#740. Skegss - Here Comes Your Man - Like A Version (#90, 2019)
67th of 2019
I don't know if I've ever seen anyone explicitly say that they like to listen to specific artists for the gimmicks they provide (or at least, not in the mainstream realm). Even when this is in the equation, it usually takes solid songwriting beneath it to justify the passion. The funny counterpoint to this is that a lack of gimmicks becomes the perfect fuel to wage war on. Without it, you don't provide haters with a valid means to understand what gravitates people. You get lumped into a hypothetical b-tier and become the subject of low-hanging observations that very easily say what everyone's been thinking. It's why if you find someone picking on the triple j sound, Skegss are always going to come up pretty quickly. All of that in mind, it's why I don't find that sort of observation to be very insightful, and it's more interesting to actually look into the fandom mindset properly. People like Skegss because they write songs that succeed at being likeable within the space they operate. Well not this time at least, must be why it's the lowest of the 9 Skegss songs I have to talk about. Will I manage to find 9 things to say? Let's start by finding out.
Alternatively, let's not talk about Skegss because it's not their song, it's one of those perennial favourites by the Pixies. I'm the wrong generation for them, but I am old enough to understand that they're a beloved band that I'm supposed to hold in reverence. Saying this now has me thinking about all the possible bands of more recent time that are carrying this candle, because as far as likely backable artists of this calibre, your volume of options has increased a lot, but I digress and apologise to Pixies fans for the slew of hypothetical bands I just compared them to.
They have a lot of songs that are viable for continued appraisal. "Where Is My Mind?" is obviously the biggest one, it's big enough that during last year's ARIA Awards, they just turned up without being announced in advance to play it, since they happened to be in the country. I was having internet troubles and didn't get to watch the whole show, but that's the only thing I remembered. Most of my favourite Pixies songs are on "Doolittle". It's got "Debaser", it's got "Monkey Gone to Heaven", it's got "Wave Of Mutilation", it's got "Hey", it's stacked. "Here Comes Your Man" is also on that album. Not one I'd call a favourite, but not a song I've got beef with either. Well, admittedly the main riff is one that I might put into the overplayed basket, but there's plenty to like elsewhere with the song's shifting dynamic range. The backing vocals from Kim Deal feel iconic as well.
When it comes to Skegss take on it, it's about as faithful as it can be. The only real difference is that they start it up with a different intro. It can't help but sound a little like "I Touch Myself", and it polled in the same year as Lime Cordiale's cover of it (#969). It gives a little surprise gratification when the riff does come in, like you're being transported to a whole different era. I think the song choice is probably the most interesting thing here even if that's a low bar. As years have gone on, triple j have gotten fairly strict about the canon of songs that can be chosen as source material. "Here Comes Your Man" falls into an odd middle ground where it's a relatively well known song, but doesn't have recency or the credentials of being a chart hit behind it, so it's a song that could probably fall astray of those rules. You'd file it under a similar box as if someone covered "The Killing Moon", because a lot of people who might otherwise totally recognise it, just wouldn't click on it in the first place because it's just not *that* omnipresent. It's the kind of selection I can get more behind, and I wish we got it more often. There's a lot of value in teaching younger generations about the classic indie songbook. It's the kind of thing that turns people into obsessives like me.
#739. KIAN - Waiting (#20, 2018)
75th of 2018
In 2008, triple j launched Unearthed High. It was a competition with a simple premise, to find the best up-and-coming bands and artists that are still in high school, and reward them with accolades and attention. At a time when triple j was still dominated by major label acts with a lot of money and promotion behind them, it was always wholesome to hear something that felt like a true underdog in the system. The winner of the competition would end up coming to triple j's studios to re-record one of their tracks and polish it up for radio rotation, but the heart was still there. I think of the first two winners, Tom Ugly & Hunting Grounds. They were tidied up but there was still an undeniable feeling of being an outsider to the system.
Something changed in the 2010s with this. You're more likely to look through the list of nominees on any given year and find some big stars in them. The Kid LAROI, Montaigne, Thelma Plum, definitely notable. Some may dispute just how much of their success was cultivated before or after this stop gap, but there was also a growing trend of artists who felt like they'd already made the big time before they'd even won it. We'll later encounter on this list, an artist who'd already landed on the soundtrack to an American film, and another who had American producers working on their debut single. The quality can still be good, but you lose the fairytale appeal where someone can truly emerge out of nowhere, connections just win out every time.
When we enter KIAN, we get to introduce a whole different kind of beast. KIAN won in 2018 for the song "Waiting". By this point, he'd already had a Hottest 100 entry the year before, performing hook duties on a Baker Boy song I'll eventually talk about. Exploring one's own solo career obviously has merits, but we're getting very loose with the definition of Unearthed at that point. We're long past the point of triple j brushing up the tracks as well. "Waiting" already had a professionally done music video (it has 5 million views on YouTube now). He also set himself apart from past winners because the song entered the Spotify chart on the very day he won, and garnered strong industry support shortly after. He got signed to EMI, and aggressive playlisting allowed the song to spend nearly 9 months in the ARIA top 50. It's still true that one of the biggest Australian hits of the last 10 years was made by a high schooler, but it's the backdrop to a Cinderella story that's a little pre-meditated.
I do like KIAN's music generally, but I couldn't help but feel the artifice of its chart run stepping considerably over normal boundaries. You get a little jealous when it doesn't feel like the song is remarkable as the numbers are making it seem. In some respects actually the Hottest 100 result puts it a little in its place for not landing higher. 5 years later, Budjerah received a similar big label push behind his song "Therapy", and that landed 1 place higher than "Waiting" did at #19, but never actually reached the ARIA top 100 at all. It really puts some perspective on the difference between a top 20 hit and a non-charter in the streaming age.
"Waiting" is an odd little song. A lot of its hooks are built on a slight betrayal of expectations. When he lands on the 'you-ou-ou-ou' hook, his delivery and the music suddenly shift and it's like you've been teleported to a different part of the song. He leaves the title drop behind a call-and-response moment that feels distant, though effective. I think the song reaches its peak on the bridge. You get an odd addition of an electric guitar that sounds far less polished than anything else in the song, but the layered vocal lines give him a chance to really belt out those key lyrics. Changing up the backing music during the last minute of the song lets the repeated backing vocals land with a different energy.
KIAN never reached these highs again, so this is the only time we get to talk about him on his own. Every now and then he'll put out another song I really like. I'm especially fond of his 2020 single "Sunbeam", which feels like a perfect pastiche of BENEE's sound to that point. I'm just a sucker for that kind of breezy guitar sound that I can't describe without using a word that's in one of those BENEE song titles I'm not yet to talk about. Something about it though, my brain just lets it in once again.
#738. Tash Sultana - Pretty Lady (#46, 2020)
68th of 2020
It wouldn't be unreasonable to say that there's a certain expected sound you get from Tash Sultana. A lot of big guitar loops that take over the whole song, sometimes for minutes at a time. It tracks that they had such a big smash into the Hottest 100 on their first EP but lowered the ceiling considerably after that, you just get tired of it after a while. With "Pretty Lady", they managed to successfully update their sound without much trade off in audience, this is their 3rd most streamed song on Spotify by a comfortable margin.
It made me wonder how the album "Terra Firma", released in 2021 fared. It was a career first ARIA #1, helped by the fact that it wasn't released on the same week as a new Eminem album like the last one was. Hottest 100 voters didn't stay on board though, with nothing making any voting impact after this first single. I guess it's easy to say that the hooks just aren't quite up to the same standard.
I wanted to listen to the album to see whether "Pretty Lady" was a misleading lead, and I don't think it is. The main thing I notice with this song is more attention given to the percussion and bass. Often times in Tash Sultana songs, you can feel the empty space between the notes, but it's a welcome change of pace here. Not quite danceable, but more work done to keep a consistent groove in place. The whole album sounds like this, and I might even put in a good word for it if not for the hour long runtime having me ready to tap out a little too early. I guess I'll have to do what mostly everyone else has done and just stick with "Pretty Lady".
#737. BENEE - Glitter (#19, 2019)
66th of 2019
It's interesting to go back to the time when this song came out. It's fairly unique in hindsight. "Glitter" would be surpassed quite soon after by "Supalonely", but it was a major breakout hit for BENEE due to going viral on TikTok. It's one of those totally arbitrary ones where suddenly every influencer and then some, is required to make a video that's exactly the same as every other one, I assume so it can just keep popping up on For You pages. They call it a challenge as if it's remotely difficult. The real challenge for me is to try and sit through compilation videos like this. You can't turn the sound off, and you can't look away from the screen. See if the constant mugging, or having to hear the same 15 seconds of one song over and over again is what gets you to tap out. I genuinely just can't do it.
I'm not in complete denial of the appeal of TikTok but the ways that it interacts with music charts just feels so counter intuitive. Also unlocking the achievement of virality on TikTok for any song feels like it's to be bestowed onto the lucky few, but over the years it just seems like every major star who's still viable always manages to get something to click on every album cycle. Especially if they're Drake. Half-hearted challenges like these just reek of artifice. The hint is usually when the videos have little to no intrinsic link to the song. I think about "Nirvanna The Band The Show", a show that constantly gets away with outrageous usage of copyrighted material under the clause that it's so vital to the story they're trying to tell that there's no way it could be done with any other material. Seriously, there's an episode where they're just straight up filming a screening of "The Force Awakens", and play the famous John Williams score without ever having to pay Disney for it at all. Stuff like this, or the Mannequin Challenge using "Black Beatles" (#150 in the 2016 Hottest 100), just feels too convenient as vehicles for whatever hit song was desired at the time.
I got off topic there, but the unique thing about this song is that this all happened to it and it was a hit...but only in Australia and New Zealand. Something that's been written about a lot over the years is the way that TikTok's algorithm does not region-gate, and so every country (English speaking at least, I assume) gets very similar content fed to them, breaking apart those country-by-country quirks the charts always served up. The "Glitter" situation seemed natural at the time, but then following that it felt like it almost never happened again. Future instances of local hits here seem to almost always come with some clear international attention. It's possible in the case of "Glitter", it's a misnomer due to the fact that the song had already gotten some chart attention in these two countries, and so its minor (on the grand scale) virality could only be measured in countries where BENEE had some notoriety. On the other hand, it also makes me perceive this as one of the last hold outs for this kind of isolated popularity. TikTok didn't just uproot everything overnight, but it's been about 6 years now, so it's a way of life for a significant chunk of music fans now.
Whether it's organic or not, the presentation of hit songs nowadays as random incidents does invite a different kind of scrutiny. When the difference between a massive hit and absolutely nothing can be flicked out of nowhere at any time, it almost makes you want to be madder. A bad hit song could easily have just fluttered away and did nothing. If you're aware of it, you also get to live in fear that it's eventually going to be uncovered. At least there's generally a time limit for the Hottest 100.
"Glitter" is one of the lucky ones. I suspect it was always destined to poll in 2019, but with the timing on its side, it became BENEE's highest charting entry, and to date it still is. "Supalonely" on the other hand, was a touch too late and got the "Sweet Disposition" treatment by landing at #126. Two months later it was a top 10 hit. As it happened though, while a vote is a vote, it just felt like "Glitter" got an unfair advantage in the moment to have that machine behind it.
I guess I felt bothered too at the time because it was probably my least favourite song she'd put out by this point. I can't pinpoint it to any exact reason because I think anyone listening to it would be right to say that it totally sounds like all her other stuff. If there's anything I want to point out in particular, it's the main music loop that doesn't really change or have the same dynamic range as those other songs. The hook isn't quite as sticky either. On the positive, I do appreciate that she's still playing around with her vocal runs, and the random backing vocals on the last chorus ('late now!') are a highlight for sure. Just wish there was a bit more to chew on.
#736. Central Cee - Doja (#39, 2022)
74th of 2022
I don't dislike Central Cee. This feels like a controversial opinion because most of the time when he comes up, it's with this level of derision that he's not just a subpar MC, but that he's so bad that anything short of absolute disdain for literally everything he's ever made is an act of rebellion. That sort of dismissal is so unproductive and boring and yet I so rarely see it challenged. I've been frightened for months that I have to publish this post. There's always a good reason too, usually a dodgy lyric, a dodgy sample...or maybe both. Foreshadowing is a literary device in which a storyteller gives an advance hint of what is to come later in the story.
On the whole I feel like he's a charismatic rapper. His distinctive voice makes him stand out, and I guess I'm interested in what he has to say as well. He doesn't always paint himself in the best light. I think of a song like "Commitment Issues", where he's trying to be romantic but can't stop telling on himself. It reaches such absurd extremes where it's impossible to take any of it seriously. No one's piling on "It Wasn't Me" levels of bad behaviour and playing it straight. No one's calling their girlfriend a b*tch while trying to get us on their side. Foreshadowing is a literary device in which a storyteller gives an advance hint of what is to come later in the story.
Central Cee has managed to break boundaries in his sub-genre thanks to savvy marketing. It's no longer a novelty to see him land on the Billboard Hot 100 on the strength of his own following, rather than the kinds of one-off crossover hits that usually happen (think "Written In The Stars" or "Don't Rush"). It's something he's even leaned into in his music. On the collaborative EP he put out with Dave, the song "UK Rap" has a hook of 'She don't listen to UK rap if it ain't Dave or Cench'. If you say it enough, more people will have it ingrained into them. It's also not unusual to see his music on the otherwise very US-centric 'RapCaviar' playlist on Spotify, and there was that time he got a big budget music video with Lyrical Lemonade, with a song that says 'UK rap or UK drill, gotta mention my name if you talk 'bout the genre'. Foreshadowing is a literary device in which a storyteller gives an advance hint of what is to come later in the story.
I think sometimes when I'm writing these things, I leave out a lot of assumed knowledge that might not be clear to everyone reading this. Maybe you've never even heard of these songs. Maybe you have heard them but don't keep track of names all the time. I'll be straight with you now. This is the 105 second rap song that uses a sped up sample of "Let Me Blow Ya Mind" by Eve and Gwen Stefani, with the opening lyric that hits you like a ton of bricks to say 'How can I be homophobic, my b*tch is gay'. That's what we're dealing with here. Just that one line is enough to derail his entire career. Well it's maybe that, the notion of ruining the sample, the strange decision to name the song after Doja Cat, and the fact that this amounts to a line where he admits his attraction to her in a very embarrassing lyric.
Beyond Central Cee, I've grown weary of what feels like surface level music criticism. Specifically the way that certain songs act as honey traps for these. It always feels incredibly predictable and lacks any interesting nuance. Like there's this warped perception of what good and bad means, and it's the existence of specific hallmarks that signpost them. A song can't be bad unless its badness is something that can be immediately understood on the first listen, or just by exposing its broken gimmick. You can always figure out exactly when someone's stopped listening to new music because of what song they hold onto as the emperor of bad music. Every now and then I'll still hear Lil Pump's 2017 single "Gucci Gang" used as an example of what's wrong with music now. Some people are still fuming about being told to put a ring on it, and maybe we're bracing for a decade to come where "APT." is an insult to music. It all feels like it comes from a mentality where whatever the hallmark of good music is, be it singing prowess, emotional lyrics, sick riffs or whatever, every song has to be assessed as if it is trying to accomplish that. It's acting as if "Doja" is Cench's attempt to make "Shook Ones Pt. 2" or "Paid In Full", and just failed on a catastrophic level. Sometimes it's just not that deep, and it doesn't have to be.
I just think it's funny. That opening lyric is a classic bit of comedic irony. Saying one thing in support of your character, but simultaneously being so oblivious as to paint yourself in an even worse light. It's just his entire bit distilled into 4 seconds. It might not be the best bit, but it's just not worth the reaction it seems to get. It's not my favourite bit either, but I'll admit I've grown to be very influenced by absurdist humour. In many cases, it's not necessarily the joke itself that's funny, but imagining the extensive sequence of events that led to me hearing the joke. It's probably just virality bait, but I just cannot believe that this was how he, or his label, decided to introduce himself to America. Me writing 6 paragraphs in defence of "Doja" is a similar kind of ridiculous parody of myself.