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When Great Listening Happens By Accident Publicado por Webmaster en marzo 5th, 2015

By Sean Ross (@RossOnRadio)

The best part about radio’s infinite dial is that there are more than 100,000 choices. The worst is that you pretty much still have to know what you want. I try to provide audio concierge services for Ross On Radio readers, but I could always use one myself. Which European top 40 will have the great song I can know about six months before the U.S., and which will just be playing “I’m Not the Only One”? Which small-market station will be transporting, and which one will be syndicated?

My radio tourism has always benefitted from those aggregators who show you a lot of choices. Uberstations.com allows me to toggle around most of any market’s radio dial, often with “now playing” information. TuneIn.com once had a feature that showed “now playing” information from dozens of stations in the same genre that you were listening to.

That feature is gone, but there’s still predictive search on TuneIn’s radio app. That’s how I came across CKFU Fort St. John, B.C. I was preparing for a trip to Toronto and typed in the calls of top 40 CKFM (Virgin Radio). After typing in three characters, I got “Moose FM,” one of a number of similarly branded (but not identically programmed) Canadian stations.

Moose FM was billed as “Energetic Country.” I would always want to listen to a station that played energetic country, but the name itself seemed a little awkward. After some listening, it became clear that Fort St. John was “the Energetic City.” And thus Moose FM became the perfect local station – one that an outsider needs at least 20 minutes to understand.

Last night, I started using the predictive search to find more stations I didn’t know. I was looking for KVIL Dallas. Here’s where I ended up next:

KVIK Decorah, Iowa – It’s Classic Hits in Northeast Iowa. When I came across it, it was playing “All Fired Up,” the long lost Pat Benatar single that marked the end of her hit streak. It was followed by the country-rock opus “The Road Goes On Forever” by Joe Ely. “Chevy Van” by Sammy Johns was in there, too. So was “Fred Bear,” Ted Nugent’s eight-minute hunting tribute, which led to PM driver Pete Wennes talking about his first bow and arrow. Like much of the small-town radio I come across, “The Viking” was hosted, which makes it considerably more live-and-local than many large-market outlets.

XHROO (95.3 Kiss FM) Cheturnal, QR, Mexico – Bilingual CHR from the Yucatan Peninsula that I found while searching XHRM San Diego. Seemingly unhosted in morning drive (as was much of Mexican radio, including large markets, even before the rise of jockless radio in the U.S.). But I heard “Teacher” by Nick Jonas, not yet a U.S. single, as well as a Spanish-language reggaeton song (“El Taxi” by Osmani Garcia) that interpolates “Murder She Wrote.” One bilingual stager promised an “international network with one name, Kiss FM.” But it was the lack of resemblance to other stations that I appreciated. It did give me the idea to search KIIS Los Angeles, though, leading to my next stop.

KIIC (Thunder Country) Albia, Iowa — “From the corn crushers to the pontoons, this is corn country,” said one of the good-sounding stagers on this enjoyable classic country outlet, just ahead of “Slide Off Your Satin Sheets” by Johnny Paycheck. As with KVIK, there were funeral announcements on this station. There was also agricultural news in morning drive, including a controversy over antibiotics for cattle and their effects on humans. Well-produced imaging used to be the sign of a special small-market outlet. But throughout my dialing around, it was generally the norm on stations I encountered, thus closing the gap on those large-market stations that are mostly stagers and music.

WUSM (Southern Miss Radio) Hattiesburg, Miss. – By searching for urban WUSL (Power 99) Philadelphia, I found Americana/roots music radio from the University of Southern Mississippi. “The cure for bad music,” declared one stager, before adding, “We can’t do anything about that smell, though.” Within a few minutes, WUSM had gone from “Don’t Cross the River” by America to Wilson Pickett to the side project from the Avett Brothers’ Seth Avett and Jessica Lea Mayfield. During a half-hour of listening, I had found at least three songs to purchase. Then I started to type WKSC (Kiss FM) Chicago.

WKSR (Kix 106.7) Pulaski, Tenn. – The obits were on the station home page. The morning man was also the GM/station manager/sports director. (The answer to “how can these small-market stations have more local talent than the big guys” was usually multiple jobs at a station or around town.) The music mix was yesterday-and-today country. It was here I came across Tim McGraw’s “Where the Green Grass Grows” for the second time in an hour. One of the interesting common threads of the small-market radio I came across was financial as a category — not just banks but financial planners and, here, the loan company that would not just advance you your tax refund, but do your taxes for you.

WBEY (Bay Country 97.9) Pocomoke City, Md. – This came out of a search (which I knew would be fruitless) for the non-streaming WBEB (More FM) Philadelphia. If your level of radio geekery has already brought you this far, you probably already know Kemosabi Joe. He was the PD/morning man of WZYQ Frederick, Md., an airchecker’s favorite of the ‘70s and ‘80s. A decade ago, he programmed Ocean City’s The Wave, perhaps the deepest oldies FM to exist under the auspices of Clear Channel. This morning, he had just segued from his regular show to the 10 a.m. swap shop program, where the offerings included two .38 pistols and, because it was the Eastern Shore, the queries included crab-basket lids.

WDJR.net Rockford, Ill. – I found it by starting to type WDJX Louisville. Just based on the sheer number of available stations, my chances of landing on a country outlet were obviously pretty good, but I didn’t end up at country WDJR Dothan, Ala., but this online urban AC. Like many similar stations, it was minimally produced, but the music mix ranged from Southern soul artist Marvin Sease to Silver Convention’s “Get Up and Boogie.”

Kill Rock Stars Radio – When you start to type KILT Houston, you get a disarming number of stations with the word “kill.” There was “Kill Radio” (“anti-corporate radio since 2000″), “Killer Radio” (“playing the killer hits”), and one of TuneIn’s own ventures into branded radio in conjunction with the Portland, Ore.-based indie-label home of Sleater-Kinney. Programming blocs included “Riot Grrrl Radio” and “Kill Indie Folk Stars”

WSHE Fort Lauderdale — The seed station here was the new AC WSHE Chicago. The station I found was online-only classic rock inspired by the Miami rocker of the ‘70s and ‘80s, one of several stations built around classic Miami call letters. And as my day’s worth of listening had begun, it ended with more classic rock that you don’t hear on the radio (“Thunder Island,” “Like It or Not” by Genesis).

Why It’s Hard To Avoid Two Of The Same Publicado por Scott Wirt en febrero 19th, 2015

By Sean Ross (@RossOnRadio)

It is the thing that I most often notice when I monitor radio stations.

It is the thing that I most try to avoid when I am scheduling music myself.

It’s hearing “two of the same.”

Sometimes, it’s two records that literally have a similar feel. With the proliferation of dense, midtempo records at mainstream top 40, it’s hard not to encounter “Jealous” next to or near “Blank Space” or “Style.” (At least artist separation keeps “Blank Space” and “Style” away from each other.) Country has its own glut of similar feeling titles— enough to result in the now infamous mash-up of “bro country” songs.

But even at gold-based stations, which aren’t at the mercy of current product, two songs that didn’t sound alike at the time can become two of the same. In winter 1977, “Carry On Wayward Son” by Kansas and “Walk This Way” by Aerosmith were both on top 40 radio and wouldn’t have sounded like the same song next to each other. But on the “Greatest Hits” station I schedule, they represent essentially the same thing. Even if era separation keeps them a song away from each other to begin with, it’s two of the more rocking songs on the station in close proximity.

Recently, I came across an aircheck of WNBC New York from fall 1978, a particularly mellow era for top 40, and a time when rotations were still managed by on-air talent. The first five songs were:

Abba, “Knowing Me, Knowing You

Toby Beau, “My Angel Baby

Ambrosia, “How Much I Feel

Andy Gibb, “Love Is (Thicker Than Water)

Little River Band, “Reminiscing

The Abba and Andy Gibb songs are more intense than the others, but that hour was full of the lush, midtempo ‘70s music now parodied as “yacht rock.” Later in the aircheck, Donna Summer’s much peppier “MacArthur Park,” Wings’ “Live and Let Die” and Meat Loaf’s “Paradise by the Dashboard Light” all make an appearance. But by then, it doesn’t matter. The overall feel of the hour is sedate.

“Two of the same” is like the old joke about mismatched socks: if you have one pair, you have another pair that looks just like it at home. If you encounter two similar songs back to back on a radio station, you’re likely to hear a different example later on – the dreaded “stretchiness” that is always easier to detect in somebody else’s editing of a music log.

Earlier this week, I came across a twitter exchange begun by WLUP Chicago morning newsman Rob Hart, who wrote, “’Uptown Funk’ is a good song and all but it needs more airplay.” That led Ken Neadly of Southsidesox.com to respond, “I enjoy the song. There are very few new songs I like, so I don’t mind the overplay.”

I’m not burnt out yet on “Uptown Funk.” The Mark Ronson/Bruno Mars hit sounds like a lot of other songs:  it’s practically an early ‘80s R&B mini-mix come to life. It’s also hardly the only example of retro R&B-flavored pop, which has become a subgenre unto itself in the last five years. But all those ‘80s R&B songs aren’t playing on top 40 radio. And the other retro soul songs at the moment tend to be ballads. So unless you’re hung-up on playing an ‘80s throwback next to the two Meghan Trainor songs that sound like early ‘60s girl-group records, “Uptown Funk” has a pretty good shot at not sounding like the song next to it on the radio.

And in that example, it’s easy to see how “two of the same” is subjective for most people, or happens even to PDs who feel they have thoroughly sound-coded their way around any problem. Should “Happy” and “All of Me,” two R&B throwbacks been kept away from each other, even with their very different tempos? “Habits (Stay High)” and “Blank Space” feel like two of the same to me. But lots of PDs undoubtedly have one coded as alternative and one as pop. And somebody somewhere probably still codes any Taylor Swift song as country.

Some PDs probably aren’t sweating these questions at all. Why not overindulge the “sound of now,” they might ask, especially if it will correct itself in a few months? Was it a problem when all the hits were 110 bpm “turbo pop”? (I think so, but it did bother me less when the two similar sounding songs were “Only Girl [In The World]” next to “DJ Got Us Falling in Love.”) Why wouldn’t you play one song people like next to another song they’re also likely to enjoy? Isn’t hearing similar songs the whole point of Pandora?

I can only say that if listeners don’t immediately sense what radio people do, that’s because they’re not supposed to. They don’t notice a lot of the detail work done by professionals in any field, unless there is something wrong. But seeing the “bro country” mashup take on a life of its own outside the industry suggests that listeners notice eventually. So do all the complaints about the stately pace of this year’s Grammy Awards, which were, like programmers, only working with the available product.

There are a lot of places, from Pandora to other narrowly drawn online stations, to hear two-of-the-same, if that’s really what you want. For the rest of the audience, offering a song-to-song variety of strong music isn’t just part of the reason we put work into editing logs, it’s increasingly one of broadcast radio’s points of differentiation.

The Secrets Of The Address Book Publicado por Webmaster en febrero 4th, 2015

Where Broadcasters Landed, Who Disappeared, And What It Says About The Industry

By Sean Ross (@RossOnRadio)

In the radio and music business, a contacts list is never just names and e-mail addresses. Even when radio and music were at their least volatile, any industry person’s address book was a testament to a business in constant flux. Rolodex cards (back when they were rolodex cards) often had contact information scratched out and updated by hand not once, but several times.

Then, in 2009, the economy’s scariest times exacerbated trends that were already happening in our industries. That year, a dismaying number of radio friends stopped having industry addresses and became part of a growing “Gmail Nation.” On the record side, ad hoc indie labels or rent-a-labels sprang up to take advantage of both the label and artist talent that was suddenly available. It wasn’t uncommon, especially in Nashville, to update somebody’s business e-mail address a few times a year.

I wasn’t looking for trends when I set out to update my Outlook contacts last February. It was both a long-delayed housekeeping task and an attempt to get back in touch with some industry friends. Instead, it took nearly a year of outreach during off-hours. In doing so, I cleared out about 15% of my address book – not just people who’ve left radio, the music industry, or music journalism, but people who weren’t easily found at all. The missing names and some of the people I reconnected with say a lot about how, and how much, our industries have changed.

I caught up with a lot of people on LinkedIn, with some help from the industry directory at AllAccess.com (and, to a lesser extent, other social media). LinkedIn was best for finding those people not currently at a radio station or a record label—some of whom had been through major career changes since their most recent “formerly of … ” listing in All Access. All Access was best for tracking down radio people with common names, of the sort not easily winnowed down in LinkedIn. Also for finding people with names like “DJ D-Structo.”

What I found was alternately dismaying and encouraging. The contraction of the broadcast and music industries is already pretty well evident. The encouraging part was seeing how many radio and music people had made seemingly positive transitions. For some, anyway, there was definitely life after radio. But it was dismaying to see exactly which sections of the industry had the greatest professional instability.

Hiding in Plain Sight?

For starters, there were some well-known broadcasters who had disappeared from the industry rolls altogether – some likely hiding in plain sight merely by deleting any reference to their “radio names.” Among those I couldn’t track down were a few once-prominent consultants and several major-market GMs. There were also those people who you thought would always work: the program directors whose job moves were a regular presence in the trade magazines, until they suddenly weren’t. There were also a few broadcasters who had kept their profiles up between jobs by commenting regularly on message boards, then, seemingly, ran out of enthusiasm and disappeared entirely.

Also missing were a number of once-prominent assistant PD/music directors, people whose gatekeeper positions had always carried a certain amount of clout. Off-air APD/MDs had always been particularly at risk when budget cuts came, but some of the missing were air talent as well. There was one APD in particular whom I remembered discussing in a competitor’s conference room as a possible PD candidate. Had he really turned down multiple offers, as we speculated? After leaving the “station he’d never leave,” the APD now appears to be out of radio altogether.

There were several groups of people who were particularly likely to have left the business and/or become hard to find. The first was urban radio PDs and MDs. Their format was one with only a handful of outlets in most markets, a large number of syndicated dayparts, especially in urban AC, and a (mostly) contracting number of stations. A friend who left a prominent R&B radio job and I were commenting on somebody who’d just been hired elsewhere. That PD, my friend noted, was returning to the business after four years. When somebody tells you that, it’s hard to be encouraging.

The radio writers I had spoken to a decade ago, when radio was more often a story in the consumer press (and often a negative one), were usually easier to find. But many had left the newspaper business as it contracted, some as far back as six or seven years ago. Among radio writers, there was a rough split between those who had gone to other full-time jobs and those now freelancing. Few were still covering media on a regular basis.

As for iHeart Media, the target of so much consumer press ire in the era when radio was still a regular beat, the company then known as Clear Channel was not the last known professional address for the majority of those I was unable to track. That was actually the former Citadel Communications. If your e-mail had not changed from Citcomm.com to Cumulus.com in 2011, when that company was absorbed, you were more likely than your peers to have disappeared.

Even though the word “retired” has become the new “exited”– the word that obscures whether certain broadcasters are leaving of their own volition — there were the number of genuine retirements you would have expected in the last decade. Broadcasters I’d known from the Northeast now showed addresses in Florida. Then again, during this project, there were several prominent “retirements” that ended abruptly after the retirees showed up across town or elsewhere.

Moved On for What?

For those radio writers who had landed elsewhere, public relations remains a popular destination. In fact, it was also where a number of radio people had ended up. But even though the corporate communications departments of most major broadcasters have expanded in the last decade, most PDs or GMs who had made that transition had to go outside the media world to do so.

Some of the other after-the-biz jobs were the ones that broadcasters always talk about when they’re fighting to stay in radio, or ready for a change. There were indeed a handful of broadcasters who had gotten their real-estate licenses, or gone from selling radio to selling cars (or, in one case, the sales manager of a Harley-Davidson franchise). There were also one or two who had tried realty and returned to radio or moved on to something else.

But other transitions took some of my contacts further afield. And some unlikely paths were travelled by several. There was more than one military-related transition, including a “senior intelligence analyst” and a former streaming audio provider now working as a civilian contractor in Afghanistan. I came across more than one person working in some manner with Alzheimer’s patients, including label veteran Cheryl Khaner, now CMO at a company specializing in music therapy.

There were other health-care transitions: the community relations coordinator for a Canadian hospital; the CEO of a service that provided pre-packaged, nutritionally balanced meals; a label rep turned “senior services provider”; and one former Canadian promoter involved in alternative medicine for pets as well as her provincial equestrian federation.

It was hard to assess every career arc I came across. A LinkedIn bio can often obscure the difference between entrepreneurship and underemployment, or whether describing yourself as “assistant manager” for a restaurant chain means overseeing a region or a night shift. But I found myself pleased for some former colleagues with pleasing regularity.

Throughout 2014, I made myself a list of the most interesting jobs now held by my former industry contacts. They included:

  • The senior director of the Nashville Opera;
  • The executive director of the Oakland Museum of Children’s Arts;
  • The executive director of Tickets for Kids Charities;
  • The lead investigator at the market’s Human Relations Commission;
  • Box-office operations for the Oakland Athletics;
  • The VP/GM of Amarillo Bulls Hockey;
  • The owner of a branding consultancy for small businesses;
  • The director of music for Buffalo Wild Wings;
  • Program manager for an online program at the Los Angeles Film School;
  • A federal agency’s “chief of development” overseeing “110 engineers and $200m in contracts”;
  • The director of sales for the Catholic Standard newspaper;
  • The director of sales for the MIT Technology Review;
  • The senior sales manager of Amazon Local in a major market;
  • The VP of marketing for David’s Bridal;
  • The senior VP of sales for NetJets;
  • A campaign manager overseeing programmatic buying for Internet radio;
  • The operator of a winery;
  • A well-known programmer now a VP of marketing to the HVAC industry;
  • The communications consultant to the Georgia Baptist Convention;
  • The head of a Biblical-based counseling program;
  • A label person-turned-Web designer;
  • A small-label owner and hip-hop producer turned investigative journalist;
  • Deputy general counsel for the Massachusetts Department of Telecom;
  • A move from Irish radio to the offices of “Discover Bundoran”;
  • Executive assistant at the World Poker Tour League;
  • A regional marketing manager for Del Taco;
  • A social media marketing specialist for Nestlé
  • An electric vehicle “infrastructure planning and development strategist” — this was a former colleague. I’d never known he had any aspirations in this area, but then again, he wouldn’t have known that I would have been interested.

What’s So Good About Goodbye?

Even a successful transition can carry with it some ambivalence. Early on, I congratulated a radio friend on landing in social media. He wrote back, “Hey, I had to work.” It’s not uncommon to come across an ex-radio or record person leaving because of unhappiness with what the business has become. It’s rarer to find somebody who spent 20 years there, but never cared for it in the first place.

It became clear to me through this project that there is a tendency to think of anybody not working in radio as still “unemployed,” or at least underemployed. And while too many of my industry friends do fall into one of those categories, many others seemed to be no such thing. They just weren’t appearing in the radio or music trade publications any longer. Then again, if your successful career wasn’t at a chart-reporting station in a current-based format, you might have been off the industry’s radar anyway — such is the sometimes self-absorption of these businesses.

The good and bad news here is that there is no one career arc for ex-industryites. To some extent, that’s because my contacts came from three intersecting industries, although it was not uncommon for both record and radio people to end up in some of the same types of jobs, especially radio sales people and record promoters. But for those still contemplating the next step, there might be some encouragement in knowing that if there is no obvious next job, a less obvious one may await.

En caso de que te lo perdiste: Programación de Entradas Publicado por Webmaster en enero 26th, 2015

Por Paul Ziino

Muchos clientes MusicMaster utilizan las reglas de protección Segue para asegurarse de no continuar canciones lentas con canciones rápidas o prevenir a artistas femeninas de jugar consecutivamente. Pero, ¿has considerado usar protección Segue a coincidir con los tiempos de los intros de la canción apropiada? (Read more.)

10 Pasos a la perfección de MusicMaster Publicado por Webmaster en enero 24th, 2015

La versión en inglés de nuestra serie de tutoriales, los primeros 10 pasos para la perfección de MusicMaster, esta finalmente terminado! Estamos muy contentos de tener Duncan Allen de MTV, EN EL REINO UNIDO como maestro de la serie.

Duncan ha estado utilizando MusicMaster desde hace mucho tiempo, que comparte algunos de sus conocimientos con todos nosotros en estos tutoriales. Los tutoriales a través MusicMaster, de instalar el software, a la avanzada de reglas del Árbol, a la edición de su registro final. Después de ver estos 10 pasos que debe ser fácilmente capaz de configurar su propio sistema de MusicMaster.

Puede tener acceso fácilmente a estos vídeos, así como una versión de ellos en alemán, en MusicMaster.com u ONAIR.de. ¡Y por favor no dude en mirarlos como quiere!

Ho! Ho! Ho! The Traditional ON AIR Christmas Party Publicado por Webmaster en enero 23rd, 2015

It was a wonderful day cruising from Christmas market to Christmas market in a historical yellow double-decker bus from the 60s.

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After finishing the tour, everybody went for a traditional German goose dinner into one of Berlin’s coziest Restaurants. We all had a blast!

Thanks to the MusicMaster family members from the USA, Poland, Switzerland, Netherlands, Italy, and Germany for making this a very special day!

Here a part of the crew on a Christmas market in front of the Charlottenburg Castle at a nice Glühwein stand!

christmasparty

Flying North for the Winter Publicado por Webmaster en enero 22nd, 2015

Team MusicMaster Worldwide continues to visit radio stations and software partners in our quest for product knowledge and better automation interfaces. MusicMaster’s Shane Finch and Jeff Schroeder crossed the border to visit OMT Technologies in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

DSC_5104

Standing left to right: David Borges, Gordo Fry, Greg Boyd, Renel Choiselat, Bill Baines; Kneeling left to right: Jeff Schroeder, Shane Finch, Gary Kristiansen

OMT Technologies is a solutions provider to the broadcast media industry across North America and Internationally. Many MusicMaster users are familiar with the iMediaTouch Radio Automation System and Digital Logger, iMediaLogger.

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MusicMaster’s Shane Finch with OMT’s Gary Kristiansen and Renel Choiselat.

MusicMaster enjoys partnering with OMT as various broadcasting conventions, including the NAB Radio Show in Las Vegas.

A-Ware and ON AIR join forces again for another 10 years! Publicado por Webmaster en enero 21st, 2015

anothertenyears1
Here are Joe Knapp and Rainer Eichhorn while signing the extension of their contract for another 10 years. They have now worked together for over 25 years and have lots of great plans for the next 10 years. The whole ON AIR team is happy to work with a company like A-Ware and with people like Joe Knapp and Scott Wirt.

Visions, Trust, Work, and Fun is what these two companies shared from day one of their cooperation and it will be the
basis for the future as well!

During the visit of Joe and Scott in Berlin for the traditional ON AIR Christmas Dinner, they took the chance to discuss some plans for next year’s activities.

anothertenyears2

5.0sr14 is now Available Publicado por Webmaster en enero 20th, 2015

icon_checkGo to Help, Check for Update to get the latest service release of MusicMaster Pro. This has lots of handy new features including the ability to click the Hour Selection bar in the Editor to the “now” time of today’s log while Instant Analysis can be set to show all panels no matter where the pointer is (see the Quick Tip for more details). Numeric and Currency fields are now right-justified. We’ve added a few more Special History reports as we continue to see MusicMaster used around the world and even added the ability to force a path when running the reports. We’ve improved RealTime, our in-studio component (thanks to WXRT Chicago for their assistance) as well as continuing to update our Nexus interface. Should you need any help with installing the update, please contact your Music Scheduling Consultant. Happy Scheduling!