“…On one hand, both individuality and locality ruled; on the other hand, the socalled Suomi-rock, a national popular music style that became mainstream, blurred the boundaries between rock and pop, which meant that the same songs could be aired by very different stations (Tuominen 1993). However, in the 1990s, local stations started to form chains or were taken over by bigger stations, resulting in a corporate-based, strictly formatted commercial radio quality culture with playlists and rotation clocks (Ala-Fossi 2005; Kurkela and Uimonen 2009;Uimonen 2010). Kiss FM and Radio Energy, in particular, gave wings to the progress of formatted music radio when they, in 1995, obtained licences for their semi-national programming and expanded quickly into major urban areas.…”