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The "Future of Rock and Roll" has no future...
Kinda sad for me...
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Re: The "Future of Rock and Roll" has no future...
This sounds very :devil: but I listen more to 97.7 now then I ever did... but it's now MAX FM....;) Actually, I was put off my some of their DJs in the early 90s. When Duran Duran released "Ordinary World" from the Wedding Album, the station wasn't going to play it. Then they asked for a vote. I called up and naturally said yes (I hadn't heard the single) - with a tired female voice answering. The Yes vote won and the single was played and all the while the two DJs talking over it - and then only playing about a minute of the song. Truthfully, the single wasn't the type you'd hear on the X anyway but how they acted was uncalled for. There were some of us that only listened early on to hear bands like DD when the regular stations wouldn't play them. The second time I had a problem with them was when I got a snotty email in response to finding out the name and title to a song. Usually 8-10 songs would be played in row - but I missed when the information was given. Basically, I was told that if I would "listen" better I would have know the information - and no they didn't give me the answer. :p:
But RIP... it was good in the beginning...:beerme: |
Re: The "Future of Rock and Roll" has no future...
I was already devestated when they went off a few years back. It was the best radio station in the world, bar none.
I don't wanna sound snobby, but I couldn't imagine actually listening to new radio today and expecting anything even remotely decent. |
Re: The "Future of Rock and Roll" has no future...
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Re: The "Future of Rock and Roll" has no future...
BUMP
Looks like it's coming back... http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.d...LIFE/310090039 WOXY.com will rock again BY JOHN KIESEWETTER | ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER The “Future of Rock and Roll” resumes at 10:10 a.m. Tuesday. WOXY.com, the Cincinnati-based Internet-only station that ran out of cash and shut down Sept. 15, returns to operation Tuesday after a deal with California-based lalaa.com, a CD-trading Web site. “We’re not going to change WOXY.com at all. We love the station,” says John Kuch of lala.com, which will invest $5 million to $10 million in WOXY.com in the next year. WOXY.com will remain in Cincinnati. The Internet-only station was born in July 2004 in Longworth Hall downtown after Oxford’s WOXY-FM was sold by the Balogh family earlier that year. “The people at WOXY.com are incredible taste-makers for new music and bands, and we want to keep that alive. It is an iconic radio station,” he says. Listeners again will hear original DJs Mike Taylor and Matt Shiv hosting music today. Program director Taylor will work 9 a.m.-3 p.m., followed by music director Shiv 3 p.m.-9 p.m. "DJ Princess” Barb Abney" has left town to work for Minnesota public radio station KCMP-FM (89.3), “The Current.” General manager Bryan Jay Miller had pulled the plug on the music last month, saying that a stand-alone Internet operation could not compete with Yahoo and AOL online music stations. He had been unable to find a “white knight” to rescue the station for months. On Sept. 20, five days after shutting down, lala.com entrepreneur Bill Nguyen expressed his interest on a WOXY.com message board. He came to town two weeks ago to talk to Miller and listeners. “The past three weeks have been surreal,” says Miller, 32. “Going off the air was the lowest of lows. I was doubtful we could work out anything at all.” Having exhausted all known avenues in late August, Miller says he “didn’t think much of” Nguyen’s initial overture. After meeting him, Miller changed his tune. “I thought: This guy is the real deal, and in sync with what we’re doing,” Miller says. Since Tuesday was the earliest WOXY.com could resume, “we decided to do it at 10:10 on 10/10,” Miller says. Immediately WOXY.com will revive live in-studio Lounge Act concerts, starting with Headlights at 4 p.m. Tuesday and the Purrs at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Kuch says lala.com will open studios in San Francisco, and perhaps other cities, to broadcast performances by West Coast bands. Started on June 8, lala.com allows people to search for CDs, songs or artists online. For each one of their own CDs they send to another person through the site, they will receive another in return, Kuch says. Every CD costs $1, plus a 75-cent shipping fee. lala provides stamped envelopes to ship the CDs. WOXY.com’s loyal listeners will help increase the CD-sharing business, Kuch says. “All these people keep coming back to WOXY.com as a trusted friend, to turn them on to new music. Now they can request the bands they hear on the WOXY.com Web site,” Kuch says. The WOXY.com has about 8,000 CDs, while lala.com has 10,000 to 15,000 CD albums. By the end of the month, WOXY.COM also will let listeners create their own radio shows to share with other listeners. The site will allow someone to assemble three hours of music which can be sent to friends, Kuch says. “We’re incredibly excited about WOXY.com. It was always a Top 10 online station listed by ‘Rolling Stone’ and ‘Entertainment Weekly,’ ” Kuch says. “This will give people a chance to hear more new music and new bands they haven’t heard before.” E-mail jkiesewetter@enquirer.com |
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