#265. Hermitude (feat Mataya & Young Tapz) - The Buzz (#8, 2015)
34th of 2015
How long do you think Hermitude have been around? It's probably longer than that. They first formed in 2000, but had known each other since 1994. They got signed pretty early on to Elefant Traks, and their debut album even has a little cameo by The Herd, like a $3.40 bag of hip hop from your local fish and chip shop. I'm listening to that first album, "Alleys To Valleys" and it sounds nothing like you could possibly picture from anything you associate with Hermitude. All very relaxed, more along the lines of DJ Shadow or J Dilla, but even that's underselling just how reserved it is. I want to shout out "Moth Journey" for its cool vibe that's simultaneously noir & sci-fi. Never going to top the charts, but it got their name out there and they started growing their brand for a while.
I was trying to find a clear thread from past to present in their older material but I didn't really see it. Even in 2008, while they may have upped the scales a little, I still feel like I'm listening to this obscure group that never went anywhere. It did click with me that I was familiar with them back then though, because they had the quirky collaboration with Elana Stone & Urthboy, "Your Call" on their 3rd album. It was probably their closest thing to crossover success in that moment, reaching #148 in the Hottest 100 that year. Just a bit of an oddball for them in the same year they were covering "Jóga" by Björk for Like A Version and taking it to strange new places.
The real change came in 2010 with the release of their single "Get In My Life", the lead single to "HyperParadise" which would arrive 15 months later in 2012. It just feels like a complete shift in focus. While the core of the music is the same, there's an increase in danceable beats that sound decidedly more modern. It's still almost completely instrumental, but it feels like it wants to eat the Ratatat (#281) cake by making big hooks out of aggressive riffs. That song wasn't a particularly big hit for them, but the next single, "Speak of the Devil" was. This song feels like their big push for popular recognition that for once decides to use a big sung hook in addition to an instrumental you won't forget. A lot of credit also has to go to one of the best music videos ever which no doubt boosted the song's profile. It worked, and they were entrenched in the Hottest 100 for the first time ever, the start of a decent run of hits for them. Maybe that looked to be a one-off, but they scored some immense fortune when young upstart Flume remixed the title track to their latest album "HyperParadise" and Hermitude got to be interlocked with his big rise in 2012. You look at all his hits at that time and one of the biggest is actually a Hermitude song.
To me, this feels like a big turning point because you fast forward a few more years and Hermitude's 5th album comes out. It might sound silly but I listen to it and I hear a lot of songs that sound like the Flume remix of them, it's so different to where we started. They knew what people were after though and it got them a #1 album, and additionally the biggest hit of the career, "The Buzz". It feels like it's a song that might have gotten too big because it's completely overshadowed everything around it and since. Mainly I just think they've not been trying to replicate it so they haven't kept that same audience with them. Whenever I hear a new Hermitude song nowadays, I find it hard to place them as the same duo, as their sound continues to take more and more unusual pivots. I think "Janela" is a great track, but I wouldn't question anything if it had just been credited as a solo Kimbra track.
The one big part of "The Buzz"'s success that always amazes me is that it made the ARIA End Of Year list for 2015. That's going well beyond being just a niche flash in the pan, or a song riding Hottest 100 hype, but a strangely genuine hit. Sorry "Hoops" (#895), sorry Jess Glynne, but we've found something that does beat a Jet2 holiday, and it's this instrumental hip hop duo coming in at #100 with a song that commercial radio barely gave a sniff to. It's not like it's stacked with star power either, the intro is a few looped words by new singer Mataya, who would amusingly have her only other star turn two years later, also landing at #8 in the Hottest 100 (#861). Kiwi rapper TAPZ GALLANTINO, or Young Tapz as he was known then gets most of the action here. He was also heard on their previous single "Through The Roof", but I've scarcely heard of him anywhere since, outside of an unexpected collaboration with a certain singer I'm known to like, and I believe his brother getting some accusations against him that I don't know the verdict on. Nothing screams hit here, so I guess you've got to feel the buzz.
Nothing about it feels like it should work, Tapz's slurred delivery, and all those stiff synth hits that seem to crawl up to the next drum break. At the very least it doesn't feel like it should be working in 2015, a time when popular dance music just didn't really sound like this at all. It wasn't even a brief fling either as the song also showed up in the Hottest 100 of the Decade at #63, higher than an annual #8 finish would suggest, especially when nudged out of the way by more famous artists with dedicated followings. I am but a small part of this song's huge popularity, but it's really always astounded me.
#264. Olivia Rodrigo - deja vu (#33, 2021)
15th of 2021
If we imagine a hypothetical version of this list that I started one year earlier, we'd have a pretty different list to be working with. Rudimental would be waiting down the line with three drum & bass bangers instead of just one. Maybe I could rehabilitate that one electronic song I never much liked, but heard on shuffle the other day and wasn't bothered, the one that isn't "Love Is All I Got", though I can't say the artist name yet. Most of all though, it would just help me out a little bit here. "deja vu" is a remarkably successful song, even by the standards of Olivia Rodrigo where basically any song she's ever released does rather well. It's also a song that holds an ominous degree of infamy: The infamy of copyright nonsense. Wait, this is strange, I can't escape the familiar feeling that we've been here before. Maybe there's a word for that.
In 2013, Katy Perry released the single "Roar" as the lead single to her third album, "Prism". She was coming off a monstrously successful album cycle that took her to the absolute top of the pop landscape if there was any doubt previously. I wouldn't say massive success was guaranteed, but if she played her cards right, she was better suited than anyone. This is obviously what happened. "Roar" was the biggest hit of the year despite being released fairly late. I wouldn't say the song was universally beloved, and many on the more cynical side noticed a strong similarity to "Brave", a single released by Sara Bareilles a few months before. Hardly a problem though, because the song wasn't very well known to the general public.
"Brave" belatedly became a hit song in early 2014. A big moment for Sara surely, ending her 5+ year stay in the Khia ward for one hit wonders. It was also one of the first successes of Jack Antonoff as a writer & producer beyond his fun. days. He'll come back into this picture a little later. One of the main things I remember observing at the time was a slight backlash. I saw numerous comments suggesting that Sara had ripped off Katy Perry. Obviously not true, but if you hear the songs in the order that most people did, it's easy to see how that connection might be made.
It's seven years later in 2021 and Olivia Rodrigo releases "deja vu", the second single from her debut album, and the one that much more quickly ended any one hit wonder allegations for her. Or if that still wasn't a big enough hit, then "good 4 u" (#341) was right around the corner too. There's nothing untoward for a while, even when the album is released a month later. Track 4 on the album, "1 step forward, 3 steps back" has a peculiar set of names in the writing credits though, Taylor Swift and Jack Antonoff. That's via an interpolation of Taylor Swift's 2017 song "New Year's Day". I don't know for certain if that's related, but a couple of months later, "deja vu" suddenly has writing credits for that pair again, along with St. Vincent. Given that it happened well after the song was released, it's possible that it's just a case of Swifties starting a wildfire, but along the way, Olivia Rodrigo herself noted a similarity to Taylor Swift's 2019 song "Cruel Summer", and so these back to back writing credits occur. At least I can only assume it had to be fans raising a stink because what are the chances that you'd include one interpolation and not the other on adjacent tracks, when they're both sourcing the same artist and mostly the same writers.
The whole thing annoyed me for the same reason the "good 4 u" situation did. I just don't hear it. It feels equally superficial. A similarity that boils down to the notion that Taylor Swift invented shouting on bridges. With the hindsight of 5 years, it feels like an early incarnation of Taylor Swift (or more likely her team) utilising her massive influence to stamp down on all upcoming stars who don't go through her. We're not talking about some unreachable recluse, but someone who could easily say 'I own the rights to that song, I won't press charges, it's all good'. I guess I'd be hard pressed to name a billionaire who got there by being courteous or generous.
I think about the Sara Bareilles situation because beyond all of this, the big twist waiting in the wings was the massive second wave of success for "Cruel Summer" that would come a couple of years later. The beloved deep cut became possibly the biggest hit of Taylor Swift's career, and for her, that's saying something. It introduced the possibility of a whole new peanut gallery who experience the pop charts in their re-arranged chronological order. Alas, I've never seen anyone say that they heard the new Taylor Swift song on the radio and thought it was ripping off Olivia Rodrigo. I will invite the realistic possibility that the parameters of popularity don't match the previous problem, and maybe music fans are just better informed than they were a decade ago. On the other hand, maybe it just makes more sense that no one would draw the comparison to two songs that just don't sound the same.
I've always very much enjoyed both of those songs, but I think I have to give the advantage to "deja vu" at this point, as a song that's never worn out for me. I think Dan Nigro needs a lot of credit for making this strange pop/psych rock hybrid that sounds pretty unique. I'll admit if there's any song I would compare this to, it's actually "400 Lux" by Lorde. This song came up on Bandle back in April last year and I desperately wanted to put Lorde down because at one point in time it was the only song I could hear on it. A problem in that game is that you can lock onto a wrong answer so assuredly that you'll probably lose two guesses waiting for something else to emerge. Yes that's right, I wrote that note down a year ago and have been waiting all this time to point it out.
We're yet to actually reach the start of the Olivia Rodrigo journey here, I've largely had the car in reverse this whole time, but "deja vu" introduces a new side to her songwriting as well. It's one that's more oriented on specific details, rather than platitudes that can apply to anyone. I'm not saying that Glee and Billy Joel are niche by any means, but they do manage to paint a picture. The specific accusation of transferring reverence of "Uptown Girl" to a new girlfriend is so funny, but a reminder that no one's born knowing music, and even the daggiest of '80s hits will feel like unearthed gems at a young age. Hughie from The Boys would probably tell you that you don't want to risk ever having the last thing you said to your girlfriend be about respecting Billy Joel though.
I do wonder if I'm even supposed to side with Olivia on this song. Teen romance is rife for scrutiny, especially if it's on the jealous side of things. I suppose the main way I differ from her perspective here is that I love the idea of someone transferring tidbits from my conversations. Maybe they hit a sour spot from association for her, but if I could get someone to transfer that experience, I might even be happy for them. One of my favourite unlikely things that ever happened to me is when I made one single meme in a subreddit for a video game. It only got upvoted about 200 times but somewhere along the way, it made it to a reasonably big YouTuber who included it in a video of theirs for about two seconds. Someone I was talking to saw it there, and then brought it up to me in conversation. Something I made managed to loop all the way around the world and end up back at me. By a wide margin one of the least likely things that I've ever experienced.
#263. Thundamentals - Everybody But You (#92, 2018)
29th of 2018
I don't even know how this is here. In 2017, Thundamentals scored their biggest hit in Hottest 100 terms (#861), one that painted over the fact that their previous album was more successful on the whole. That usually spells the end on the next album cycle. It's a path we've seen here many times (#654), (#404), (#351). It'll happen more as we go through this list. Thundamentals followed the playbook except when they put out their next album 18 months later, they still managed a pretty fair showing, with this unusual appearance solidifying that they weren't going anywhere. Now, they haven't had another entry since 2018, but nothing about it screams of a logical last gasp.
The only thing I've got here is that Thundamentals took things down a slightly different path with this album. Not a radical transformation, but maybe tweaking the parameters just a little to maybe find favour with a different audience. I'm looking at myself here. I happened upon their song "All I See Is Music" and it instantly became a big favourite of mine. It's much more chilled out than you'd expect with an instrumental that nearly overpowers Jeswon & Tuka. Great hook too, music does make the pain go away. I guess making Aussie hip-hop music that doesn't really sound like it has often been a strength of theirs.
I wasn't familiar with "Everybody But You" at all when it made the poll. Another case of me running my own side-quest and missing the supposedly popular option. It was a strange adjustment at first. If Tuka's hook sounds a little annoying, I get it. For me it quickly emerged as a dark horse, that surprise song from the pack of dozens of downloads on the day that I look forward to hearing the most. It does exhibit some of those properties of "All I See Is Music" too, with a really warm bass line to coast you through it. It feels strange to say but I could imagine this translating into an acoustic guitar jam pretty seamlessly. It's hard to imagine many people getting behind second tier, late career Thundamentals singles, but this is a real overlooked gem from this set of songs.
#262. Kanye West - Bound 2 (#59, 2013)
43rd of 2013
There's a peculiar streak that Kanye West maintained for a very long time, which is that he had a top 50 single in Australia from every single one of his albums. Up to 2026, that's 12 albums, and you can also include 3 collaborative albums though you'll have to call it quits once you get to "Vultures 2". Though a single top 50 entry is a pretty low bar for most stars, I'm not sure there actually is anyone else that can match him. Most big stars just don't have that big a catalogue, or more likely they've got a period of time that's letting them down. Taylor Swift would have something to say about it if not for her debut album. It's mainly just weird that it's Kanye West of all artists, who so consistently sabotages his own album rollouts with unusual strategies that are not conducive to this. It's a streak that sits on a razor's edge of just barely getting over the line most of the time.
The most egregious example of this has to be "Yeezus", his 2013 album. "Yeezus" was put out with no advance singles and actually became his first #1 album in Australia...though memorably it needed a recount after some erroneous sales were attributed to his nearest competition. A rare case of the charts admitting they made a mistake and amending. This didn't help him on the Singles chart though which was currently residing with some of the toughest competition it's ever had. You couldn't just waltz into the chart because the bar for entry was so high. It was true of Kanye West in fact. The biggest hit on the album (and a future entry on this list) stalled out at #58, and then the more short-lived hype of "Bound 2" got to #56. Kanye's run of skirting the line finally coming to an end.
In 2022, "Bound 2" became the subject of a TikTok meme. I had never seen it before, but the crux of it appears to be that you get two people on camera, one lip syncs along with Kanye for a portion of the song while the other person is doing an exaggerated lip sync with the sample. Naturally the song has been sped up to the point of sounding like chipmunks, and I'll give it partial credit for being an example that actually feels justified, I don't think it'd work with the original track. Thanks to this brief viral trend, "Bound 2" re-entered the charts and got all the way to #50, preserving the streak, and linking the chain up with all the albums he'd put out since. A very satisfying turn of events.
This is all ignoring the elephant in the room by pretending that "Bound 2" is just a regular Kanye West song with nothing to report. This is clearly not the case. Sitting at the end of "Yeezus", it feels like a novelty bonus track. Just a silly joke that doesn't fit in with anything that came before it. If "Yeezus" wasn't so short, maybe it even could have been a hidden track, but then evidently there were bigger plans for it. A large part of why the song is so famous is because it received a music video where Kanye makes out with Kim Kardashian while riding a motorcycle. Popular consensus seemed to be to make fun of it for being bad, and it entered the canon of music videos on YouTube that have considerably more dislikes than likes, the area usually reserved for Justin Bieber. No longer the case, though that's probably either because dislikes aren't displayed to encourage it, or because it's only viewed now by people who already know they like it.
Otherwise, it's mainly the samples that make this a weird song. The title spills the secret as it's built from Ponderosa Twins Plus One's "Bound". Not the only popular rap song to do this, as Tyler, The Creator would use a different part of it on "A BOY IS A GUN", though that one doesn't feel nearly as strange. It's just a very slow and breezy sample next to some of the most intense songs Kanye has ever put out. The other sample comes from an early Brenda Lee hit, "Sweet Nothin's", giving us the immortal phrase 'uh huh, honey'. For Brenda Lee, it introduces the song and her, for Kanye it's a weird disarming punchline that takes you out of the whole thing multiple times.
Oh and there's a third sample, "Aeroplane (Reprise)" by Wee, which has the melody interpolated by Charlie Wilson on the bridge. The boldness of his performance was one of the first things that sold me on the song. It came into play again a year later because the drum & bass duo Sigma made a bootleg version of "Bound 2" that eventually turned into a hit song for them called "Nobody To Love". Their track re-recorded those vocals and took it from a twice-off bridge to pretty much the whole song. They also kept Brenda Lee in it, in case there was any chance it could be a coincidence. Sigma's version turned into a massive hit, going to #1 in the UK, and also hitting #11 in Australia, considerably better than "Bound 2" had managed. It felt like a strange injustice at the time but I mainly look at it now as an example of the different audience reaches some artists have. If you're getting your hit songs from the radio or anything that feeds itself from top 40, it's entirely possible that "Bound 2" just never enters your world, and everything about the Sigma track is new and novel. Even if you aren't, maybe coating over the Kanye West parts of it would make it more palatable anyway. The scenario has flipped now anyway, with "Nobody To Love" being relatively forgotten and "Bound 2" absolutely sticking around. The big names always win I guess.
Otherwise the fascinating thing about "Bound 2" is the lyrics. There's an odd sense of romanticism to it that manages to get told in the most absolutely crass way possible. There's something more real about that, anyway. Being too busy being in love to even try to find the word to describe your girl without being disrespectful. Otherwise it's hilarious. The kind where you're so compelled by the performance that the absolutely laboured 'Brad reputation' punchline still manages to hit. I just can't believe the lyric about the sink isn't even the most ridiculous part of its own rhyme. It was never really my favourite from the album but I'd be lying if I said I wasn't glad to have it when it showed up. It felt a little random at the time but I think the song itself aged surprisingly well.
#261. Thelma Plum - Backseat of My Mind (#21, 2022)
18th of 2022
I sometimes think of the middle of the list as the Xavier Rudd zone of the countdown. It was effectively the limit to how far he could go as he was playing to one specific niche of voters and it was just a matter of getting their approval or not. The funny twist with all this is that his last entry "Follow The Sun" was probably being severely underrated at the time as it's shown itself to clearly go beyond that initial audience into a massive, enduring hit. We can also say something similar about The Amity Affliction who practically live in the bottom half of the countdown and only very occasionally jumped out of it when they were having some crossover popularity. Again, it makes sense, all things considered.
Did you ever notice that Thelma Plum has only made the top half of the Hottest 100 twice? If you've been paying close attention to these posts, it's been nothing but also-rans that snuck into the lower part, because across 10 or 11 entries to date, that's just as far as most of her songs go. The first exception is obvious, and saved for a later date. The other one is this, the incredibly unassuming go-getter that acts as if it's playing similar cards to the first one. I don't think it is, and I could easily imagine numerous other songs of hers to be in this same place instead. Career momentum or just a good song? Maybe it's a bit of both.
Like "The Brown Snake" (#579), "Backseat of My Mind" comes from her "Meanjin" EP, which was written during lockdown, in case there wasn't enough COVID influence in the last two years. Meanjin is the indigenous name for Brisbane which is where she was stuck writing it. It's amusing to look at press statements at the time which seem to hint towards this being a lead single for a new album, except that when the album did eventually arrive in 2024, this wasn't on it. Maybe if it had the streaming numbers.
Not that the backseat is the right place for it, but there's a good driving pace to this. There's a clear difference from her older music where she's found a comfort in writing unabashed pop songs. I have a fondness for some of those weirder edges, but the sanded down version is mighty pleasant too. There's a familiarity here but I wouldn't call it a rip off of any of her previous singles. Just one of those hit streaks to embrace in the moment.










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