By Bryan Farrish
Most people reading this won't know this, but vinyl (or "wax") is
actually growing in popularity. And radio, although it never totally
dropped using vinyl, is now increasing its use of wax in particular
formats. You may have even heard the scratches purposely put
on some urban or pop recordings to simulate real vinyl.
You may have guessed that hip hop and rap are the prime users
of vinyl. While this is true, pop, hot AC, electronic, ambient, and
even some mainstream-AC or country dance "remixes" can make
use of vinyl. The main indicator of the need of vinyl is how much
potential there is for dance club play of the club remix.
Starting with college radio, if you are doing hip hop or rap, then
vinyl is nice but not mandatory. Projects with vinyl will do a lot
better, but it's still possible to get most-added (and then chart) on
CMJ without ever pressing wax. Same for electronica (i.e.,
"RPM"). But due to the large number of college stations, it is
understandable that not all projects will have the budget for wax.
Commercial mixshow, however, requires vinyl, period. These
guys are your main leads into club play and record pools, and
indeed, they are sometimes the very same people who mix the
clubs (or run the pools) anyway. You can almost do mixshows
without even having CDs, but don't try it... you'll be sacrificing
some airplay. This applies to any genre that can spin in a
mixshow.
With commercial regular rotation, the use of wax gets back to
how much mixshow is being pushed at the same time. If mix is
definitely part of it, they you have to do wax. But there is also a
splash factor with wax which becomes important, and it ties into
the other standard marketing items like trade support: When you
have wax, you are taken much more seriously, even though for
regular rotation the stations are just going to dump the CD onto
their hard drive.
So for a basic regular rotation push, you can use just CD; for a
good push you must use CD and wax; for a serious push you
must push wax and CD to both regular rotation and mixshow (and
for a heavy-duty push, you have to work regular rotation separate
from mix, and you have to service and work each mixshow guy
separately... usually at their homes and on their cells.)
It should be noted that mixshows are not the same as record
pools. Record pools are for club servicing only; they do not cross
over to radio mixshow.
QUANTITY: For college, if you only do one piece of wax per
station, you'll need at least 200 to 300 wax (and CDs) for the
basic reporting panel of CMJ. If you want to hit each DJ with a
separate piece, you'll need more like 500.
For mixshow, if you are only servicing the mixers (and not the
PD/MD) and if you are only giving one piece per person, you'll
need about 600 pieces for the basic 300 stations that have
active mixshows which report to the trades (there are more, but
they don't report.) If you want to include the PD/MD, that's an
extra 2 per commercial station, or about an extra 300. Finally, if
you are going to be giving the mixers copies for them to give to
the clubs, you'll need an extra 300 to 600.
Keep in mind when you are servicing wax, you need to send it
(with CDs) in a priority box. Otherwise it may get delayed 2 to 3
weeks.
Bryan Farrish is an independent radio airplay promoter. He can
be reached at 818-905-8038 or www.radio-media.com.