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Guest post by Fred Jacobs of Jacobs Media StrategiesBelieve it or not, I still have friends in the record label community, despite my lurid past as “The Classic Rock guy.”And just about every conversation is another Kabuki dance about whether radio plays enough new music versus whether there's any good music to play. It's a chicken-egg thing. Stations are loath to play new music they don't believe in. And labels won't continue to discover, sign, and record artists that aren't going to receive airplay.Of course, I'm talking about the world of Rock music. With Country, Hip-hop, and other genres, it's a totally different story as we saw the other night on the Grammy Awards show.Like many rock programmers of a certain age, I vividly remember the days when we didn't have enough current slots to accommodate all the great new music coming out. Scores and scores of artists had developed strong followings. The really good stuff by established groups had to get played – now. Cutting-edge stuff debuted at night or overnights. Everything else had to wait its turn.The debut of a new album from Floyd, Journey, or AC/DC signaled their respective fan bases to come alive, often waiting in line at record stores to be among the first to buy it. The announcement of a new single by the Stones, U2, or Bob Seger actually helped stations “set occasions” that would have been powerful had PPM been around during those halcyon days of Album Oriented Rock radio – or as it was known as back then, AOR. As a PD, getting your hands on that new song – even a minute ahead of the competition – served as a little victory.Back then, AOR excelled with 12-34 year-olds – the “sweept spot” of Baby Boomers. They were the target, long before the sweeping dictates of 25-54 buys clamped down on radio in the Eighties. They had money, interest, and enthusiasm for new music. And radio had their attention.Obviously, this was a completely different universe than the Rock format finds itself in today. Everyone made a lot of money. And played a lot of new music because it was plentiful, and the audience demanded it.