DETROIT DEALERS PLAY DOWN CHART VALUE IN SOUND-ALIKE MARKET . . . SEPTEMBER 3, 1966

From the MCRFB NEWS archive: 1966

Detroit Dealers Frown on Detroit Radio Music Chart Value; Not Used as ‘Guides’

 


 

DETROITWhile local record merchandisers claim that area radio “Top 40 charts” are highly inaccurate, they say that they are able to live with the situation because no one in the Motor City market uses radio charts as a buying guide.

This lack of direct chart influence on record sales, according to dealers, is due to the relatively high number of competing Big Beat radio stations in the area – all offering slightly different formats and none having a clearly dominant influence as taste-maker in the Detroit pop market.

WKNR MUSIC GUIDE August 22, 1966

Sam Press, co-owner of the Ross Music Shops in Detroit, said that “There are actually three influential rock stations – two here and one in Windsor, Canada, competing for the kids’ attention, plus two very strong R&B stations. You have to remember that because of Motown, R&B is a stronger product here than it might be in other markets. So what you have is kids constantly switching dials between all these stations and not being dominated by any of them. A ‘Keener’ (WKNR) chart might have some of the most popular songs in the area on it but it will invariably be late in listing a big English hit which the kids have been hearing on CKLW of Windsor, and will likewise be late in listing a hot R&B number that has been exposed by one of the other stations.”

“What this means,” he said, “is that teenagers choose the best of several stations. For this reason we don’t have to buy according to anybody’s chart. The independent dealers in this town wait until they start getting requests before they will order anything – except something by a very hot artist.”

Asked if his customers would not seek out a competitor who already had the hits in stock, Press said: “The racks are even slower in getting current singles out – we can move faster than our competition.”

Not Used as Guide

Lou Salesin, a 35-year veteran of the business who owns Mumford Music Shop, said that he also does not use “radio charts as buying guides. I must ignore WKNR and the other lists; they are inaccurate for a number of reasons. Some of these inaccuracies could he eliminated -and I would like to see that happen, just for the principle of the thing.”

Sol Margolis, owner of the Ross Music Stores, told Billboard: “I only order what I get calls for, plus a minimum of new releases by established artists. To my knowledge, no Detroit dealer uses radio charts as any kind of a buying guide. We know better than to trust what those sheets say.”

Another dealer, who did not wish to be identified, said that “you simply cannot believe what the radio charts list. The trouble is that there are too many pop records being released. I think the manufacturers are working on some sort of percentage planning. They just keep churning the records out, hoping that 5 per cent or so will make money for them.

WXYZ SOUND SURVEY August 29, 1966

“As far as local charts are concerned,” he added, “we often see a record that hasn’t been shipped already on the sheet. Other times, we see stations keeping numbers on the charts long after they have stopped selling. They do this, apparently because they got on a record too late, and then refuse to admit that their influence hasn’t been able to keep it a hot seller. There are many complicating factors, but the end result is inaccurate charts. All the dealers know this, and they depend on requests and their own experience in the business to tell them how to buy.”

Chet Kajeski, of Martin and Snyder, a one-stop in Detroit, told Billboard: “I find frequent discrepancies on the radio charts. As far as I am concerned, they hurt jukebox operators in the area. By failing to list, and expose on the air, what is a legitimate ‘adult’ hit, they can cut down play on the boxes. This happens with a record that sells very well in the area, deserves to be listed on the charts, but doesn’t get listed because the stations don’t feel it is in their format.” Because such a record does not get the additional push of air play, its life on a jukebox is sometimes shortened.

“I don’t believe,” Kajeski added, “that many record dealers are affected by the charts in the Detroit area. By being inaccurate, these charts defeat their own purpose.” END

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Information and news source: Billboard; September 3, 1966

 

 

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