I was going through the Recently Played thing on Virgin Radio trying to find a song title yesterday and I noticed that they played Gangnam Style literally every hour. Sometimes more.
I was going through the Recently Played thing on Virgin Radio trying to find a song title yesterday and I noticed that they played Gangnam Style literally every hour. Sometimes more.
Crazy in Canada for a foreign language song
Virgin 98.5 is really bad for that. I listened to it for two hours at work on Thursday and they played that Fun song that sounds like Cecilia three times. I only heard Gagnam Style once, but they played the new Pink song twice and three different Carly Rae Jepsen songs.
Yeah agreed.
Back in the day when I delivered pizza I'd hear a core group of songs 4 or 5 times in a 4 hour shift.
I think a lot of it is the Canadian content laws combined with the lack radio friendly, good Canadian musicians.
I've argued for years that it's not the content laws but radio stations purposely having limited catalogues.
If the content laws weren't there I'd be the same US based artists overplayed. Nothing would change but Carley Rae Jepson songs would now me Jennifer Lopez songs (or someone to that effect).
We're starting to see stations market no repeat songs during the work day (save an all request lunch hour). That's a start, it broadens the playlist and would make it easier for a variety of artists to make it on the airwaves.
The issue is people listen to the radio when driving in their cars, so while they might play a hit song every hour, commuters hear it once. It guarantees they get the hits.
__________________
"Calgary Flames is the best team in all the land" - My Brainwashed Son
I've argued for years that it's not the content laws but radio stations purposely having limited catalogues.
If the content laws weren't there I'd be the same US based artists overplayed. Nothing would change but Carley Rae Jepson songs would now me Jennifer Lopez songs (or someone to that effect).
We're starting to see stations market no repeat songs during the work day (save an all request lunch hour). That's a start, it broadens the playlist and would make it easier for a variety of artists to make it on the airwaves.
The issue is people listen to the radio when driving in their cars, so while they might play a hit song every hour, commuters hear it once. It guarantees they get the hits.
This is true, especially for the pop or top 40 stations.