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WAVV Staffers Depart Following Sale Closing

With the closing of Fort Myers Broadcasting Company’s $8 million purchase of Soft AC “Wave 101.1” WAVV Naples Park/Fort Myers FL, a number of staffers have exited the station. Only morning host Paul Conrad and a couple members of the WAVV sales team have made the move with the station to the new ownership as […] […]

US

Upholding Standards (And Launching Smooth Jazz)

WLML (Legends 100.3) West Palm Beach was one of my Intriguing Stations of 2014, not the least for launching an Adult Standards station in 2014, particularly one that concentrated on the Great American Songbook, not ’60s MOR or ’70s Carpenters/Barry Manilow soft pop. Pre-COVID, I heard the station regularly on trips to South Florida. Recently, […] […]

ASIA

Comrex launches new remote contribution solution to send and receive audio

Gagl, a new cloud service for remote contribution from Comrex, is now available for purchase. Subscriptions are available for $35 USD per month or $35 USD per year with a free 14-day trial.Gagl allows between one and five users to send and receive audio from computers and smartphones. Each user receives their own mix-minus to hear other connected guests, and the Gagl audio is delivered to a Comrex hardware codec (such as ACCESS or BRIC-Link, usually ina studio).All participants can hear other participants and the codec “sends” audio back to them. Participants can connect and send audio by simply clicking a link using any common web browser. Gagl is designed to be used with consumer grade equipment, so contributors only need a device and a headset to get on the air.It uses the Opus audio encoder, with a bit rate that delivers both voice and music in excellent quality. Gagl also delivers audio directly to aComrex codec with all the stability enhancements, pro-grade audio connections, and features that hardware codecs provide. The simple user interface makes it easy for users with any level of technical experience to use.Gagl could be used as the hub for a news program or for a morning radio show to support multiple simultaneous contributor connections. Because it offers low latency, it’s appropriate for call-in talk radio. Gagl could also be used to allow a single contributor to connect back to thestudio from a computer or smartphone.Gagl works with Comrex hardware IP audio codecs including the AES67-compatible ACCESS NX Rack IP audio codec and ACCESS MultiRack multi-channel IP audio codec as well as the BRIC-Link series. […]

ASIA

Evolution of The Relaxing Music Format

Content from BPRRelaxing music radio was a fairly new format idea in the late 1980’s. Early relaxing music stations played mostly New Age and Jazz Fusion recordings, most of which were instrumentals. One of the pioneers of the format was The Wave in Los Angeles which debuted in 1987. The station created a lot of interest because it sounded so different from all other radio formats of the time. It provided a stark contrast to the Rock, Oldies and Contemporary Hit stations of the time. The format was known in the business as NAC (New Adult Contemporary).Subsequent relaxing music stations soon learned that the combination of New Age and “Smooth Jazz” (a new name for Jazz Fusion) was insufficient in the quest for a greater mass appeal audience. The emergence of PPM ratings technology (so-called People Meters) showed that audiences of the format were very passive and listeners had little allegiance to “relaxing” stations perhaps because the brand offering was so limited in content. In effect, the original format was similar to the music streaming services that offer a constant flow of the same style of music.One of the problems with the original relaxing music concept was that listeners were mostly listening at specific times and under specific circumstances such as late evenings before bed time. This severely limited the degree of listener engagement and loyalty to the station. NAC stations suffered from poor conversion of weekly reach to P1 listening status.In time, NAC stations realized that their target audience was being drawn away by the emerging Adult Contemporary format stations. AC stations differed from NAC stations because the AC stations played pop vocals. Additionally, AC stations were able to present a playlist with a somewhat broader tempo and dynamic range than NAC stations. As the years passed, the music tastes of the AC target audience changed and AC stations began to play more and more up-tempo songs by pop and pop rock artists.Meanwhile, NAC stations were moving away from New Age and Smooth Jazz. They added an increasing number of familiar vocal hits that appealed to the target demo (usually 25-54). Although the energy level and tempo of these vocal hits had to be limited in order to fit the format, vocal hits offered a key component common to almost every music format and that is familiarity. Listeners could now hear songs that they actually knew and with which they could sing along. The introduction of news and information segments and live presenters expanded the brand offering.The term Soft AC soon replaced the term NAC. Station brand names also had to change. The word “soft” unfortunately has negative connotations for some potential listeners. Soft implies weak and ineffective. As a result, brand names such as Relax, Smooth and The Breeze emerged. Positioning statements evolved into lines such as “the feel good station”. The benefit of “feel good” is that it does not necessarily imply any specific music style, tempo or energy level. It just makes you “feel good”.Today, some of the most successful Soft AC stations fill a void between contemporary hits and oldies formats. They attract audiences that have outgrown a steady stream of contemporary hits and they also attract listeners who are not quite ready for oldies nostalgia. The demographic center of the audience is most often 35-44 with a slightly larger concentration of women than men. However, the potential audience of a well-programmed Soft AC often extends to the 30-49 demo and beyond.It would not be an over-simplification to say that Soft AC stations are the new “easy listening” stations for listeners whose preferences fall somewhere between stations that make you want to dance, stations that make you want to fall asleep and stations that remind you of the good old days.By Andy Beaubien, BPR […]

US

BIN Promotes Andrea Coleman To VP/News Operations; Mike Stevens To Managing Editor

iHeartMedia’s Black Information Network has announced the promotion of Andrea Coleman to Vice President of News Operations and Mike Stevens to Managing Editor. Coleman joined BIN at its 2020 launch as a news anchor and was promoted to News Director in February. She has served as an anchor and reporter for CNN and WGCL-TV Atlanta […] […]