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In the 60s, 70s, and 80s songs didn't stay on top for as long as they have since the 1990s

2007-12-29 05:45:34 · 5 answers · asked by Pat 2 in Entertainment & Music Radio

5 answers

Gearbox has a good take.

However, more during the '70s and '80s there was a very active record promotion machine that spent huge amounts of money wining and dining radio Program & Music Directors. The charts were very important in selling music and so, the station people were encouraged to turn the songs over at a faster clip, so more records would be sold.

Now that promotional money has dried up as the traditional record companies are really hurting - and feuding with radio.

There's also a sophisticated computer-monitoring system in place that shows actual airplay for any station of any importance. What this research has shown us is what some suspected all along. Just as the DJs are screaming, "If I have to play that &%$#* song again, I'm throwing it out the window..." the audience is just beginning to become familiar with the song. So the records stay on top longer to better reflect what the audience wants and because the radio people don't have the pressure to flip the songs as often.

There's other reasons (the switch from singles to album sales for instance), but the lack of promotional and advertising dollars to support the songs is one of the more significant explanations.

Good question. A star 4 U!
-a guy named duh

2007-12-29 08:54:09 · answer #1 · answered by Duh 7 · 2 0

stable afternoon Punch :) 1964: living house Of The transforming into sunlight - The Animals 1965: (i won't be in a position to Get No) satisfaction - The Rolling Stones 1965: Get Off My Cloud - The Rolling Stones 1966: Paint It, Black - The Rolling Stones 1966: Paperback author - The Beatles 1966: ninety six Tears - ? & The Mysterions 1967: Incense And Peppermints - The Strawberry Alarm Clock 1969: i won't be in a position to Get next To You - the enticements 1972: Papa exchange into A Rollin' Stone - the enticements 1973: Superstition - Stevie ask your self 1975: repute - David Bowie 2003: whats up Ya! - Outkast

2016-10-09 09:15:21 · answer #2 · answered by edelstein 3 · 0 0

My vote is there is a less number of songs being made available for the Hot 100 so those songs tend to stay a lot longer as something hasn't captured people's imaginations like they did years ago.

2007-12-29 06:43:05 · answer #3 · answered by gearbox 7 · 2 0

Duh must be in the radio business like myself. His answer is pretty much right on.

2007-12-30 21:36:57 · answer #4 · answered by Answer Man 3 · 0 0

Maybe because people dont care that much and people arent buying music and just downloading it.

2007-12-29 05:48:46 · answer #5 · answered by david 3 · 0 0

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