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Radio is dead-Long live the Radio.pdf - Universidad del País Vasco

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Welcome to <strong>the</strong> third age of radio: understanding radio's present from radio's past<br />

<strong>Radio</strong> remains a significant way in which we encounter new music, and while <strong>the</strong><br />

radio market has seen considerable expansion in broadcast channels it has been character<strong>is</strong>ed<br />

by a consolidation in brands and musical diversity. Public service broadcasters<br />

and some commercial and third sector radio stations have taken advantage of<br />

<strong>the</strong> opportunities in creating new services. Yet it <strong>is</strong> in <strong>the</strong> ongoing developments in<br />

music services that <strong>the</strong> greatest innovation <strong>is</strong> apparent. It will be interesting to see<br />

what <strong>the</strong> next decade brings.<br />

Bibliography<br />

ARBITRON. (2011). “<strong>Radio</strong> Broadcasters Add Nearly 1.7 Million Weekly L<strong>is</strong>teners in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Past Year “, from http://arbitron.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=43&item=783.<br />

BARNARD, S. (1989). On <strong>the</strong> radio: music radio in Britain. Open University Press:<br />

Milton Keynes; Phila<strong>del</strong>phia.<br />

BARNOUW, E. (1966). A tower in Babel : a h<strong>is</strong>tory of broadcasting in <strong>the</strong> United<br />

States, to 1933. Oxford University Press: New York.<br />

BURNS, K. (2001). Jazz - A Film by Ken Burns, PBS.<br />

CURRAN, J. and J. SEATON (1997). Power without responsibility : <strong>the</strong> press and<br />

broadcasting in Britain. Routledge: London ; New York.<br />

DIGEST, R. (1927). Columbia System Ready To Go. <strong>Radio</strong> Digest. New York.<br />

DIMMICK, J. (1986). “Sociocultural evolution in <strong>the</strong> communication industries”.<br />

Communication Research 13 (3): 473 - 508.<br />

DOERKSEN, C. J. (1999). “’Serving <strong>the</strong> Masses, Not <strong>the</strong> Classes’: Station WHN,<br />

Pioneer of Commercial Broadcasting of <strong>the</strong> 1920s”. Journal of <strong>Radio</strong> Studies<br />

6(1): 81-100.<br />

DOUGLAS, S. J. (1999). L<strong>is</strong>tening in : radio and <strong>the</strong> American imagination, from<br />

Amos ‘n’ Andy and Edward R. Murrow to Wolfman Jack and Howard Stern. Times<br />

Books: New York.<br />

GABBARD, K. (1996). Jammin’ at <strong>the</strong> margins : jazz and <strong>the</strong> American cinema.<br />

University of Chicago Press: Chicago.<br />

GOMERY, D. (2008). A h<strong>is</strong>tory of broadcasting in <strong>the</strong> United States. Blackwell<br />

Pub.: Malden, MA.<br />

The <strong>Radio</strong> <strong>is</strong> <strong>dead</strong>. <strong>Long</strong> <strong>live</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Radio</strong>!<br />

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