KROQ top 50 1980

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Ha, did the Surf Punks ever make a chart anywhere else?

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 19:51 (nine years ago) link

Jesus, like a big chunk of these are my overall favorites by an artist (The Wait, Los Angeles). This is hard!
Oh wait, Train In Vain's on this list? Nevermind.

campreverb, Monday, 30 June 2014 19:59 (nine years ago) link

Only a Lad, which got top 50 airplay when I was listening to KROQ 15 years later...

skip, Monday, 30 June 2014 20:49 (nine years ago) link

Wow this is tough, could go with any of these:

De Do Do Do De Da Da Da
Once in a Lifetime
Train in Vain
Holiday in Cambodia
Los Angeles
Ashes to Ashes
Games Without Frontiers
Private Idaho
Clampdown
Crosseyed and Painless
Here Comes My Girl

I'll prob wind up voting for Clampdown, but right now I'm leaning towards Private Idaho.

voodoo chili, Monday, 30 June 2014 21:08 (nine years ago) link

Was a programmer at this station in Oingo Boingo? I started skimming their yearly charts from the link above...I don't think I know a single Oingo Boingo song (I remember the band), but they place songs on every chart through the '80s except 1983--sometimes multiple songs.

clemenza, Monday, 30 June 2014 21:17 (nine years ago) link

haha i think there may have been a little bit of a relationship but i think they were just a big local band. i've told this before but in the lab the kroq 80s station (which is pretty great if you love new wave) is one of the standbys and soon after we started listening to it an oingo boingo song popped up and i mentioned how everyone i knew who grew up in la really really hated oingo boingo and it seemed weird to me, like what a fairly innocuous trivial band. after a few months of listening we understood. we understood all too well.

balls, Monday, 30 June 2014 21:47 (nine years ago) link

Ha, I was going to ask about Oingo Boingo too but I figured they might have had a better shot of making other charts than the Surf Punks. (I don't think I know one of their songs either. Danny Elfman has done some decent stuff, though.)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 30 June 2014 22:06 (nine years ago) link

the only people I know who like Oingo Boingo are from San Diego/Los Angeles. they make my skin crawl, personally.

Οὖτις, Monday, 30 June 2014 22:23 (nine years ago) link

yeah i'm looking at the year end list for 91x in san diego for 83, another early mod rock station first year of new format and yup sitting there at #20 - oingo fucking boingo.

balls, Monday, 30 June 2014 23:22 (nine years ago) link

Ashes To Ashes.

the joke should be over once the kid is eaten. (chap), Monday, 30 June 2014 23:26 (nine years ago) link

I've got the double IRS compilation from the early-'80s, so I have heard Oingo Boingo. Skip picked them a few posts above, and he's got good taste in power pop, so I'll give that song a listen. Forgot about Danny Elfman's involvement.

clemenza, Monday, 30 June 2014 23:32 (nine years ago) link

Very cool poll idea. Weird that You Shook Me wasn't the selection from Back In Black.

Once In A Lifetime, by a considerable margin.

kornrulez6969, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 01:28 (nine years ago) link

i grew up on KROQ, though 1980 was a bit young for me. i came on board around 1985 or so. it's funny to me that they played stuff like Tom Petty, The Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd and AC/DC. the KROQ station i grew up on would never touch that sort of stuff. will say more later about KROQ when i have some time.

voting "Crosseyed and Painless."

Bee OK, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 02:06 (nine years ago) link

lol bob seger

a much better poll would be all the rodney on the roq comps.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78ls3a-7mAQ

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Tuesday, 1 July 2014 03:14 (nine years ago) link

with due respect to the songs and artists here, many of which i love, this lily-white playlist is every bit as vile as the much-loathed AOR format that was being birthed around the same time. both formats bent over backwards in their commitment to the notion that radio should be as racially segregated as possible.

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 03:20 (nine years ago) link

Other than Prince and Rick James, was there anything out there in 1980 that would have fit from a musical perspective?

Maybe the whiteness of the musicians is related to the whiteness of the audience the station was reflecting and creating. Maybe the answer to my initial question would be obvious to me if KROQ and the rest of the industry had done a better job.

voted Van Halen.

Zachary Taylor, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 04:36 (nine years ago) link

In an attempt to answer my own questions, I have turned to Rate Your Music and their lists. I see that the Specials, English Beat, maybe Bob Marley, maybe some early rap, Zapp, S.O.S. Band, could have fit into that format. It's kind of a brittle new-wave influenced rock format.

A couple of years later there were more funk singles that would fit in there. I didn't notice any Latino acts and I'm not sure if Joe King Carrasco would have singles yet.

Zachary Taylor, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 04:51 (nine years ago) link

(xp) on a strictly musical level, lots would have fit. if you're playing disco/funk records by queen and the rolling stones, why can't you mix in disco/funk records by black people? if you're programming talking heads "once in a lifetime" and david bowie "fashion," why can't you program zapp or grace jones? or the really good stevie wonder album that came out that year? or the amazing prince album that came out that year? (hell, only one year later prince would be opening for the rolling songs, who have three songs up there.)

obviously, segregation in radio formats is a complicated issue that goes beyond "strictly music" into marketing, image-making, audience perceptions, advertising dollars and all sorts of other stuff. but someone has to take the initiative and challenge some of those perceptions and prejudices if we're ever going to get beyond that, and radio, especially so-called alternative/modern radio, would have been in a great position to do that. i mean, AOR was TRYING to be conservative; that format was clear in its intentions. kroq and similar stations saw themselves as progressive entities, which makes their choice to be exclusionary particularly sad and offensive to me. modern rock radio did not have be this way. it CHOSE to be this way.

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:13 (nine years ago) link

(sorry to rant, but this has always been a huge sore point for me.)

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:16 (nine years ago) link

(also, prince obviously did not open for the rolling songs. i believe they were called the rolling stones, which is a much better band name.)

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:18 (nine years ago) link

I took a quick look at the the KROQ top 50 crossed with Billboard's top 100 for 1980 (http://www.bobborst.com/popculture/top-100-songs-of-the-year/?year=1980). Only common songs were Cars (#12 on Billboard and #28 on KROQ), Emotional Rescue (#53 and #50), Don't Do Me Like That (#64 and #20) and Misunderstanding (#71 and #32). In addition there were some artists on both lists but represented with different songs (Pink Floyd, Pretenders, Queen, Bob Seger, and Pete Townshend). Strangely enough Blondie was #1 on Billboard in 1980 with Call Me and not represented at all on the KROQ list - a far cry from their CBGB days.

that's not my post, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:42 (nine years ago) link

Arrgh, missed that Floyd was on both lists with Another Brick in the Wall (#2 and #6).

that's not my post, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:46 (nine years ago) link

No idea who to vote for between Talking Heads, Pretenders, and X.

that's not my post, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 05:50 (nine years ago) link

yeah prince is kinda the key - he does fairly well in the 84 list but is pretty much absent otherwise even though 'delirious' would've slotted in perfectly (and tbf i think i've heard it on the kroq 80s station so it may have been in the mix, just not making the year end list)(which kinda points at one thing i've never been clear w/ here or w/ other station year end lists tbh - is this standard measurement 'these were the biggest hits on this station'? most requested? some vague mix of popularity and what the station wanted the brand to be? to an extent it doesn't really matter, all three rubrics are accurate enough in terms of tracing the development of the format, but a set of data coming from top down input from programmers that has bob seger and b-52's says something different than a bottom up input from listener requests or polling), it's the closest he came to thomas dolby or oingo boingo. there are a few other blips - 'super freak' actually pops up in the lower reaches of the chart (and it is interesting to think of as a new wave novelty), there's an occasional reggae song, by the end of the decade things improve very slightly w/ fishbone/living color/lenny kravitz (though you could argue only one of these is an improvement of any kind and tbh i'm not sure fishbone does appear, i think i'm just assuming surely they do). 91x's lists had more reggae as well iirc. otherwise yeah it's a couple of guys in the specials, a couple of guys in the english beat, a guy in general public (and two of these guys are one guy). rap i'm not sure realistically stood a chance (though 'white lines' pops up), it had difficulty getting airplay on r&b stations (the first rap song doesn't hit #1 on r&b chart til 87 - 'i need love' for one week - the next isn't until 1989 - 'me, myself, & i' for one week; the berlin wall comes down before there's another one. bill clinton is president before you get a hip-hop track to spend more than one week at #1 - 'nuthin but a g thang' for two weeks), but as much as the narrative is that modern rock stations were a glossier version of college radio (esp in the early 90s heyday when you had huge mod rock hits that would've obv college radio fodder a few years previous - hello crash test dummies) there's always been a gap between the two and i don't mean merely mod rock not touching stuff that doesn't have major label promotional money behind it or even mod rock stations (west coast at least as far as i've seen) not embracing rem until right around the time pop radio was as well.

balls, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 07:01 (nine years ago) link

Am thinking there was more culturally diverse programming on WHFS near DC around the same time. It was at any rate better than the album rock (as it was called then, AOR as a name came a little later) stations, whose nod to diversity would be to play Beat It or Little Red Corvette on Smash or Trash when they were brand new without mentioning the artists' names, then "blow everybody's minds" with the reveal.

Three Word Username, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 07:36 (nine years ago) link

Tough, but "Train in Vain."

LimbsKing, Tuesday, 1 July 2014 13:19 (nine years ago) link

KROQ was sort of like a classic rock station in the late 70's so it made since that they held on to a couple of those bands before moving forward from here. you didn't turn on the "Rock of the 80's" to hear Disco.

Bee OK, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 01:46 (nine years ago) link

well you didn't SAY you were turning on kroq to hear disco, and kroq didn't ask you to tune in to hear disco. but they did play it, and you did hear it. they didn't call it "disco," of course. they called it "rolling stones" or "queen." disco and funk were absolutely part of modern rock radio's musical identity. they just weren't advertised.

in later years, they'd play faith no more's "we care a lot" but they wouldn't play run-dmc. or, worse, they'd play the beastie boys but no other rap songs by anyone. i understand why they did this. i understand marketing and promotion and identity and all that. but the marketing and promotion were racist, and by submitting to it and perpetuating it, kroq and other stations were complicit in the racism -- even as they programmed a lot of really great music.

i am well aware that none of this is breaking news. but it continues to make me unhappy.

fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 05:10 (nine years ago) link

argument would be alot stronger if queen weren't a classic rock vestige they dispensed of pretty quickly, if they'd played non-rock beastie boys, or hadn't played 'white lines' (not sure how many other new wave hip-hop songs they missed really - feel free to name some others that duran duran covered though), and if they hadn't shunned disco stones for new wave stones. there are others new wave r&b songs they missed (hi dere rockwell) though again maybe they didn't - they played 'delirious' and it didn't make the year end chart. not that you don't have a point but acting like 'they played this new wave act's song w/ a disco component - why didn't they play this disco song w/ no new wave component?' is disingenuous at best. it's confusing genre fluidity w/ the nonexistence of genre. new wave stations played disco to the extent that they were new wave. disco stations played new wave to the extent that they were disco. r&b stations played rock songs to the extent that they were r&b. rock stations played r&b songs to the extent they were rock. prepare to have yr mind blown: 'heart of glass' and 'rapture' charted on the disco and dance charts but (brace yrself) 'one way or another' didn't. 'hey ya!' charted on the modern rock chart but - are you sitting down? - 'the way you move' didn't. 'bennie and the jets' peaked at #15 on the r&b chart but somehow elton john's next single 'don't let sun go down on me' didn't chart at all on the r&b chart. crossover depends on epistasis. i like freeform radio, i like pop radio (esp during non-hegemonic periods), but acting befuddled that when specialist formats show any kind of eclecticism it doesn't lead to some kind of complete rejection of prior format or some mutation into generalism is dumb. once you go black you never go back isn't an actual law of physics.

balls, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 06:24 (nine years ago) link

i mean there's a TON of new wave disco not disco they didn't touch. their peak disco probably comes in 86 w/ pet shop boys, boys don't cry, baltimora. obv those acts completely owned r&b radio that year.

balls, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 06:40 (nine years ago) link

While it seems fair to ask just how cutting edge KROQ really was, but there's something about being outraged that radio was segregated in 1980 that rings a bit hollow to me.
To me, a bit more interesting question is whether the genre itself was self-segregating as alluded to in Bangs 'White Noise Supremacists' piece.

campreverb, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 16:43 (nine years ago) link

I've got the double IRS compilation from the early-'80s, so I have heard Oingo Boingo. Skip picked them a few posts above, and he's got good taste in power pop, so I'll give that song a listen. Forgot about Danny Elfman's involvement.

― clemenza, Monday, June 30, 2014 7:32 PM (2 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Best O Boingo has quite a few good ones...but of course I would think that...

One funny thing about KROQ and Oingo Boingo is how much they played tracks from Boingo Alive, which was a 2-CD set of live re-recordings of their "hits" from the '80s. Through the early and mid '90s you could hear both the originals and the re-recordings.

Boingo had at least one song in the top 106.7 every year from 1980 until 1990:

1980: 2 songs
1981: 2
1982: 2
1983: 1
1984: 1
1985: 3
1986: 3
1987: 4
1988: 2
1989: 1
1990: 1

skip, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 17:12 (nine years ago) link

This is an interesting list - the most requested songs of all time - featuring a truly horrible #1 that I would have guessed if I hadn't opened the link first:

http://www.radiohitlist.com/KROQ/KROQ-Top-500-All-Time-2006.htm

skip, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 17:13 (nine years ago) link

While it seems fair to ask just how cutting edge KROQ really was, but there's something about being outraged that radio was segregated in 1980 that rings a bit hollow to me.
To me, a bit more interesting question is whether the genre itself was self-segregating as alluded to in Bangs 'White Noise Supremacists' piece.

why can't it be both, though? why can't we ask whether the genre was self-segregating AND ask whether radio was self-segregating? does radio follow genre or does genre follow radio? or do they both follow something else? i don't spend a lot of time in 2014 thinking about how radio was segregated in 1980. various radio formats were also segregated in 1960 and 1970 and 1990 and 2000 and 2010. i bring this up now simply because this thread put it back into my head, and i think it's relevant to this thread. would it also ring a bit hollow to point out that mtv refused to play michael jackson in the early 1980s if this were a thread about mtv's top videos of the early 1980s? or would that be ok?

to balls' points, i like freeform radio too, and no, i don't expect commercial radio to embrace a freeform format. what i would like, though, is for a commercial format that claims to be progressive and modern and forward-looking to display at least a modicum of openness and inclusivenesss and adventurousness. what does it actually mean to only play disco to the extent that it's also new wave? what makes a song or an artist new wave? do people just kind of automatically know that duran duran is a lot new wave and prince is maybe a little new wave and zapp isn't at all new wave? is the difference encoded into the music, or into the artists' choice of clothing and hairstyles, or into their promotional materials? is it an objective difference or a subjective difference?

fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 17:35 (nine years ago) link

I think those are interesting questions, and perhaps it's unfair of me to peg your argument as hollow. On the other hand, I don't think it follows that because KROQ operated within a narrow genre that all subsequent promotion of the station is racist (post hoc). The music industry has been categorizing and pigeonholing popular music since the rise of the 78, and radio followed suit for the same exact reason-commercial interests. Those interests rarely served art, much less social justice.

campreverb, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 18:47 (nine years ago) link

It's interesting to me that the top 40 radio I grew up with in the 70s had room in its playlist for Barry Manilow and The Ohio Players (and Freddy Fender!) making it probably more inclusive than KROQ. That said, I totally get why they would play Blondie's take on disco and not Donna Summer's.

"New Wave Music" on wiki yields this: The new wave sound of the late 1970s represented a break from the smooth-oriented blues and rock & roll sounds of late 1960s to mid-1970s rock music. According to music journalist Simon Reynolds, the music had a twitchy, agitated feel to it. New wave musicians often played choppy rhythm guitars with fast tempos. ... Reynolds noted that new wave vocalists sounded high-pitched, geeky and suburban.[15] A nervous, nerdy persona was a common characteristic of new wave fans and acts such as Talking Heads, Devo and Elvis Costello. This took the forms of robotic or spastic dancing, jittery high-pitched vocals, and clothing fashions such as suits and big glasses that hid the body.[49]

This seemed radical to audiences accustomed to post-counterculture forms such as disco dancing and macho "cock rock" which emphasized a "let it hang loose" philosophy, open sexuality and sexual bravado.[50] The majority of American male new wave acts of the late 1970s were from Caucasian middle-class backgrounds, and theorized that these acts intentionally presented these exaggerated nerdy tendencies associated with their "whiteness" either to criticize it or to reflect who they were.[50]

wild-eyed, high-volume bursts of pious indignation (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 2 July 2014 19:26 (nine years ago) link

the top 40 radio I grew up with in the 70s had room in its playlist for Barry Manilow and The Ohio Players (and Freddy Fender!) making it probably more inclusive than KROQ.

top 40 radio, or whatever the top-hits-of-the-day format has been called at any given time, has pretty much always been the most inclusive music format on radio. still is!

fact checking cuz, Wednesday, 2 July 2014 19:59 (nine years ago) link

In 1980 pretty much all my friends hated Ramones (too simple/dumb), Devo (too weird) and anything that sounded like "disco." And the first commercial "new music" station in my city was really big on songs like "Drivers Seat" by Sniff n the Tears, i.e. the commercially safe face of new wave. It was Danceteria-styled dance clubs playing Mi-Sex and Teena Marie side by side that rekindled my interest in R&B; I had really stopped listening to commercial radio of any sort at that time.

wild-eyed, high-volume bursts of pious indignation (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 2 July 2014 20:27 (nine years ago) link

RIP.
https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-IQ_aPHpH4gg/U7ekei08xTI/AAAAAAAAAqs/Df6Q86HaMeA/w750-h422-no/ken+roberts.jpg

LA Times

Ken Roberts, a concert promoter who rescued a debt-ridden Pasadena rock music station and oversaw its rebirth as powerhouse KROQ-FM (106.7), which helped acts like Prince and Culture Club gain mainstream attention, died May 22 in New York City. He was 73.

Roberts had been ailing since a heart attack in February, said his former wife Harriette Craig, who announced his death last week.

Under his ownership in the 1970s and '80s, KROQ went from being a much-maligned renegade to one of the most influential modern rock stations in the country, with deejays like Richard Blade, Freddy Snakeskin and Jed the Fish championing alternative music in the widely emulated "ROQ of the 80s" format.

Among the many then-unknown bands the station featured were Duran Duran, the Clash, U2, R.E.M., the Go-Go's, Devo, the Police, the Pretenders, Billy Idol, Oingo Boingo and the Eurythmics, all of whom owed some of their success to a middle-aged concert promoter from Hoboken, N.J., who wanted people to hear new music.

"I don't think he quite understood the music… but he wanted to be cutting edge," Blade said this week. "Ken really believed in the freedom of radio. What Ken allowed people on air to do shaped the musical taste of Southern California and exploded across the country."

Born in Hoboken on Feb. 28, 1941, Kenneth John Roberts was entrepreneurial as a child, delivering newspapers and hiring other boys to wash neighbors' cars. He attended Seton Hall University in New Jersey and helped pay his way working as a page at NBC. His connections there helped him arrange a concert on campus featuring singer Jack Jones. He booked Della Reese next.

After graduating in 1963, he started a business coordinating college concerts featuring some of the era's most popular performers, including Harry Belafonte, Sammy Davis Jr., Andy Williams, Johnny Mathis, the Supremes and the Temptations. By the early 1970s his company was representing Frankie Valli and Sly and the Family Stone.

I moved to Pasadena in 1982, from the wasteland of Album-Oriented-Rock in inland America, and was blown away by the music I heard on KROQ. I remember the line, "It's hip man, it's totally hip it's the only thing happening". RIP, sir, well done.
MIKE_FROM_SGV
AT 9:30 PM JULY 04, 2014

One of the engagements he booked for Sly Stone's band was for a KROQ-sponsored show at the Los Angeles Coliseum. When KROQ couldn't cover the costs, Roberts agreed to pay for the concert in exchange for a small ownership stake in the struggling station.

He did not realize what he had gotten himself into until he attended a meeting in 1974 with the other owners — a motley group that included a doctor, a couple of dairymen, a Sacramento lobbyist, a secretary and several other small investors. Roberts, with his background in concert booking, turned out to be the most experienced as far as radio was concerned. By the end of the meeting he was elected president.

He soon learned that KROQ's finances were in shambles after a year of programming without commercials, a gimmick intended to build audience. He took the station off the air for two years while he dug it out of $7 million of debt.

The station resumed broadcasting in 1976 but its troubles were far from over. The Federal Communications Commission had ordered the station to surrender its license, which made it vulnerable to rivals trying to take it over. Roberts paid them to drop their bids and bought out his partners until he was sole owner.

In 1979 he hired Rick Carroll as program director. Carroll, who died in 1989, was widely credited with refining KROQ's new-music signature, but Roberts kept him on track.

Snakeskin, who joined KROQ in 1980 and now handles the vintage KROQ playlist on the station's digital channel, recalled that Carroll had proposed a weekend of Beatles music to draw in more listeners but "Ken set him straight. Ken said, 'You're not doing no Beatles weekend on my station.' He could see this new kind of music was catching on."

KROQ's ratings soared in the 1980s, leading the FCC to award the license to Roberts in 1985. A year later he sold the station to Infinity Broadcasting for a record $45 million. KROQ, at 106.7 FM, is now owned by CBS.

Divorced in 1981, Roberts had no children.

In 1991 he returned to the radio business with his purchase of stations in Santa Monica and Newport Beach that shared the frequency 103.1. With Snakeskin as program director, a techno-rock format was simulcast on both outlets as MARS-FM. But it failed to find an audience and after a year switched to smooth jazz.

A risk taker who made and lost fortunes, Roberts had to give up his 112-acre Mandeville Canyon ranch in 2012 after defaulting on a loan from a Connecticut hedge fund. Once listed for $45 million, it was sold at auction for $12 million.

His turnaround of KROQ remained his most notable success.

"We were this tiny little station in Pasadena with a crappy signal playing music the other stations wouldn't touch with a barge pole," Blade said. "We all came together under Ken Roberts."

Bee OK, Saturday, 5 July 2014 07:13 (nine years ago) link

a)i have no idea how that comment post got in there. b)he did die a while back but was posted in today's obituaries for whatever reason.

Bee OK, Saturday, 5 July 2014 07:21 (nine years ago) link

i guess they were waiting for this poll.

Bee OK, Saturday, 5 July 2014 07:24 (nine years ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Sunday, 6 July 2014 00:01 (nine years ago) link

there's songs i think are more definitive of the format, or of the artist, or just "better," but i can't see me know voting for "ashes to ashes."

the times recommends: gluten-free dining in italy! (Hunt3r), Sunday, 6 July 2014 00:40 (nine years ago) link

"not voting"

the times recommends: gluten-free dining in italy! (Hunt3r), Sunday, 6 July 2014 00:40 (nine years ago) link

Same as it ever was

Walter Galt, Sunday, 6 July 2014 12:27 (nine years ago) link

Same as it ever was

Frederik B, Sunday, 6 July 2014 14:19 (nine years ago) link

hope to also have this series continue after this.

Bee OK, Sunday, 6 July 2014 23:16 (nine years ago) link

yeah i'll go to at least the beginning of the mod rock chart, might go all the way to nevermind. after 91 the chart's just another mod rock station chart, whatever was distinctive fades pretty quick once the money really pours in.

balls, Sunday, 6 July 2014 23:28 (nine years ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Monday, 7 July 2014 00:01 (nine years ago) link

Asked who he thinks the KROQ audience is, Federman curiously answers who it should be. “The KROQ audience should be about 28-29 years old and ethnically diverse,” says the L.A. native whose business background is in sales and dotcoms (mostly failed, by his own admission).

Mm, wonder why.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 03:16 (three years ago) link

Interesting article — I haven’t listened to radio for so long, I didn’t know that Star 98.7 changed to “Alt.”

KROQ playing new/different music sounds like a good thing after two decades of the same Offspring song every two hours, but sounds like they’ve f’d up most everything else.

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Wednesday, 20 May 2020 03:42 (three years ago) link

It's hard to cry about hearing less Sublime and Foo Fighters but replacing them with Post Malone is a fail.

skip, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 04:51 (three years ago) link

lol, agreed

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Wednesday, 20 May 2020 05:06 (three years ago) link

tho i don't like much of the current crop of alternative radio hits, the station that the kaplan guy is trying to build would likely be a significant improvement on what it has/had been. the alt adult contemporary model of programming that now predominates in the format has honestly been tragic, possibly even damaging to the legacy of the alternative classics it (over)plays

dyl, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 05:20 (three years ago) link

It's easy to see why they decided to switch to something new. Unfortunately they strung listeners along for years with half measures (a little Sublime/Offspring here, a little Muse there, a little Imagine Dragons and Marshmello for modern taste) so now no one is satisfied with consolidating toward any one subset of their potential playlist.

skip, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 16:32 (three years ago) link

I truly would be interested if some ILXor would be able to tell me something rte: the appeal of Kevin and Bean. It was for many years the #1 drive time show in the second biggest radio market in the US…but I wanna know if its any different from any drive time show in the rest of the country. I have listened to Howard Stern steadily for 30 years, but…I really have no understanding of the appeal of drive time radio other than his show…I suppose it's like being a Led Zeppelin super fan but being ignorant of Bad Company and Grand Funk and every other hard rock act all the way down to Shinedown or some shit…I listened to Opie and Anthony once and simply could not believe that anyone found this entertaining…

also, there are clearly some acts on the above list that any ILXor knows very well…Billie, Killers, 21 Pilots, Tame Impala, the 1975, and a few others;…but I do not have a handle on many of the others…which is to say, what is an alternative radio format presently trying to achieve and/or reflect, apart from selling ad time? what is the aesthetic? does the demographic mentioned by the GM in the piece listen to whatever this alternative music is supposed to connote? my impression is that hip-hop dominates the desired demographic…

veronica moser, Wednesday, 20 May 2020 21:09 (three years ago) link

I was never an active Kevin & Bean listener, but there was a period in the early 2000s when I would hear their show regularly (as part of my job), and their appeal was pretty clear to me. They were great on the radio -- the personalities, humor, etc.

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Wednesday, 20 May 2020 22:35 (three years ago) link

i probably know way too much about this radio stuff than i should. probably not as much as morrisp but KROQ was really that important to me growing up and admired what they did in those early years. one of my dreams was programming a big radio station but i was naive and didn't understand the money and politics behind all of it.

i used to listen to Kevin and Bean up until i moved to San Francisco in the summer of 1995. they came on board 01/01/1990. there was just a chemistry there that worked, they played off together so well. Howard Stern was on KLSX, a classic rock station at the time. i couldn't get into Howard as every time i tuned in he was always trying to get girls to take off their clothing. the real elephant in the room for Kevin and Bean was Mark and Brian, they owned the mornings at that time. KROQ had better music than KLOS and they could do tie in with the wennie roast or acoustic Christmas. plus Nirvana.

i moved back in 2003 but really when i put on KROQ it was all about Submine, Red Hot Chill Peppers, Smashing Pumpkins and the Offspring. i only liked one of those acts so i had moved on.

somewhere along the line iheartradio saw an opening and copied what KROQ was doing all those years. they are not playing Post Malone and took away everything that KROQ was. now they don't know what to do and they are throwing things at the wall to see what sticks. it seems like it's not working and the other alt radio station has stolen everything from KROQ including all their listeners.

Bee OK, Thursday, 21 May 2020 00:09 (three years ago) link

Great post, Bee

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Thursday, 21 May 2020 00:46 (three years ago) link

How often does KROQ still play '80s music? When I was growing up listening in the mid-90s the "retro" stuff was Oingo Boingo, New Order, the Cure, etc. They could draw a pretty clear line back from the KROQ origin story to the new music they were playing at the time. It was also easy for them not to swamp the new music they were playing - more like occasional reminders.

Now there's more retro music to choose from and more difference in the sound between the retro music and the new stuff. It's a hell of a lot tougher now for them to draw from a 30 year back catalog while staying relevant with new music, satisfying the longtime listeners, and having a coherent point of view.

I think we would all agree that KROQ shouldn't be an alternative oldies station. They could have pivoted toward, say, the Phoenix aesthetic but that doesn't mix well with Red Hot Chili Peppers. If you insist on playing Under the Bridge every day then that limits your choices for new music.

skip, Thursday, 21 May 2020 04:59 (three years ago) link

I am listening to every song on the above list by artists with whom I am unfamiliar to try to draw some conclusions as to what "alternative" as a mass market radio format comprised of new music, not the classic RHCP/Sublime/Foo iteration, in 2020 and, fuck, like 10 years prior, could amount to, what kind of aesthetic unifies it…if anyone else has some ideas as to what this could be, I would be interested in hearing…

there's also this, in which Mike Kaplan from the Variety piece seems to be dubious that Bille E and Lana del rey has a place on alt radio in NYC, which is hilsrious…

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/18/arts/music/rock-radio.html

veronica moser, Friday, 22 May 2020 14:20 (three years ago) link

Looks like earlier this morning, KROQ played Billie > Smells Like Teen Spirit > Lana (Sublime cover) > RHCP > Daft Punk.

Feels schizophrenic to me, but maybe not to today’s KROQ listener.

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Friday, 22 May 2020 14:50 (three years ago) link

(Alt 98.7’s playlist looks pretty similar; maybe a touch more appealing. Recent run (as of 6:57am): Billie > Pumpkins > Fitz & the Tantrums > Daft Punk. They played “Hey Ya!” earlier in the hour.)

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Friday, 22 May 2020 14:57 (three years ago) link

DJ Shadow, didn't expect that.

skip, Saturday, 23 May 2020 00:26 (three years ago) link

Overall the amount of repetition is pretty mind numbing though. Daft Punk, Foster the People, Rezz & Grabbitz (who?), No Doubt, DJ Shadow, White Stripes, Muse, and Weezer each played twice within a 6 hour period, Fitz & The Tantrums (who?), Linkin Park, Panic at the Disco, the Killers, and Grouplove three times, 21 Pilots five times.

skip, Saturday, 23 May 2020 00:32 (three years ago) link

that's a horrible playlist, they need to play new music and not all these retreads. they should be playing stuff like Perfume Genius, Car Seat Headrest, The 1975... it seems so obvious to me, only playing Billie is not going to cut it.

Bee OK, Saturday, 23 May 2020 01:28 (three years ago) link

Lana (Sublime cover)

this reminds me that i believe the influx of hit covers on alt radio in the past few years to be partly attributable to the format's turn toward the oldies/adult contemporary programming philosophy (see also weezer and meg myers scoring big hits at the format with pretty straightforward readings of "africa" and "running up that hill" respectively)

dyl, Saturday, 23 May 2020 06:21 (three years ago) link

Checking back in on the KROQ & Alt 98.7’s playlists are the end of the day, I see that KROQ also has “Hey Ya!” in rotation. Both stations are playing old Third Eye Blind songs, which is somewhat unexpected.

Alt’s playlist, which looked slightly better this morning (if only for playing a more recent Billie Eilish track) isn’t looking so hot at night. Lotta Offspring.

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Saturday, 23 May 2020 06:27 (three years ago) link

...though they are playing the Bloodhound Gang right now, which is a thumb’s-up in my book.

Inadequate grass (morrisp), Saturday, 23 May 2020 06:29 (three years ago) link

another characteristic of 'alt ac' stations, or at least the one in my city, is their eagerness to play hits from the mainstream/uncool/'pop' phases of a (former) alternative act's run. like, most of the all-american rejects tunes they'll play are specifically the ones that alternative radio barely touched back when they came out

dyl, Saturday, 23 May 2020 06:49 (three years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Billboard’s Hot Rock Songs chart has been rebranded Hot Rock & Alternative Songs as of this week.@twentyonepilots’ "Level of Concern" was the final #1. @Powfu's "Death Bed" is #1 on the 1st issue of the new chart.

— chart data (@chartdata) June 9, 2020

dyl, Wednesday, 10 June 2020 05:10 (three years ago) link

Is there still an Alternative chart?

Charging for Brewskis™ (morrisp), Wednesday, 10 June 2020 05:58 (three years ago) link

yes, the standard airplay chart for that format is still being published

honestly 'hot rock songs' is(/was) just one of the many useless genre charts that have the same methodology as the hot 100 (since 2012) and are thus entirely beholden to the arbitrary decisions that folks at billboard make regarding what songs fit in what genre -- for example, the weeknd's "blinding lights" is perplexingly categorized by billboard staff as an r&b song

obviously, alternative hits were being included on this rock chart in the past as it conventionally went without saying that 'alternative' music is rock music. breaking out 'alternative' in the chart's new title is evidently an admission that, well, it turns out that a decent subset of what's now considered 'alternative' music is not rock. the powfu song that's now #1 was not on the chart until this week -- readers surely would have howled at the suggestion that it's 'rock' -- even tho it's being played primarily at a putatively 'rock' format.

dyl, Wednesday, 10 June 2020 06:26 (three years ago) link

one year passes...

https://variety.com/2021/music/news/kroq-stryker-leaves-ted-kevin-klein-1234992395/?cx_testId=49&cx_testVariant=cx_1&cx_artPos=2#cxrecs_s

Ted Stryker Departs KROQ’s ‘Stryker & Klein’ Morning Show, a Year After Taking Over the ‘Kevin & Bean’ Slot

Bee OK, Thursday, 10 June 2021 03:45 (two years ago) link

one month passes...

https://variety.com/2021/music/news/kroq-kat-corbett-exits-locals-only-kevin-bean-1235034057/?cx_testId=48&cx_testVariant=cx_1&cx_artPos=0#cxrecs_s

As KROQ DJ Kat Corbett Exits, She Reflects on Two Decades at the Station and the Struggles Facing Alternative Radio

Michael Schneider
Tue, August 3, 2021, 8:14 PM

Longtime KROQ DJ Kat Corbett is the latest voice to exit the iconic L.A. alternative radio station — and although she’s not ready to reveal her next stop just yet, she hints to Variety that several possibilities are on the horizon.

“I am talking to some folks that I can’t say just yet,” said Corbett, who also continues to host a daily show on SiriusXM’s Lithium channel. “I think the audio sound space is so amazing right now. Podcasting, fiction podcasting, this stuff is blowing my mind. How I would love to put some of my stories in that arena.” Corbett also hopes to release her debut novel before the end of the year: “They’re rough drafts but I wrote two books during COVID. I was like, what else am I gonna do?”

Corbett had most recently served as a weekend and fill-in DJ for KROQ, in addition to her signature, weekly show “Locals Only,” featuring unsigned and up-and-coming L.A. bands. From 2005 to 2020, Corbett was KROQ’s midday DJ, following the famed “Kevin & Bean Show.”

But “Kevin & Bean” ended its run at the end of 2019, following the departure of Gene “Bean” Baxter. Co-host Kevin Ryder continued until March 2020, when KROQ fired him and co-hosts Allie Mc Kay and Jensen Karp over the phone, in the middle of a pandemic.

More recently, Ted Stryker, co-host of the current morning show, “Stryker & Klein,” also departed the station. The loss of KROQ’s signature stars, coupled with a dramatic shift in the station’s music mix over the past year, has led to several pieces — including one in Variety — dissecting the station’s current choices, ratings plummet and its future.

Corbett, however, had been pondering an exit at KROQ for some time, even prior to the recent departures and changes. She had actually planned to leave, with another show lined up, last year until the COVID-19 pandemic changed everything.

“I was ready to go then because, frankly, I reached the top of my game, and I never thought I’d be somewhere for 20 years — like that’s crazy, let alone KROQ,” said Corbett, pointing to the decision to leave the midday gig. “I’m somebody who really likes to work, I like being creative, and again it’s like, what else was there for me to do? I was never one of those people where I was, ‘I’m going to retire at KROQ.’ That’s not a thing. You grow out of the demo. I knew that there would always be a time. It was definitely happening right before COVID. And then, obviously, everything fell apart and so I already had a home so it was kind of like, [why not ride it out] while I was still there.”

What KROQ now faces is bittersweet, Corbett said, and it’s not just KROQ struggling to maintain relevancy.

“Right now I think alternative radio in general, and not just KROQ, I’m talking across the board, every single outlet is in a state of they don’t know what the hell is going on,” she said. “I think they’re deluding themselves if they think the kids are coming to radio. Kids don’t know what radio is, and they don’t care. And so now you’re alienating your audience by getting rid of all music. Also there’s this big thing, and again across the board in all alternative, where they’re, frankly, pushing hip-hop and pop as alternative, because those two genres, that’s where the money’s at. But the genre is just demolished. I don’t know how to fix it, but it’s just not its own thing anymore.”

Corbett added that she’s not knocking the idea of mixing or evolving genres on alternative radio. She began her career at another legendary modern rock station, Boston’s WFNX, and remembers when outlets like that would mix Public Enemy, Run-D.M.C., De La Soul and Prince with music by the Clash or Dinosaur Jr. The problem now: There’s very little new rock to mix in the other stuff.

“Who’s the next Green Day, who’s the next Nirvana or Rage Against the Machine, where’s that?” she said. “I think rock is in a hard place right now. And the lack of that to mix in, like, current rock is really the problem.”

Of course, the demo that grew up on alternative rock is also the demo still listening to radio, and it’s the struggle of maintaining that core audience via gold-based records — yet attempting to evolve the sound to stay fresh and bring in a new generation — that has put the format in such crisis.

“A lot of times people get mad and they yell and go, ‘KROQ sucks’ or ‘I haven’t listened in years,’ and the reality is, it’s because you’ve gotten older,” Corbett said. “We’re not programming to you, we’re programming to 18-to-34. You’ve literally outgrown the demo, so of course it’s not going to resonate with you. It’s not that the place sucks, it’s just not your thing anymore. Frankly, it’s like I’ve outgrown it. I have other desires and passions. But for all of the time that I’ve been there and the family that I’ve made and the experiences I’ve had, it’s been an incredible place to be.”

Corbett first joined KROQ in the early 2000s from crosstown rival KLYY “Y-107,” a small radio station that attempted to take on Goliath KROQ, but eventually flipped formats to Spanish adult contemporary in 1999.

“Everybody was like, ‘There’s no way you’re getting hired at KROQ, especially not after you worked at Y-107,’” Corbett recalled. “So I hounded [then-program director] Kevin Weatherly until he finally gave me an audition. And the audition was the worst. I hadn’t even seen the studio, and everybody was like, ‘Don’t worry, KROQ, they’re so broke, the studio’s like an old college radio station, you’ll be fine.’ I get in there and they had just gone digital. Which I had never used before. So I got a five-minute lesson from the board op at ‘Loveline’ on how to use Audio Vault.

“I was like, are you kidding me? Is this really how I’m going to try to get a job here? By going on air at KROQ with a system I’ve never seen before? It was an absolute nightmare. I actually cried on the way home after my overnight shift. But you know, thankfully, they heard something.” Corbett began working various shifts until eventually replacing Tami Heide in middays.

And now, although most of her former KROQ colleagues have already left the building, Corbett said she has fond memories of her two decades at the station, including breaking artists like Local Natives, Silversun Pickups and Fitz and the Tantrums on “Locals Only,” and working with a staff she described as “absolute mad geniuses.”

“It was the ‘Island of Misfit Toys,’” she said. “You often hear that phrase about when baseball is working, how it’s just magic. It’s like music. It’s very much like that in radio and we had all known each other for so long. You didn’t have to think about anything, you knew people were gonna get the job done. It was a handoff, like in the middle of chaos, we made it all work. It was a beautiful thing, and it was really exciting and fun and we laughed so much. But little by little, you start losing pieces of the band, and then it doesn’t have that feel anymore. That’s just a natural progression, especially if you’re together for such a long time.”

Bee OK, Wednesday, 4 August 2021 07:13 (two years ago) link

i know i find this KROQ fascinating and just post these strange happenings. i'm a Southern California kid who grew upon KROQ so i document some things here in ILM.

Bee OK, Wednesday, 4 August 2021 07:17 (two years ago) link

Really great post, Bee. What does she really mean when she says "current rock is the problem"? From the 'alternative' perspective, isn't there plenty of new product flowing? Or is that 'indie'?

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Wednesday, 4 August 2021 17:40 (two years ago) link

I was in LA recently and always try to listen to KROQ when I'm there out of nostalgia and curiosity. It's a more incoherent listening experience than ever, with mostly golden oldies and a smattering of new rock(ish) music. Angst might be the one common thematic thread, with the exception of wannabe good-vibes stuff like Sublime and RHCP. Glass Animals' "Heat Waves" is a nice track - is it alternative rock? Even if you call it alternative rock, does it really make sense when played in between Yellowcard and "When I Come Around"?

Alt 98.7 is eating their lunch because they play classic KROQ music. https://alt987fm.iheart.com/music/recently-played/

skip, Thursday, 5 August 2021 16:11 (two years ago) link

working warehouse jobs through the whole second half of the 90's in LA was just KROQ all day long

(•̪●) (carne asada), Thursday, 5 August 2021 16:29 (two years ago) link

two months pass...

The San Francisco Bay Area's last remaining alternative rock station was unceremoniously turned into the following yesterday:

“Hi. I’m Dave FM. I live in the Bay Area. Totally Random Radio is what I do.”

https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/music/why-is-105-3-fm-suddenly-playing-guns-n-roses-and-prince

Totally Random means playing Duran Duran, MC Hammer, The Killers, and Journey in succession. How cool.

skip, Saturday, 16 October 2021 17:16 (two years ago) link

Radio sucks.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Saturday, 16 October 2021 19:11 (two years ago) link

5. the b-52's - give me back my man 0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hl_EEpRfrkk

everyone watch this video. it takes 4 minutes.

only one poster was correct on this thread:

I don't think I was aware of "Give Me Back My Man" even being a single or making any kind of a splash on its lonesome. Such a great song, though.

― The Golan & Globus Action Lafftacular! (Old Lunch), Monday, June 30, 2014 1:26 PM (seven years ago)

all kidding aside, what a great year for music (and singles), it's just overwhelming

typo hell 13: crypto in insidious, though (Karl Malone), Saturday, 16 October 2021 19:21 (two years ago) link

i feel like devo is going through a low point in terms of reputation (? i could be wrong.) not so much that people diss them, more that they just aren't mentioned much these days. and looking at the initial KROQ list, 'whip it' was #1 that year! but that + girl u want (which has always been more my speed) combine for only 1 votes here

typo hell 13: crypto in insidious, though (Karl Malone), Saturday, 16 October 2021 19:28 (two years ago) link

a poll from 7 years ago, of course. and yet even since then i feel (i feel -- very subjective, again) their relevancy has declined a bit

typo hell 13: crypto in insidious, though (Karl Malone), Saturday, 16 October 2021 19:29 (two years ago) link

Rumor has it that "Give Me Back My Man" was inspired by a woman who saw her dude fall from a boat and watched him get eaten by a shark.

Not sure if it's true or not but I want to believe.

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Saturday, 16 October 2021 20:20 (two years ago) link

i have also heard that, so rumor does have that

typo hell 13: crypto in insidious, though (Karl Malone), Saturday, 16 October 2021 20:24 (two years ago) link

good job skip

Bee OK, Monday, 18 October 2021 02:44 (two years ago) link

four months pass...

“Rock music is part of what we do, it’s part of alternative, but it’s not the only part of alternative. We’re not just looking to play four white dudes in a band. Our audience is as diverse as ever and our playlist needs to be too. Whether it’s Billie Eilish or Lana Del Rey or rappers making alternative tracks such as 24kGoldn and Dominic Fike, we’re bringing together what millennials and Gen Z fans want. There are really no boundaries when you think about music today. We’re not a singular focus where we get so pigeon-holed and lack diverse options. We don’t just stand for one thing. It’s a lifestyle and an attitude.”


Update: this guy^ is now out; apparently (at least in part) because his programming strategy “lost a significant portion” of the station’s core audience.

Please don’t take / My time change away (morrisp), Thursday, 17 March 2022 01:23 (two years ago) link

ThisIsMyShockedFace.gif

Loud guitars shit all over "Bette Davis Eyes" (NYCNative), Thursday, 17 March 2022 04:44 (two years ago) link

Interesting stuff, thanks for the link morrisp

Bee OK, Thursday, 17 March 2022 16:49 (two years ago) link


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