Lew Dickey |
NASH FM, which launched last month, will focus on building
relationships with Nashville record labels, Lew Dickey said. The new station
depends on local labels for fresh music and views itself as the “promotional
arm” of those operations, he said.
“Content is incredibly important to us,” Dickey said according to the Nashville Tennssean. “We just look at it as NASH is good for Nashville.”
“Content is incredibly important to us,” Dickey said according to the Nashville Tennssean. “We just look at it as NASH is good for Nashville.”
The station already has had a cumulative audience of more
than 1 million, Dickey said, adding that a spike in country record sales in the
New York area followed the station’s launch.
The media company is hoping NASH FM will be viewed as “hip,
fun and accessible,” characteristics that will help it transcend country
music’s image and rope in new listeners, Dickey said.
“It has actually exceeded our expectations as this largely
transcendent brand,” Dickey said. “That’s one of the things necessary to bring
advertisers to the brand.”
Dickey shared his vision for the start-up station and the
NASH brand during a morning presentation at the Country Radio Seminar. The
annual gathering of country radio and music label executives and recording
artists concludes today at the Nashville Convention Center.
Last month’s launch of NASH FM in New York marked the first
time the city has had a country radio station in 17 years. With the addition of
NASH, Cumulus now controls a market-leading 84 country radio stations.
Read More Now.
Country Aircheck’s Daily Buzz reports Dickey was sked about
the company's management philosophy. "We believe in centralization where
it makes sense. We view corporate as quality control and strategic planning ...
every market is different, but the fundamentals that drive great radio stations
– sales, promotion, programming – are all the same. That doesn't mean you play
the same playlist in every market ... but there are a set of key fundamentals
that, if practiced properly, will result in strong performance."
As for the perception of Cumulus within the label community
he admitted, "There's probably a little bit of misunderstanding and maybe
some overreach on our part ... but that's not the intent and that's not the
steady-state of how we want to run the business. Radio and the label have a
symbiotic partnership. We are the promotional arm for the labels. We want to
have a very constructive relationship."
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