#260. Angie McMahon - Slow Mover (#33, 2017)
29th of 2017
I have a certain fascination with the way many artists seem to reach their greatest career peaks at the very start, even when it doesn't feel like it lines up accurately with the arc of their career and infamy. I've mentioned before with artists like Nickelback, how it can potentially be a product of being 'figured out' by the audience, in terms of where they stand and what they represent. More potential in buying into something speculative. Other times it just feels strangely out of place. You can blame different chart eras but it's odd to think that Troye Sivan's only ever top 10 single in Australia was achieved within a month of his first ever chart appearance. Chris Brown debuted at #1 in Australia and outside of his collaboration on "No Air", he's never been back at #1 since then. It might feel like Angie McMahon's only gotten more famous over the years, but she still got her biggest Hottest 100 hit straight away.
This still feels strange to me but it does line up with another happening at the same time. In 2017, Wolf Alice had a decent showing in the top 200 with two of their songs. One of those 'what could have been' moments that could've been rectified if the voting was more unified behind one song. I think if anything they just needed more time, because they won the Mercury Prize later on in 2018, which has made "Don't Delete The Kisses" into a bigger deal. It's something that'd be rectified in the future...right? Well, two albums later and they're now charting better in terms of music charts, but they are a complete absence from being even close to the Hottest 100. When people lament their lack of success, or likewise for Angie McMahon who was last seen at the #101 & #103 positions, it just seems like both artists had a bunch of people who eagerly voted for them then, but then mysteriously disappeared. Just whistling inconspicuously while witnessing the outrage. I voted for Wolf Alice multiple times so don't get your pitchforks out at me, but I suppose then I am a passive supporter of Angie McMahon who's never given her the dues.
Perhaps it all comes down to that intangible feeling of a hit song that connects, and we have to wonder what "Slow Mover" does to put itself there. It's a big, sweeping gesture song that's thinking about the future in the way that I don't always expect to resonate with the youth audience. It's like a Family Guy joke I saw recently poking fun at How I Met Your Mother, how Ted at his age seems strangely fixated on the idea of marriage rather than just dating. Maybe this generation (then) are just willing to support someone who's contemplating bigger things, awarding the confidence in it all. I think it's a conviction that Angie can definitely sell in this song, even though she's making a declaration of the opposite, and maybe once you put all your chips in for a song like this, it's just incredibly difficult to ever meet the same heights, no matter what you do. Everything's just a permutation on our first impression of what the artist is, and what they should be. Maybe you'll buy her album, maybe you'll buy the next one, you're just waiting it out to see if it's all as good as this song promises it to be.
#259. Cold War Kids - First (#89, 2014)
32nd of 2014
I wonder if in 2007, you just had to be there. I was, so you can trust me on it, but I imagine otherwise if you look at the pointy end of the Hottest 100, there are a handful of songs that don't really have the popular credentials to justify themselves. The one that probably sticks out the most is "Hang Me Up to Dry" by Cold War Kids, a song that had been doing the rounds since the start of the year but wasn't a hit by any measure. Cold War Kids weren't an essential 'everyone's talking about them' kind of band either. They're not even Australian. Yet here they are inserting themselves into the pointy end of the countdown.
To me, it makes perfect sense, but then the whole "Robbers & Cowards" album is a core memory for me. I was mostly into the singles near the front of it, but they fill a niche that cannot be replaced with anything else. A combination of stress, anguish, and inserting odd instruments into the mix. I can't decide if it sounded genuinely modern at the time because I don't really have a point of comparison. It's just that when the riffs to "We Used to Vacation" or "Hang Me Up to Dry" start, I'm instantly teleported back to 2007, and everything is good.
This early success was probably enough on its own to justify keeping the band around for a while yet. I'm proof positive as someone who kept digging into random new singles of theirs as late as 2017. They notched up a couple more Hottest 100 entries after 2007, but it felt like a last hurrah when they couldn't quite make it in 2013. I feel like after that we get a completely different story that's unrelated to everything going before it.
Or maybe not initially. Cold War Kids snuck into the Hottest 100 again with "First" in 2014. A quirky rebound that was probably mostly on the back of their previous momentum but they had a more well liked single this time around. In the time since this has happened, "First" has gone from that fluke of a last gasp to absolutely the band's signature song. A song that's become so big that the band might retroactively be considered one hit wonders for it. There's talk of a lot of alternative rock songs sounding like car commercial music, and this might be the guilty party in that stereotype because it literally was used in one.
At some point you have to stop and wonder 'Why this song?'. It would be fair to wonder why this of all things has become one of the biggest hits of all time on alternative radio. It's a completely isolated incident too. It didn't remotely stop the band from dipping into obscurity. My only best guess here is that it's a song that finds the sweet spot of sounding a little different and interesting, but not too weird and off-putting. Sometimes it can be hard to tell how much of it comes down to the song as opposed to just being in the right place at the right time, because what I just said could describe a lot of Cold War Kids songs. I guess people just really like that one drum fill and the bit about flying like a cannonball. If we've learnt anything recently it's that the people crave Oasis.
#258. FISHER - Losing It (#2, 2018)
28th of 2018
It's insane to think that we're still on a generational FISHER run right now. The 2025 Hottest 100 has wrapped up and there he is again, two entries at #32 & #89. I'm just a touch early to seeing how his new song is faring but he's got plenty of time to sort something out and keep the streak going. For now, he's made the list 8 years in a row and it all started with this bolter in 2018. You'd think maintaining this would require a career with steadily paced out peaks but aside from a couple of recent songs that vaguely could be called crossover hits, he's mostly been coasting off a strong start. Then again, The Living End also introduced themselves to the world with their defining hit song, and they're the benchmark with 10 consecutive appearances. As far as I'm concerned, I'm gonna get through this entry and my burden of writing about so many FISHER songs will finally be over.
I don't know if there is a general consensus on the strengths of Hottest 100 years. The funny thing is that I of course saw someone say that the Hottest 100 died in 2025, only to get chimed in with a bunch of people who were seemingly united in saying that the answer was a different time period prior to that. You might agree that it's passed it with someone, but if they're saying it happened 10 years before, surely that's gotta be fighting words as they're disparaging a decade of key memories for you.
2018 looks tailor made to push people to Double J though. I'm not done dissecting the whole top end so I won't jump ahead on it, but I see a whole lot of songs that are poised to infuriate for some combination of being an absolute irritant, a boring pop crossover, or an Ocean Alley song that manages to do both at the same time (#521). When you get to a song like "Losing It", I've gotta be out of my mind if I think a bunch of people introduced to it in that very moment are gonna say 'Oh yeah, the kids are alright!' and not 'Is this what they call music nowadays?'. For the rockist perspective, "Losing It" does so little to placate the reservations. It only has 24 words in it, or if you don't count repeats, it only has 3 words in it. The closest comparison point I can make to it is probably The Bloody Beetroots' "Warp 1.9". I think though even fans of that song might find the minimalism of "Losing It" to provide nowhere near the same payoff. It's the kind of thing that's gonna make you paradoxically question if the new generation has any spice in their interests, before lamenting a week later that they seem shockingly desensitized given the filth that passes as entertainment now. God, I wish any of the people who voted "Wings" as the first ever Best Picture winner in the 1920s could be brought back just to watch "Anora" or "Everything, Everywhere, All At Once".
I think the gut reaction is important because it lays the groundwork for how willing you're going to be to concede to the new canon of music history being written without your input. Over time, it's how I've tried to make sense of it, and it's a more fun way to experience things, I can tell you that. "Losing It" might just be the pinnacle of tension and release. From the very first second you're introduced to a buzzing alarm, and the whole song builds up to drops that don't even really give you a chance to calm down after. I have to imagine it's pretty incredible in a live setting. All the constant build up and the catharsis afterwards. It almost feels cruel, the way the first two drops come in after about 15 seconds of percussion hits, but then the next one doubles it to around 30 seconds. Just the ultimate drum roll. Maybe in my ideal world, "Losing It" would have a bit more meat in the drops, but I think the simplicity is where it finds its niche. Don't make us think too hard about it.
#257. Dune Rats - Too Tough Terry (#85, 2020)
18th of 2020
There's a band from Oxfordshire called Young Knives. I will readily assume most don't really know them very well because in the leagues of landfill indie, they don't even have that one crossover song that people still listen to. They'd long for even a taste of the success that run off singles by The Fratellis get. Anyway, I bring them up because I hated them. If you were ever going to sell me on the idea that Kaiser Chiefs and associated bands maybe weren't actually worth the time of day, then reminding me of bands like this could have been what did it. Maybe I was wrong for thinking this, but I'd hear "She's Attracted To" and get bogged down by every decision made that seems laser focused to irritate. I think it's pretty harmless nowadays, but then every throwback tends to seem better divorced from its initial context. Can't imagine the discourse if the song came out now though.
A funny thing happened years later. I heard a new song on triple j quite a few years later and I really liked it. The Strokes were about to drop their big comeback single, and I'd be pretty obsessed by it. They were beaten to the punch by another song with raucous, sticky riffs. You know I'm talking about "Love My Name" by Young Knives. It's always my nomination for one of the most unexplainably transcendent songs ever made. The closest thing I can think of for what works is that the song's chorus includes these funny 'pew, pew, pew' sounds that remind me of some similar sounds in "Mario Land 3: Wario Land", which is nostalgic as heck. In general though it's just so tightly packed without a moment wasted. Between them and Silversun Pickups, I just had an incredible track record of tricking artists into making some of my all-time favourite songs just by declaring to myself that I hate them. Maybe there's something in that. You're so invested in the storyline that you pay closer attention, just close enough for the surprise sucker punch of glory.
It's funny for two other reasons too. The first is that for whatever reason, the song and album just never made it to Australia. It's 2026 and you still won't find it on Apple or Spotify. I haven't the faintest idea why, and the fact that it was obviously sent to radio here in some capacity just adds to the confusion. Maybe there was some stumbling at the time because the band were currently rebranding (they used to be *The* Young Knives), but I wonder if there's just not enough demand and no one noticed it. The other funny thing is that over a decade later, Dune Rats found some success by making the song "Too Tough Terry", which feels like it has to be a deliberate Young Knives pastiche. They're so completely memory holed that I don't see anyone else point it out.
Of course, we're talking about Dune Rats here, so they're still going to be playing to their own devices. While the confrontational energy is all there, I just don't remember Young Knives saying 'c**t' quite as many times. Nah, I'm just joking, we all know Dune Rats are singing 'Terry is a tough, can't see straight Terry'. All up though, it's an important evolution of the form. When you're singing about the most absolutely abrasive person imaginable, you have to meet him in form. Terry wouldn't stand for his theme song being weaksauce. I'm ready to be convinced that this is the prototype for Playlunch's "Keith", setting the stage for the most niche Epic Rap Battles of History...of history. Just imagine how many parking spots Terry could hog with his 18 wheeler.
#256. The Smith Street Band - I Don't Wanna Do Nothing Forever (#90, 2022)
17th of 2022
I learnt some pretty difficult news about Wil Wagner while I was researching one of the previous entries. I can't actually find him talking about it very much because it's a very taboo topic, the kind of thing that's difficult to go out and say in public. Maybe the clues were always there given the location of Smith Street in Melbourne. I'm afraid to say that Wil Wagner is a massive Collingwood fan. The album that this song comes from is called "Life After Football", which is of course ironic as that's a foreign concept for that team. Pendlebury and Sidebottom have been playing together longer than The Smith Street Band have. Maybe this song getting into the list is compensation to make up for just how unbelievably stressed he must have been in 2022, watching his team win 9 close finishes in 12 weeks, only to finally have the tables turn as they fell short of making the Grand Final by 1 point. I think about this whole spectacle and wonder if I even hate Collingwood anymore. There's an alternate history where they don't lock in a year later and my team wins that year instead, but then subsequently doesn't for the next two years.
In all seriousness though, it'd be wrong not to at least acknowledge some of the allegations put towards Wil Wagner. Some of them involve an artist who will appear in this list later on! I don't think it's really my place to comment on it as it's one of those hard to decipher situations where there could be some culpability on both sides that isn't even necessarily catastrophic (because we're humans and sometimes we don't make the best decisions, and sometimes we feel the need for karmic retribution to make up for being wronged in a non-malicious way). I'd like to hope at least everyone's learnt from the experience.
It did feel a little strange to see The Smith Street Band still showing up here after all that time though. This looks like it will be the last time (though not for this ranking) and it's not a bad way to go out in any case. If you're after songs that are equally anthemic and existential, then I've got the song for you. Sometimes they'll wrap it up in packages that we're familiar with, but I love that the big kicker phrase is something as banal as being stuck at work on respective birthdays. A simple creed to illustrate how the things we do to maintain our life get in the way of the very life we're trying to maintain. On the other hand, we're looking at a well-worn path set by New Radicals, because the lyric that always sticks with me the most is the one about the sexy Germans. Feels like I don't wanna do nothing at all, nothing at all, nothing at all. Stupid sexy Germans.















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