Other than NPR, I've pretty much given up on terrestrial radio. Of course, it depends on where you live...maybe, but the consolidation of radio has done to most of this medium what big-box bookstores and the Internet have done to small, independent booksellers. All of the predictable genres -- classic rock, adult contemporary, hip-hop, oldies -- are accounted for, but with a blandness, restricted playlists and ad clutter that makes them pointless to listen, plus compression/limiting to maximize loudness.herodotus wrote:And there are people who find commercial radio of every sort to be a form of aural rape.
Because as a member of the aforementioned fourth group, let me tell you, I find it much easier to find new music that interests me now then ever before.
Our most recent car, purchased in October, has Sirius/XM with six months free, and it has the only radio worth listening to. But I'm not sure it's really worth $13 a month, plus the economics of the satellite radio business are essentially untenable -- infrastructure costs are so high that no scenario includes profitability.
So Internet radio is the only solution, but means nothing in a car or being outside the house. Portable players are the only viable option, although the car noted above does have a 30-gig hard drive for music (wav, mp3, wma) and accepts both portable players and SD cards.
So, to me, radio is relegated to second place behind owning the music and having it available where and when we want. That's why there are hundreds upon hundreds of CDs and as many flac, mp3 files. A management nightmare, but what are the options.