found a good chunk of real obscure music that I’m in to. Can’t recommend them highly enough, might tune in on a digital radio service & give them a go!

    • Windex007@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      There was a radio station who’s whole thing was that they would never play nickleback. Then one day they accidentally played nickleback. The Playlists were coming from some head office 5000 miles away, and they missed pulling a nickleback track once it got to the local station.

  • dropdrip@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    I don’t get it either, OP. If the DJs don’t go mad how do the listeners retain sanity? It’s madness. (No, really. You have trades people who listen to the same station day in day out and they play the exact same songs, over and over, every day. Those listeners are demented. At that point you’re just listening for the ads…) Tune into the local community stations. All the commercial stations are just repeat rubbish. You’ll find variety and local music on the community stations. They likely need your financial support too. It’s sad seeing these stations shutter one by one…

  • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    16 days ago

    The new underground radio is keying your CB microphone at the speaker from your 8-track player. /s

  • Pissed@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    Don’t big record companies just have the 10 hits they manufactured in a laboratory which they test in key markets and then push out to the rest of the world. I remember when I went to Southern California I was hearing a bunch of songs I’d never heard before. A few months later those songs were being played on corporate radio in the EU.