- Joined
- Feb 19, 2017
So, I figured I'd start a thread on my favorite music radio format. One that isn't all that much of a thing nowadays but was a big thing in the 80's, 90's, and even into the 2000's.
"Oldies" is all about playing the hits of previous eras and is part of the wider "Classic Hits" format that largely succeeded it in the late 2000's and all throughout the 2010's. But there is a difference. All oldies are classic hits but not all classic hits are oldies.
"Classic Hits" basically refers to any mainstream music that's more than 20 years old. At this point, guys like Smash Mouth and the Backstreet Boys can qualify as classic hits.
"Oldies" is more specific and generally is associated with the Boomers and Silent Generation and can best be described as the popular hits and beloved songs from around the birth of Rock & Roll to around the death of Disco (or about 1955-1980) although some of the earlier oldies stations kept their playlists limited to 1950-1969.
Generally any kind of mainstream rock, pop, or R&B from 1955 to 1979 can qualify. Certain specific genres would include Doo-Wop, the British Invasion rock artists, Disco, Motown, Rockabilly, and the original bubblegum pop acts of the late 60's and early 70's.
Some staples of oldies radio would include these songs...
"Oldies" is all about playing the hits of previous eras and is part of the wider "Classic Hits" format that largely succeeded it in the late 2000's and all throughout the 2010's. But there is a difference. All oldies are classic hits but not all classic hits are oldies.
"Classic Hits" basically refers to any mainstream music that's more than 20 years old. At this point, guys like Smash Mouth and the Backstreet Boys can qualify as classic hits.
"Oldies" is more specific and generally is associated with the Boomers and Silent Generation and can best be described as the popular hits and beloved songs from around the birth of Rock & Roll to around the death of Disco (or about 1955-1980) although some of the earlier oldies stations kept their playlists limited to 1950-1969.
Generally any kind of mainstream rock, pop, or R&B from 1955 to 1979 can qualify. Certain specific genres would include Doo-Wop, the British Invasion rock artists, Disco, Motown, Rockabilly, and the original bubblegum pop acts of the late 60's and early 70's.
Some staples of oldies radio would include these songs...
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