by James Leonard
posted 10/20/2012
WEMU courts younger listeners with less Coltrane, more Trombone Shorty.
The best of times for WEMU, then and now the jazz and local news public radio station of Eastern Michigan University, was during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, when weekly listenership peaked at 54,000. The worst of times came four years later, when Michigan Radio's WUOM dropped classical music for a news-and-information format. Its audience took off--and WEMU's plunged to 26,000.
Making matters worse, says station manager Molly Motherwell, "the average age of WEMU listeners is sixty and they have aged with the station. That's not unusual for a stable format and long-term staff. But it's not sustainable in the long term."
So five years ago, the station did a survey of its listeners. They discovered, Motherwell says, that the casual listeners "would tune in and out depending on what they heard. And they said they wanted us to talk less in the music shows."
"We had to take long, hard, painful looks at ourselves and really listen to ourselves," says music director Linda Yohn. "We've been known for presenting high-quality music forever, but the professionalism of the hosts, we really worked on that. For example, an announcer might repeat himself three or four times, and we worked hard on getting him to say it once. Less talk, same information."
And while the station still plays jazz, it's been updated to attract a younger audience. Instead of twenty-minute sets by Miles Davis or John Coltrane, its hosts now mix artists and play more young jazz musicians like Trombone Shorty and Marcus Miller.
"When we started to change, it took a while to convince old-time jazz fans," says program director Clark Smith. "But jazz changes. It's not just music of the thirties, forties, and fifties." This doesn't mean the station has turned to the avant-garde. "Nothing dissonant," Smith says. "Nothing jarring. Nobody strangling a saxophone."
WEMU's numbers began "reviving five years ago," says Smith. "The changes we made broadened the night and the day
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