[quote name=\'The Ol' Guy\' post=\'152361\' date=\'May 15 2007, 08:05 PM\']
I don't disagree at all. We sent out tons of postcards for an audience poll (over 5 years ago), and I'll bet 50% have passed on. It's a currently unsustainable format as it is currently going. And some are saying the traditional "Oldies" stations are next as their listeners ages rise.[/quote]
True, "Oldies" stations (which I define as 50's & 60's music) are rapidly being replaced by either other formats (Jack replaced CBS-FM in NYC) or the "(Fun) music of the 60's and 70's" format -- they try to avoid the 'oldies' moniker nowadays.
However, many people believe that the demise of 60's music will level off soon, as a good chunk of the music strongholds from Beatlemania onward is still popular with all generations. You'll see the weaker songs drop off, but I don't foresee the Fab Four, The Stones, or the Motown heavy-hitters being retired and ignored in 10 years.
But then again, corporate radio and their shareholders have already killed off the weaker songs by defining a 30-year range of Rock & Roll music to 300 or 400 songs tops.
In 1989, a bunch of us on a college radio show said the following:
"Just think of it...In a few decades from now, senior citizens in nursing homes will be jamming in their wheelchairs to Jimi Hendrix and the Dead Kennedys!"
/And by 2045, nursing homes will be filling up with gray haired rappers!/
//70 year old's will roam the halls singing "My Humps"//