#795. PNAU - Go Bang (#7, 2017)
83rd of 2017
Since early on in 2017, Australian songs have had a hard time reaching the ARIA top 10. The last one to do so just squeaked over the line at #10 for a single week before quickly falling back in line. That's been a common pattern too. Occasionally you'll have outliers like "Be Alright" (#986) but even they've become so few and far between that on most weeks, the best-selling Australian single is "Riptide" (#885) once again. There are just so few opportunities now for local artists to amass the staggering concurrent audience size needed to reach that level. triple j's Hottest 100 is one of the very few things we've got, and it's why "Go Bang" reached the ARIA top 10 for a single week. Not counting a guest feature on a ZAYN single by an artist who will eventually appear on this list a couple of times, the last Australian song in the top 10 was "Chameleon" (#851) almost a year prior. PNAU were doing some seriously heavy lifting for the rest of the team.
The title of 'Highest polling PNAU song' has changed hands 4 times. It was a real shock when "Embrace" was finally unseated by "Chameleon", but then perhaps a bigger one when this song went just that little bit higher, netting them their only ever top 10 finish. It's weird because this is the follow-up hit which lives to be in the shadows, but maybe "Chameleon" achieving further success beyond the polling cut off re-installed the drive to vote for PNAU in these things. Or maybe like me, people just like this one more. You can protest and point to the Hottest 100 of the 2010s, where "Chameleon" polled at #149 and "Go Bang" didn't make an appearance, but I'd argue that given the nostalgic lean of those poll results, it wasn't a fair fight to begin with.
This song feels to me like they found a successful formula with Kira Divine, and now figure they can build off of that into something new. "Chameleon" is a song that largely settles into its own groove and lets Kira take it from there. This takes the sometimes stale piano house trend and gives it a real kick into action. So much of it is the same chord played over and over again but it really elevates things. I did end up rating all of the PNAU entries pretty close to each other, it's really a matter of finding those slight variations on the formula and weighing them up. On a positive note that I didn't get around to mentioning before, Kira Divine actually is credited on all the relevant songs on most of the relevant platforms (YouTube remains unchanged). Better late than never.
#794. FISHER (feat MERYLL) - Yeah The Girls (#68, 2022)
81st of 2022
Speaking of formulae, FISHER mixed it up this time. No, the music still sounds like what you'd expect, but in 2022 he managed to poll two songs at the same time. This means I can look at their respective positions as an examination of their individual merits, rather than just an annual check-in with how FISHER stock is trending. I like this one less, ergo the polling position makes sense to me.
It did have me wondering about the titular phrase. Usually when you get these sorts of things immortalised in song titles, they're somewhat fresh and current, but it was pretty antiquated by the time this song came out. From what I can see, people have been using the phrase 'yeah the boys' for a very long time, but it was specifically around late 2016, with the proliferation of a Facebook group of the same name that the phrase really took hold in Australia. It really captures a certain set of low effort lad culture memes that I feel the internet has collectively moved away from. In any case, the gender flipped term here showed up shortly after with slightly less negative connotations.
I'm uncertain if MERYLL, the Dutch singer on this song, was familiar with the phrase before recording it. It appears that she didn't actually meet FISHER in person until 2023, and she wrote the song as a topline with the UK producer Bad Milk, and then it just ended up in FISHER's hands (or maybe someone else's? Let's save that story for a FISHER blurb I'm having trouble filling out) afterwards. MERYLL is typically a hardstyle vocalist and said in advance of the release that this was her branching out into something totally different. She's not so much singing on this song as she is regaling us with a mundane story. There's probably a shout out to "Can't Feel My Face" (#839). That song only peaked at #12 in Spain where the song takes place, so maybe it's just slightly more novel to hear it in that setting. The Weeknd's only #1 hit in Spain is "La Fama", his 2021 collaboration with Rosalía. The last actual line of the song is 'Girls on the game'. That's a phrase I can't see having been picked up outside of video games, but I wonder if FISHER extrapolated the title from it, giving the song a more viral launching point.
It's a solid groove but it doesn't move me much. Eventually I'll be able to pinpoint the little parts of FISHER songs that really click with me, but we're doing the bare minimum at the moment.
#793. Halsey - Hold Me Down (#42, 2015)
76th of 2015
Halsey was always destined for big things. Anyone who's managed to lock down a considerable audience before playing the radio game just has a huge head start. This song comes from Halsey's debut album which entered the ARIA Albums Chart at #2, this was months before Halsey ever had a top 50 single as a guest, and years before they had one as a lead artist. That's a big pulsating sign that's telling the record label 'Hey, this is a good investment you've got here'.
triple j had hopped onto the Halsey train a few months before that, so they may have played a part in that strong opening. It's where the station's idiosyncrasies come into play here. This song was Halsey's highest entry that year. It's because it's one of just two songs that got played substantially at the time. Whatever you think about "New Americana" or "Gasoline", they didn't really get a shot here. It makes this feel like a temporary stop gap. Halsey's on weighted training clothes until they go on to bigger things. For whatever reason, that didn't especially happen. A couple more of their songs in later years would end up in a similar position to this, but only one Halsey song landed substantially higher, in the top 20. So the dust has settled and this is still one of their biggest entries. Odd, that.
It's not a song that's felt like it's a star maker. If you're already into Halsey, then sure, but there's very little in the way of mind-blowing charisma or intrigue to it. It all feels very cold, slow and mechanical. I'll admit I had prerequisite disadvantage here. About a year before this song came out, there was a minor Australian hit song by KYA & LDN Noise, called "What I Live For". That song has the exact same hook at the end of its chorus as this, and with it being rather pulsating, just adds to this song feeling sluggish and tired by comparison. This gets a fairly standard passing grade.
#792. Olivia Rodrigo - traitor (#67, 2021)
82nd of 2021
2021 has always felt like a big turning point year for the Hottest 100. It's the year where TikTok solidified itself as the breaker of every hit song going forward, and it spilled through to triple j. A lot of the usual old suspects are shoved down the pecking order, and what we got to replace them were 5 Doja Cat songs and 5 Olivia Rodrigo songs. That alone is enough to leave a sour impression on some old heads hoping to have the pop hit machine filtered away from their periphery. Olivia Rodrigo especially might just be the breaking point. You can throw in past justifications for other artists where they made their name on triple j, but you really can't with Olivia. She's a former Disney star who had her first proper single (which I'll get to eventually) debut at #1 before she turned 18. There are no hard yards to be seen here.
Olivia tends to get a pass because most people seem to like at least some of her music. She's something of a genre hopping machine which in some cases has brought some very unexpected sounds to the top end of the charts. I've generally liked her music but I always find the albums a bit patchy. I do respect that she doesn't just bloat them for streaming stats. Thanks to this, you could make the argument that "SOUR" deserves commendation as the most streamed album of all time, because its least streamed song has over 350 million streams, more than any other album I think.
This was clearly demonstrated when the album was released, and Olivia's very small discography was vastly outweighed by the demand for her music, so people just kept listening to it over and over again. There are only a small handful of albums that have managed to land their entire track list in the ARIA top 50. Every song on "SOUR" charted for at least 4 weeks.
A lot of people don't like when whole albums dominate the singles chart. I think it's great. With so much general movement controlled by radio playlists, streaming playlists, algorithms, or in the past, the measurable visibility of a track on the iTunes front page, it's refreshing to see those mechanics interrupted by the true voice of the people. Most of those songs aren't part of that assembly line so you get to see something close to organic movement. Something it also does is gives you a chance to watch the relative popularity of different tracks in real time. It might start off being influenced by what's at the top of the track list, but before long, it's a question of how many people saved and replayed certain favourites, and the real picture shows itself.
It's why I found myself rooting for "traitor" at the time. Just like "Too Good" (#929), it was an album track that launched itself very high on the charts. In its second week, it climbed up to #5, overtaking one of Olivia's actual singles, and it stuck around in the top 10 for a good while after that too. Ironically it wasn't until it became a single that it started slipping out of the charts, and it makes sense. I've had times when I've owned an album, and a single release has shined a light on a deeper cut that I wasn't paying attention to at the time ("Teenagers" by My Chemical Romance comes to mind), but you just can't do it with this album. Everyone had already heard it all, the era of 'hey, here's the new single, start listening to that' has never felt more dead and buried.
Did I actually like "traitor" though? I think I did at the time. As was the case with most of her songs, it showed a new side that sounded fresh. It's all very silly and melodramatic. Taking a friend to task because they patiently waited until after Olivia broke it off to start dating her ex that there were clearly feelings for beforehand. It's the emotional maturity of Tony Soprano yelling to his therapist because his nephew started getting intimate with the woman he decided not to sleep with. Ain't it funny? I prefer to keep this one as a deep cut. The rest of her entries here have a bit more going for them.
#791. Kingswood - ICFTYDLM (#56, 2014)
77th of 2014
If you've never heard this song before and don't plan on changing that, I'll get it out of the way: It stands for 'I can feel that you don't love me'. Maybe you could figure that out anyway. Some conversational acronyms have a way of solving themselves, like we all have predictive text simmering inside of us. Actually I find it's much harder to decipher words when they're spelled out to you in quick fashion, it's too much to process when they spell out 'S-E-N-T-I mentality' in the first verse. But that's got nothing on "Party Started" by The Cat Empire, major props if you could keep up with the bridge on that song. I finally gave up this year and looked it up.
The Kingswood story is that of an occasionally raucous band who seemed to mostly only poll while at their most mellow. They've since taken that a step further and landed on a more country-twinged sound. The fandom hasn't quite followed with them, but they did manage to rack up 5 entries here along the way, so they've got a healthy showing.
As a fan of that raucous energy, this one puzzled me a bit. The most interesting thing about it is the title, while you're generally being robbed of any payoff to anything exciting here. Time has been a little kind to it. It reminds me a little of a 2013 song by a band that'll eventually appear here, operating on a similar scope of ideas. Not sure I'd ever want to try out the inferior product, but I suppose a little variety can be nice.