Bay Area Radio Airplay • 
    



Home

Return to Radio Guide

Mail-Off




Parade of Real-time Playlists

 

Sunday, January 01, 2012

Copyright © 2002-2012 Simpatico.blogspot.com. All rights reserved.
 
Name That Tune


You may notice a slight delay when this page loads.


Music radio stations only hear from their listeners on two occasions: when they want to request a song and when they have a question about the identity of a song (okay, they also call when there’s a contest). The identification part has become much simpler thanks to the Internet. Most radio Web sites publish a playlist of the most popular tracks of the week (refer to Bay Area Radio for our comprehensive radio guide). For those interested in the actual number of spins a song has received weekly at a particular radio station, they can check out the station’s monitored airplay at Radio & Records (radioandrecords.com).

What happens if you’re still not sure after reviewing a current playlist? And what about recurrents for which radio stations do not normally provide a playlist? You can verify any song by searching the Internet for audio samples and lyrics. Radio’s solution is to display information about a song in real time as you listen to it. Until such time when everyone has a radio receiver with this type of display capability, the Internet has come to the rescue.

Some radio Web sites continuously update a list of songs played during the last hour. That’s a good start, but what they need to do is archive such a list for at least the previous 12 hours. If you have a question while you’re driving, you may not be able to check the Internet immediately. That’s why this log needs to be maintained for more than one hour. YES Networks (yes.com) has done just that for radio stations that are already electronically monitored: It compiles and updates a station’s real-time playlist for the past 24 hours (there’s a 15-minute delay between the time a song airs and when its ID appears).

As technology continues to improve and become widely available, radio station switchboards may never have to answer another question about a song.

One-Stop Browsing for Your Convenience

We have compiled below a set of YES tool bars for all the local radio stations in the San Francisco Bay Area that are currently monitored by YES Networks.

Radio Airplay
Freq.
(KHz/
MHz)
Call Letters/
Airplay Monitor by YES Networks

San Francisco Bay Area
1170KLOK


1510KPIG


88.5KQED


88.9K205BN


89.1KBBF


89.1KCEA


89.7KFJC


89.9KNDL


90.1KZSU


90.3K212AA


90.5KSJS


91.1KCSM


91.1KRCB


91.5KKUP


92.3KSJO


92.7KNGY


92.9KFGY


93.3KRZZ


93.7KJZY


94.1KPFA


94.5KBAY


94.9KYLD


95.3KRTY


95.7KBWF


95.9KRSH


96.5KOIT


96.7KNOB


97.3KLLC


97.7KVRV


98.1KISQ


98.5KUFX


98.7KSXY


98.9KSOL


99.7KMVQ


100.1KZST


100.3KBRG


100.9KXTS


100.9K265CY


101.3KIOI


101.7KXFX


102.1KDFC


102.9KBLX


103.3KSCU


103.7KKSF


104.1KJOR


104.5KFOG


104.9KCNL


104.9KMHX


105.3KITS


105.7KVVF


106.1KMEL


106.5KEZR


106.9KFRC


107.1KSRT


107.7KSAN



Key
Top 40
(mainstream, teen, rhythmic, dance, adult)
R&B
(R&B/hip-hop, adult R&B)
Country

Rock
(mainstream, modern, triple-A, Americana)
Adult contemporary/rhythmic AC

Latin
(top 40, rhythm, AC, regional Mexican, tropical, oldies, news/talk)
Christian
(AC, top 40, rock, inspirational, gospel, news/talk)
Jazz
(contemporary, traditional)
Classical

Oldies
(top 40, rock, AC, R&B, country, disco)
Variety

News/talk

Noncommercial stations
(public/educational/religious: all formats)

If you see a blank YES tool bar under the name of a radio station, it means there’s a problem with the YES Networks server. We need an airplay monitoring service that’s a bit more Internet-savvy. Nielsen BDS and Mediabase, are you listening?

Note that some songs may be incorrectly identified. For instance, they may be attributed to the DJs who put together compilation albums instead of the actual artists. This is a clerical error—not a problem with the audio-matching technology.

Beware that if a song is not in the database, however, it will simply be ignored. It’s understandable that no airplay-tracking service could possibly recognize every song on the radio all the time. Any automated system would be stumped by a mix show; it’s a good thing radio stations have begun to publish their mix show playlists. Instead of leaving an imperceptible gap in the time line, YES Networks should clearly tag any failed identification—it’s worse to gloss over missing data.

Cool Web Surfers Don't Cut and Paste

Would you like to share this Web page with friends? Don't cut and paste. Provide a Web link to this page or refer to its Web address. We invite all content providers to join our "Don't Cut and Paste" campaign.

Copyright © 2002-2012 Simpatico.blogspot.com. All rights reserved.

Labels: , , , , , ,




Google



This page is powered by Blogger.