Homeless on the Range. One of my favorite Albuquer...
Homeless on the Range. One of my favorite Albuquerque radio station was 105.1 FM "The Range." I say was because once again the corporate suits have monkeyed with the radio dial and taken a great, unique station off the air and replaced it with something they deem more marketable. The Range was a "Classic Country" or "Country Oldies" station. It was refreshing to be able to hear "real country" music from Hank Williams, George Jones, Johnny Cash, Buck Owens, and Waylon Jennings without having to put up with the twangy overly sappy pop music that they call country nowadays. The Range also had a block of "Western" or "Cowboy" music shows on Sunday morning, one hosted by my friend Rick Huff.
How did I find out about this great loss to my community? It was weird to say the least. I have been without my car for the last two weeks, while it was in the shop getting the bumper replaced. So, I have not been listening to the Range in my car. Our bedside clock radio is one of these space age implements that takes a rocket scientist to program, and for unexplainable reasons, we wake up to the second best country station in town 107.1 FM. As I wake up this morning Tony Lynn, the morning jock, says he'd like to welcome all former Range listeners to the station. I immediately go, "What the...?" and jump out of bed and turn the living room radio on. Sure enough, there was some sort of Spanish language, morning zoo deal commencing on my beloved radio home. I felt cheated, I felt lost, I felt betrayed.
This isn’t the first time I have felt this way about Albuquerque Radio. This goes back to the early 1980s, when KRST dropped their great progressive rock format featuring everything from ZZ Top to Ian Drury and Blockheads, and such shows as the “National Lampoon Radio Hour.” This truly inspiring stuff was replaced by the bland “modern country” format it still has today. When alternative rock(actually that was before the term was popuar) station KBAC was changed to a blander classic rock format in the early 1990s, I was crushed. It eventually ran off to Santa Fe, became more folky and hard to pick up here, until it was given the 104.1 FM frequency. Finally, another great station. But that only lasted a couple years, eventually it was kicked back to Santa Fe, with a horribly weak Albuquerque translator, and 104.1 FM became “World Class Rock,” a bland adult alternative station. It lasted only about a year before it became yet another Spanish station. Oh and last but not least, Smooth Jazz 105.5 is now a Christian Contemporary station.
The Albuquerque Radio landscape now looks like this: with about 50 stations broadcasting, we have 11 religious stations, eight Spanish stations, seven news/talk or sports talk stations. Three formats dominate half the dial. The next category would be what I call “Old Music,” classic hits, be it rock, soul. disco or country from the 1950s through the 1990s. Most of these stations utilize the same short playlists repeatedly. Big Oldies and ED-FM seem to be exceptions, and ED-FM is especially innovative, with a huge playlist, incorporating about 35 years worth of music and every subgenre of popular music outside of country and jazz. With no DJs or talk, it is actually a joy to hear.
While I complain about the sameness and limited choices of commercially broadcast radio, I must take into account changing technology.
Radio is limited, but our music choices, through other venues, are becoming unlimited, or close to it. We have internet radio, satellite radio, and pay services like iTunes, eMusic, Rhapsody. There are even forty channels of music on digital cable. Maybe these services are exactly why commericial radio sucks, the commercial stations are giving up trying to specialize at all. Appealling to the broadest numbers is now the name of the game. Maybe this is why ED-FM is so successful. Not everyone is going to like everything they play, but there is something for everyone on that channel.
Maybe I’m a traditionalist. Maybe it’s hard for me to accept change. Granted, I have dabbled in the online version of XM Radio, I subscribe to eMusic, and my TV is often tuned to the Music Choice Classic Soul, Classic Country and Americana stations. There is hope for those that like musical variety. But, I still like variety when I get into my car and flip on the radio. Thankfully, there’s still KUNM, where I can at least listen to a different kind of music on different evenings, but let’s face it, radio just isn’t as much fun anymore.

