Radio Stations Winning With Classic Hip-Hop

Street Knowledge

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http://www.mediapost.com/publicatio...io-stations-winning-with-classic-hip-hop.html

Just as the classic rock format can still draw big radio audiences, “classic hip-hop” may be the next big thing in the radio programming world, judging by the events of the last few months. A string of stations have cleaned up, audience-wise, by playing the old-school greats of rap.

According to The New York Times, which first reported the trend, it all began in October when Radio One’s KROI FM in Houston dumped the news format for classic hip-hop, playing anthems and lesser-known gems from Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. Per Nielsen figures cited by the NYT, KROI’s audience soared from 245,000 to 802,000, while its market share more than tripled from 1.0 to 3.2.

KROI’s huge success was the signal for Radio One to switch a number of its other stations to classic hip-hop as well, including WPHI-FM in Philadelphia and KSOC-FM in Dallas. In the copycat world of radio programming it’s no surprise that other big broadcast radio groups are following suit, including iHeartMedia and Cumulus Media.

The former switched KMJM-FM in St.Louis and WSOL-FM in Jacksonville to classic hip-hop, while the latter dropped the Q100 format for classic hip-hop at 97.9 in Atlanta. In fact, the Atlanta market briefly went from having no classic hip-hop stations to three carrying the format, although one later dropped it.

Some programmers attribute the popularity of the classic hip-hop format to the loyalty of the original fan base -- mostly urban African-American listeners, who drove rap’s popularity as young devotees in the 1980s and 1990s. Now, as they reach their 40s, this cohort is reasserting their taste for the classics over more recent -- and perhaps lesser -- hip-hop artists favored by younger listeners.

Whatever is driving it, the emergence (or rather reemergence) of the classic hip-hop format is good news for urban radio broadcasters that have often struggled with declining ratings and advertising revenues in some of their key markets in recent years.

Discussing the failure of previous experiments with news formats in Houston and elsewhere in November, Radio One Alfred C. Liggins III admitted: “We just couldn't get any real significant ratings traction, and that's also kind of the history of these all news FMs in New York, in Philadelphia and Chicago, Atlanta, Washington. A great idea, but in practice, it really hasn’t proven out to be a winner.”

By contrast, Liggins noted that the switch to classic hip-hop began paying immediate dividends in audience growth.
 

CodeBlaMeVi

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They're doing it now with 99 Jamz in Miami. They call it throwbacks and keep older people who actually listens to the radio glued.
 

George's Dilemma

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This is also an indictment on the state of new music in Rap.
lol at the artist 90's babies like getting out done by old artist.
This didn't happen back in the late 90's early 2000s or ever.


Exactly, today's Hip Hop music is mostly sh!t. There's a reason why people will be listening to Nas, Big, Pac, and a ton of artists from decades ago. These current ringtone rappers are only good for a couple weeks or so before they peak out.
 

Turbulent

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might get higher ratings with the older crowd (which i'm apart of by the way) but don't radio broadcasters get more advertising money from advertisers targeting 18 to 30 year olds or something like that?

also, do people still listen to the radio like that? :heh:
 

Pool_Shark

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I want other stations to take notice and start giving people some variety instead of trying to beat you over the head with the same song every 20 minutes. KDay plays all kinds of songs they're not scared of giving people more than just the hits.
 

DANJ!

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might get higher ratings with the older crowd (which i'm apart of by the way) but don't radio broadcasters get more advertising money from advertisers targeting 18 to 30 year olds or something like that?

also, do people still listen to the radio like that? :heh:

This is the only way that format will thrive, by separating it from the other urban station. It can thrive the same way classic rock radio thrives,because hip-hop has reached that point where there's a generation gap massive enough for stations like this to work. It used to be that stations would try the throwback show, but the throwback show would always get lower ratings because it was on a station competing with the new shyt. When it's something like this and older people know where and when to tune in, it can do just as well as the oldie R&B station or classic rock. Even if the adults are splitting their time between this and the regular urban station, it'll still be a go-to when they're not into what the regular station is playing. Also, it might get some converts (i.e. younger people who'll discover shyt thru the station).
 
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