(#musicindustry, #music, #radio) If you're a music addict, you probably hate traditional radio, for obvious reasons. And according to the latest stats, younger listeners agree. But this still remains a gorilla-sized format, and a major place for song discovery. And, as big conglomerates continue to spread into streaming audio and HD, its influence is showing resilience.
Consider the latest from Edison Research, which recently conducted a survey of 12-24s in the US - and then compared its findings with those captured a decade ago. A lot has changed, including the number of hours spent listening to terrestrial radio stations. But radio still ranks remarkably high in new music and concert discovery.
As you'd expect, total listening hours have tanked among younger listeners over the past ten years. In 2010, 12-24s are spending an average of 1 hour and 24 minutes daily on traditional radio, down from 2:43 in 2000.
Huge drop, right? Well, here's where the resilience comes in. The same survey found that 88 percent of those surveyed discover new music through traditional radio, a figure that narrowly falls short of personal recommendations (at 90 percent). But it easily tops formats like YouTube (72 percent), social networking sites (56 percent), and even internet radio stations from Pandora, Last.fm, and Yahoo Music (42 percent).
Then again, it's almost impossible to get big radio spins. But that's another story entirely. Complete Edison report here.

Comments Closed
Dan Thornton Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Interesting research - is there any definition on what forms a Personal Recommendation? Is it in-person, or is there some crossover between a recommendation from a friend, and a recommendation from a friend via a social network or to check out a Youtube video, for example?
I'm not surprised by the lower discovery scores for internet music services - they tend to be very good at providing a way to access music you already know you like, but I do wonder how the score will change outside the U.S to include services such as Spotify, which have made more efforts to allow social recommendation and sharing, or Apple's Ping, which is a more limited effort in the same vein...

trevor Wednesday, November 03, 2010
I'm really surprised by the Pandora and Last.fm stat, because they are all about discovery. If anyone's not playing the same old playlists its them.

Natasha James Wednesday, November 03, 2010
Radio is definitely important...even if so-called "Mainstream" formats SUCK. Most new artists I discover on NPR stations, which is still traditional radio. Like all media, we will see new outlets, but traditional radio will remain, much as TV did not wipe out theatres. Internet radio ADDS to radio, and "mainstream" radio will also become internet based as well as terrestrial. www.natashajames.com

@Valery__ (Twitter) Wednesday, November 03, 2010

@indabamusic (Twitter) Wednesday, November 03, 2010

@Valleyarm (Twitter) Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Peter Michael Thursday, November 04, 2010
What is the average top 40 terrestrial channel playing new every week? 2 tunes? it's low. there is just not enough variety in the typical top 40 channel to allow for much more than that. Yes, the top 40 channel has those top hit songs, and yes the normal joe catches it because they repeat it every 90 minutes, but that is not musical discovery to me, that's billboard top 20 being repeated to death by clear channel, and those few "top" tunes are sticking out in a person's mind and skewing the survey results.
wow, a depressing statistic indeed.

Visitor Thursday, November 04, 2010
Been that way for centuries. Except for the half-percent of us, people just don't want to be inundated with new music. Getting a little bit by accident is all most people want.

@ChicoSousa (Twitter) Thursday, November 04, 2010

@ON_twitt (Twitter) Thursday, November 04, 2010

oconnorrecords Friday, November 05, 2010
When standing on a street corner, when walking by a store radio from cars and radio splashs you with their media and you start hearing songs whether you like it or not....That creates familiarity which is one of the keys to new music discovery.

Radiopotato Saturday, November 06, 2010
With all of the ways to get new music today, I believe that this is the very last time traditional radio will ever come out ahead. The music world is run by social media, placement on TV and movies, and by commercial-free formats. Evolution is the future and everything will be custom-tailored to suit each personal desire.

nicoletti consulting Saturday, November 06, 2010
Wake UP..RADIO in all forms IS HERE TO SATY and Evolve...
any Questions ? Joseph Nicoletti consulting/Promotion p.o.box 386 Laguna Beach California 92652 USA musicbiz@cox.net ph 949-715-7036

@DeeannDMathews (Twitter) Monday, November 08, 2010
Deeann Dova Mathews
I have seen the power of this for myself

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