Had a chance to listen to about 10 songs in 45 minutes. My analysis of the format - for anybody who cares.
I heard three songs that could legitimately belong in the "oldies" format - "Papa Was a Rolling Stone", "Sugar Sugar", and "Backstabbers"
I heard one Contemporary Christian song from the praise and worship era. The station is also billing itself as "positive", so inclusion of CCM is not unexpected - but - aside from people who are members of churches, nobody listens to the praise and worship era of CCM, which in my opinion virtually destroyed the format. The songs would have a great deal of meaning in a worship service or home Bible study setting, but come off as ponderous, repetitive, and long on the radio. In other words, this was NOT a radio cut, unless you are on a praise and worship CCM station with an audience that likes it.
The rest of the time, I didn't recognize the cuts. In the past, I did a lot more radio listening. If it charted in the 60's, 70's, or 80's, and even if it didn't - I will know it. From the general style I would date most of them to the 80's, which is appropriate for a "classic hits" format, but not deep, unknown tracks like these. Because music videos kind of dominated the music scene, there are a lot of really bad 80's tracks that had great videos. But without the video on the radio, they are still just bad music. There is a reason why some of these never charted.
They played a teaser spot with two songs I recognized from the 90's. Somewhere along the line, I got this idea that 28 years is the cutoff for oldies, so 90's are a little young for an oldies / classic hits format.
Another teaser spot said that if you want to host your own radio show, contact them. That is bad news for oldies fans - look for this frequency to be jammed with more foreign language stuff soon.
I still don't think a three to four decade range will work. If you grew up with Elvis, you aren't going to like 80's. If you grew up with the Beatles, you probably hate rap. I think about a twenty year period is about the limit because you will hit a generation that way. A little 50's, lot of 60's and a few 70's works well for Cousin Brucie, for example. But playing a doo-wop fifties followed by Baby Got Back is not going to work - two different generations.
The station has a bad technical problem. It is mono, with only one channel in the audio. Reception roughly across the West Little York area from BW8 to Fry is terrible, and I, too, got interference from other stations.