#335. Kid Cudi (feat Pharrell Williams) - Surfin' (#40, 2016)
35th of 2016
Sometime in 2008 I became aware of the song "Day 'N' Nite". I'm not exactly sure when, because triple j never seemed to include it on their online hitlist (or if they did, they included it for such a short period of time that I couldn't manage to spot it just now on the Wayback Machine). It was on the Hottest 100 voting list in 2008 though, at least some proof that it came up. I won't pretend that I paid close attention to it myself, just that when we jumped forward to 2009 and the song became a global hit, it felt unusual to see this second wind. Depending on who you ask, it was more popular through the remix by Crookers (which also was released in early 2008), but that's becoming more of a footnote over time. Kid Cudi's moody rap might have come out too early for its own good, but now it feels like a prototype of rap in the 2010s, one that hasn't aged a day.
As is often the case, it put Kid Cudi in an unusual position as a rapper with mainstream appeal who wasn't necessarily playing to those expectations. Lupe Fiasco is always my primary example of this conundrum. He's obviously very gifted at playing to both sides of the fence, but not always at the same time, which has resulted in a very uneven discography. Like when the next thing you hear on "Tetsuo & Youth" after all 9 minutes of "Mural" is a Guy Sebastian hook, who's it being made for? Kid Cudi fell into a different trap. After years of being mostly adjacent to the top 40 and occasionally troubling it, he started getting really weird with it. I remember being put off by 2013's "Indicud", partly because of when it came out and the unrelenting copium I was huffing at the time regarding triple j's feature album selection, but also because it betrayed his initial ideas and just felt a little too strange. I haven't forgotten about that weird sampling of Father John Misty's "Hollywood Forever Cemetery Sings".
Things took an even sharper dive 2 years later on "Speedin' Bullet 2 Heaven", an album I can't bring myself to go back to, but one that brought about a weird fascination at the time. Maybe it'll get its cultural reassessment over time, but its combination of loud rock riffs and Beavis & Butthead interludes left me a little cold. If there's something that should be looked into, it's the downward spiral of the lyrics, that's only gotten clearer further into his career. I would like to touch on that as well, but it's probably better served for a later entry (where Kid Cudi will not be credited, maybe you know the one).
That might be enough to derail a career, but Kid Cudi kept going along as if nothing happened. About a year later he had another album, "Passion, Pain & Demon Slayin'", which steers a bit closer to what everyone wants to hear, but not necessarily languishing in the past either. "Baptized In Fire" is a very early Travis Scott collaboration that's another stone on the foundation of his future dominance. What we're concerned with here is "Surfin'", a song that for whatever reason, charted in Australia's top 100 and nowhere else. Not the last time an American rapper will inexplicably do this and also be rewarded with a pretty good Hottest 100 position, in 2016 even.
My only guess is that triple j had enough reach that people actually heard the song over here and that made the important difference. Recent projects had probably taken Kid Cudi off Santa's Nice list for the radio, so it was probably harder to get him on there, even though the song is extremely radio friendly. By the time the album came out, the song was tucked away at the back of the album with a new 6 minute version that drags on a bit, so it's just a big hit that never got a chance outside of this market. That album version does have one other notable thing about it though, which is that Pharrell can actually be heard on it. If you'd never heard it, you might be scratching your head at how producing the song warrants a feature credit here, or wondering if you just missed him. This is also the first time Pharrell has come up at all here, and there'll be a decent amount of that, even without some of his biggest hits getting a guernsey. For now though, I was riding this wave. Just extremely good vibes here from the bright brass and lively percussion.
#334. Urthboy (feat Bertie Blackman) - Long Loud Hours (#33, 2015)
41st of 2015
It's so mundane that I haven't seen anyone ever comment on it, but I have a deep fascination with the ending of "My People" by The Presets. During the final chorus of the song, Julian changes the lyrics ever so slightly, to include the line 'party time, all of my people'. Ironically, for me it's always the clear sign that this seemingly unstoppable song is about to end. I'm just realising tonight there might be a good reason for me paying attention to that. A handful of months before "My People" was released, Urthboy was on the radio with "We Get Around". Another song that feels like an unending chorus, but also a song that does the same trick, as Urthboy decides just once to say that 'we stay around', leading into the song's bridge & coda.
Yes, this was another regularly scheduled 2007 nostalgia moment, which usually isn't for a good reason, but in this case I think it's fitting. Urthboy teamed up with Bertie Blackman and got into the Hottest 100, and on the ARIA Chart in the year 2015. It's such a strange moment in time to witness, and it's not as if it was done by playing the game. It was done with this odd-sounding song about the 1999 prison escape by helicopter by Australian criminal John Kilick. All around, an interesting story, and one that enough people bought into.
If you're hearing about all of this for the first time, you might also want to know that Urthboy is an Australian rapper, best known as a member of The Herd, a group that might have rivalled Bliss n Eso as the second biggest rap group in the country for a while. I'd say he's the leader, but no one in The Herd controls The Herd, that's why it's unpredictable. They were pretty early in the game though, and even if they weren't initially on the most serious of terms (ah, scallops), they were one of the more provocative acts of the late Howard era. In 2003 they were taking the whole country to task for abiding Johnny on "77%", and 5 years later they were dancing on his political grave with "The King is Dead". It would be easy to deride the latter as just courting an easy political stance, but I think it needs all the more credit for the sheer volume of quotable bars they pass around. How can you come back when you're being rhymingly called out for losing your own 33 year old seat?
The rise of Bertie Blackman comes a little bit later. She had her career very much on the fringe initially, with pop rock that wasn't quite finding its audience. In 2009 she played around a bit more with synths and saw unlikely dividends with what else was going on, that album "Secrets and Lies" easily being her most successful. It feels like the kind of album that I now discover was her first major label release but that didn't come until the next album. Her most recent album was released in 2014 and she's only occasionally done guest appearances since then. She's done arguably more important things since then like getting married and having a child. If she does decide to make music again, I'd probably be on board.
When this song did come out, it heralded a surprising late career surge for Urthboy. In the era when you might have expected him to have higher charting albums, he wasn't even cracking the top 50, but this one, with the cumbersome title "The Past Beats Inside Me Like A Second Heartbeat" managed to crack the top 10. I bought it, it's a good album. Especially fond of the pseudo-title track, which features an artist that will later appear on this list. "Long Loud Hours" is a good one too. What's surprising about it is that it tells the story mostly from the perspective of John Killick's girlfriend Lucy Dudko, the one who hijacked a helicopter to bust him out of jail. In that sense, this performance is largely gender-flipped as it's Urthboy providing this side, and you only hear John's side when Beato joins for the chorus. Both of these people are still alive but I haven't been able to find any response to the song from either of them. Killick did say in an interview in 2025 that he's tired of the story, so maybe he doesn't take much interest in there being a minor hit song about it.
#333. Drake (feat 21 Savage) - Jimmy Cooks) (#76, 2022)
28th of 2022
A little while back, I had something very strange happen to me. I received a DM on Twitch from someone I didn't know, who criticised my way of playing Tetris, I presume having just encountered me a few times and looking up my name from that. In all fairness, they were correct in part, that I'd been relying on a lazy method to begin my games, one that's very easy to spot and ridicule. My defence is that it's only something I do for about a minute or so, and afterwards I play normally (in case you're wondering, it's a technique called '4-widing', where you build exclusively on the 6 leftmost or rightmost columns, save for 3 tiles at the bottom. If you build all the way to the top, you just about get carte blanche to very lazily score a 15+ combo as you can very slowly drop pieces down the hole you create. Competitively, it's very difficult to fend off without adequate preparation). My rationale is that by giving myself a head start, it allows me to fend off the people who will continue to do it for an entire match, perhaps even warding them off their boring playstyle as it's not as infallible as they might think.
I was probably dealing with a troll but I decided to explain my perspective in a reasonable way. I left out the part that calls out what they must be doing if they've noticed this from me. I eventually got another reply mocking me further except I was blocked from responding again. It's not anything I'm too mad about, but it got me thinking about how unwinnable the situation is. Either I continue doing it and they get to mentally mock me should they continue to encounter me, or I stop doing it and they get the satisfaction of getting into my head. Once you've smugly decided you're above someone, it's very difficult to come down from that, whether you're right or not.
There's a messy allegory here, and it relates to the online response I saw to Drake's musical output in 2022. You could extend it further back than that, but 2022 was the year we got some serious data that proved the worst tendencies of both Drake and his fanbase. At this point, he's been on a decade-long streak of diminishing returns. Regardless of how successful he was, the general consensus of 'This is the worst album he's ever released' was coming through like clockwork. Drake was overexposed and washed, incapable of trying new things and just relying on his successful brand to stay afloat.
This changed a little bit in 2022, when Drake released the album "Honestly, Nevermind". In theory, it's a long awaited sea change. Drake steps away from reliable trap beats and makes an honest to God house record. There's just one problem; it's not well liked at all and it tanks. Every Drake album has gone at least triple Platinum in America, except this one that so far has just limped over to Platinum after a year on sale. Any further certifications it gets will likely be carried on the back of this one song. You know, the one song on the album that isn't house music, it's just that reliable team up with 21 Savage to make the trap music we expect from both of them. Of course, five months later they'd course correct with "Her Loss" and everything would be back to normal.
What I saw from all of this was the most tedious form of win-win smug commentary. That same kind where it's always anchored around disdain for Drake and his fans, and so it's just a matter of choosing the right reading from it to justify it. Here, it was mostly about the way his fans responded to the album, who are so narrowminded in their interest that as soon as he tries something different, they outright reject it. The success of "Jimmy Cooks" is proof positive that they're unadventurous and scared. Never mind the fact that a single collaboration on the album that sounds a bit different to the rest is always going to stand out. Never mind the fact that the execution on both might differ a tad, you've got more ammunition to say you're objectively better at listening to music than Drake fans, like you needed any proof.
Am I coming in the defence of "Honestly, Nevermind"? Not really, I've not been that interested to go back to it. I don't think it's a complete failure though, and I think if you want a trimmed down experience, "Falling Back", "Sticky" and "Massive" makes for a nice little pocket that shows a good bit of range within Drake's bounds of the genre. "Falling Back" was seemingly supposed to be the single from the album (it has a music video), but the quirks of the ARIA Chart that seemed to be linked to digital sales performance meant that it never even charted in Australia. It was probably supposed to be a top 10 hit. Our charts are known to be a little odd sometimes.
If I also choose to look at "Jimmy Cooks" on its own merits, I think it's a good one too. Drake's in his element obviously and fires off a verse that isn't necessarily memorable (the beat is doing a lot of heavy lifting here), but glides along nicely. It's yet another song for him that feels like multiple songs stitched together (possibly a Travis Scott song has a lot to answer for), but it does provide us with possibly the funniest start to a 21 Savage verse ever. The same kind of wingman energy we got way back when Jay-Z was summoned by his own name on the remix of "Diamonds From Sierra Leone". Just recently 21 Savage is facing tough competition from Stormzy on who has the best delivery of that one word. Beyond that though, he's still the heart of this song. Absolutely no reservations about his performance, it's the kind of thing I wish Drake would take more to heart and consider emulating. At this point he just exists to have circles run around him on his own songs.
#332. Middle Kids - Stacking Chairs (#39, 2021)
28th of 2021
Once upon a time I was extremely liberal in my tendency to overplay the songs that I like. Probably the important factor here is that I built up my music library from scratch and didn't have a lot of options. It's huge now, but it used to just be a handful of CDs and single downloads, you're gonna end up listening to "One Crowded Hour" quite a lot. I think I was also very obsessed with looking at my most played stats. Even in 2007, I was jotting it down on paper so I could witness how much it changed, and I was probably deliberately acting upon that.
Fast forward to the present and it's not really something I can play around with anymore. My most played songs have been locked in place for over a decade now. My last.fm profile tells me I've listened to 87 songs at least 100 times. That number will probably still grow, given that numerous songs are just on the cusp, but they're all songs that were in from the ground floor. Everyone who came in too late for that is aware. The last song I listened to 100 times was "Warning" by Cymbals Eat Guitars, from 2014. The only song after that which is even within striking distance is "Golden To Thrive" by Samsaruh, but at the current rate, it'll be another 18 years before she gets there, and then the song will be 26 years old, not exactly improving the state of play.
Part of what's happened is that my music listening has gotten so ritualistic. I have a current playlist of songs I'm listening to at the moment, and I listen to it once a week. At best you can maybe expect to last on it for 6-7 months and then that's it. Log about 30 plays and reside in the back catalogue to only occasionally be brought back up. My most played song of 2023 got 33 plays, and has only gotten 3 more since then. This isn't anything that's very important, and it's probably for the best that I'm spreading out my music listening a bit more, but it does mean that I'm just not hearing these songs as much, and they're likely making less of an impression on me, even though it doesn't feel like it in the moment.
The weirder side effect of this is that it's often making it harder for me to listen to albums. Here's a likely sequence of events: You hear a song you like, you stick it on your playlist and come back around to it as often as that might entail. The next time it comes up, you might start thinking 'oh, there's an album, I should check that out'. I have this frustrating problem where I hesitate to take this step, because I just listened to one of the songs, and I don't really want to hear it again in quick succession. My listening habit has become an odd crutch that makes me not want to overplay any songs. Just listening to something twice in a week is a rare privilege that I'll rarely dole out.
So I just don't listen to as many albums as I used to. I keep track of it on a spreadsheet for myself and there's a huge spike after I start using Spotify that very rapidly declines after 2017, until reaching a flatline in 2023. Often times when I've been listening to albums for this blog, I'll refer to this sheet to put them in the log, and be surprised to find out that I already listened to them, just because my current mindset is one that would surely not lead to me listening to these particular albums. Middle Kids did not make the cut. I'm listening to it now, but "Today We're The Greatest" is just the 25th album from 2021 I've heard. How many people could honestly say that it'd be one of the first couple dozen albums they'd go out of their way to hear in that year? I feel like anyone who heard it, probably heard so many more.
I had a good reason to do it too. The title track of the album is a big favourite of mine. I don't know how to pitch it, but I think if you're moved by the emotional swell of Coldplay's "The Scientist", I think it might resonate for you. It's taken this moment here for me to finally take the plunge. I think the best thing it has going for it is its surprisingly deep run of singles. I'd almost heard half of the album already, even though it's very top and bottom loaded. It never really comes close to those soaring highs I craved, but if you want to see a small scale version of one of those kinds of stacked albums, maybe give it a shot.
In any case, "Stacking Chairs" has proven to be the big song to come from it. One that I blazed past initially but found a warmer reception for it once it polled and became part of my increasingly monstrous music library. While I might be craving more just because of the song that's sitting just after it, this is still a good step in that direction. Maybe it's appropriate after all that I said that we've got a song that says 'When the party's over, I'll be stacking the chairs', because they might not get to reap the celebratory reward of being a permanent fixture in my most played songs list, but it is a viral function to serve by continuing to provide new hits, because I don't exactly just want to listen to the same songs over and over again. It's not a very Middle Kids sentiment though, is it? My good authority of being a kid is that stacking the chairs at the end of assembly was a riotous occasion, one that allowed all sorts of creativity in playing around with what the laws of physics allow. Maybe they're more like Upper Middle Kids at this point so they're just bored of it all, darn teenagers.
#331. Baker Boy - Mr La Di Da Di (#51, 2018)
36th of 2018
Let's just say for example, someone could potentially have a lot of money but be unable to use their wealth to be happy. Perhaps they tell themselves and everyone else that they're happy, but deep down, they exhibit a pattern of miserable behaviour for which money is no cure. Surely no one like that really exists, but if they do, then "Mr La Di Da Di" is here to rub it in their face.
When it comes to this song, that's one of two things you can really say about it. The other is that it sounds just a little bit familiar. Perhaps fans of Kendrick Lamar, or an album that beat him to a GRAMMY Award might be able to fill in the blanks, I'm not allowed to. Maybe there's some irony to the latter, given a certain song's materialism, but that would be a crazy war for Baker Boy to start. How famous does someone have to be for a rap feud to have any spice?
I think though in all sincerity that this is just Baker Boy tipping the cap to his idols. In an interview he gave with Musicfeeds about a month after the song was released, he says Kendrick Lamar is one of his favourite contemporary rappers, and then proceeds to fanboy over him and imagine having an awkward fanboy interaction with him at Splendour In The Grass. If you're a creative of any kind, it's always going to be hard to avoid cribbing from your favourite artists, I do it all the time. "Mr La Di Da Di" is still justifiably Baker Boy's own thing. He'll always have the bilingual aspect going for him, and it's just another notch in the belt of his endless positivity, even when he's saying rich people are stupid.
%20-%20Single.jpg)
%20-%20Single.jpg)






%20-%20Single.jpg)



%20-%20Single.jpg)




%20-%20Single.jpg)







