Triple J Hottest 100, 2016

The 2016 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on Australia Day, 26 January 2017. It is the 24th countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as chosen by the listeners of Australian radio station Triple J.

2016 Triple J Hottest 100
Countdown details
Date of countdown26 January 2017
Countdown highlights
Winning songFlume featuring Kai ("Never Be like You")
Most entriesViolent Soho (5)

2016's countdown broke several Hottest 100 records, including number of votes (over 2.25 million), number of songs by Australian acts both in the whole list (66 out of the 100) and at its top (all of the top four),[1] and longest absence between countdowns (16 years for Paul Kelly). With the first-place win of Australian producer Flume for "Never Be like You", 2016 marks a record-breaking fourth consecutive annual countdown in which the number-one track was by an Australian act, after Vance Joy in 2013, Chet Faker in 2014, and The Rubens in 2015. Flume became the first electronic dance music producer to top the countdown.

Background

Triple J's Hottest 100 lets members of the public vote online for their top ten songs of the year, with these votes used to identify the year's 100 most popular songs. Any song that premiered between December 2015 and November 2016 was eligible for 2016's Hottest 100. Triple J published a list of 1,909 eligible songs on their 2016 Voting List.[2] Voting commenced on 12 December 2016, as announced by Dr Karl Kruszelnicki in a nature mockumentary depicting a live music event. The short film featured cameo appearances from many musicians,[3] along with Dr Karl doing a shoey.[4][5]

Several artists and presenters made their Hottest 100 votes public.[6][7][8][9] The artists most often voted for by Triple J presenters were: D.D Dumbo; Kanye West; Julia Jacklin, who was not ultimately featured in the countdown; and A.B. Original, who are vocal critics of Australia Day (in 2016, Triple J announced a review of the countdown's date in response to criticism from the group and others).[10][11] On 12 December, bookmakers Sportsbet.com.au and William Hill placed Flume's "Never Be like You" as the song most likely to take out first place by a significant margin, with a Sportsbet representative stating that they have "never seen such a short favourite at this stage".

Voting closed on 23 January 2017. By 25 January, the day before the countdown, bookmakers and media reports identified Flume's "Never Be like You" and Amy Shark's "Adore" as the clear frontrunners for first place.[12][13][14]

Full list

Note: Australian artists
# Song Artist Country of origin
1Never Be like YouFlume featuring KaiAustralia/Canada
2AdoreAmy SharkAustralia
3JungleTash SultanaAustralia
41955Hilltop Hoods featuring Montaigne and Tom ThumAustralia
5RedboneChildish GambinoUnited States
6Believe (Like a Version)DMA'sAustralia
7PapercutsIlly featuring Vera BlueAustralia
8Say ItFlume featuring Tove LoAustralia/Sweden
9StrangerPeking Duk featuring ElliphantAustralia/Sweden
10StarboyThe Weeknd featuring Daft PunkCanada/France
11ChameleonPnauAustralia
12CocoonMilky ChanceGermany
13Love$ickMura Masa featuring ASAP RockyGuernsey/United States
14ViceroyViolent SohoAustralia
15Genghis KhanMiike SnowSweden
16January 26A.B. Original featuring Dan SultanAustralia
17The Opposite of UsBig ScaryAustralia
18All NightChance the Rapper featuring Knox FortuneUnited States
197Catfish and the BottlemenUnited Kingdom
20On HoldThe xxUnited Kingdom
21Death to the LadsThe Smith Street BandAustralia
22Ultralight BeamKanye WestUnited States
23Catch 22Illy featuring Anne-MarieAustralia/United Kingdom
24Come On Mess Me UpCub SportAustralia
25Because I Love YouMontaigneAustralia
26Make Them Wheels RollSafiaAustralia
27DriveGretta RayAustralia
28Frankie SinatraThe AvalanchesAustralia
29Our TownSticky FingersAustralia
30Innerbloom (What So Not Remix)RüfüsAustralia
31One DanceDrake featuring Wizkid and KylaCanada/Nigeria/United Kingdom
32NotionTash SultanaAustralia
33BullshitDune RatsAustralia
34Scott GreenDune RatsAustralia
35World of Our LoveClient LiaisonAustralia
36Sad SongsSticky FingersAustralia
37Smoke & RetributionFlume featuring Vince Staples and KučkaAustralia/United States
38YouthGlass AnimalsUnited Kingdom
39Step Up the MorphineDMA'sAustralia
40Surfin'Kid Cudi featuring PharrellUnited States
41I Feel It ComingThe Weeknd featuring Daft PunkCanada/France
42HeartlinesBroodsNew Zealand
43Final SongDenmark
44SatanD.D DumboAustralia
45Dumb Things (Like a Version)A.B. Original featuring Paul Kelly and Dan SultanAustralia
46Dang!Mac Miller featuring Anderson .PaakUnited States
47WalrusD.D DumboAustralia
48CreepinKingswoodAustralia
49HigherHilltop Hoods featuring James ChatburnAustralia
50Strange DiseasesGang of YouthsAustralia
51Outcast at LastSticky FingersAustralia
52Love Yourself (Like a Version)HalseyUnited States
53BlanketViolent SohoAustralia
54Bored to DeathBlink-182United States
55Say a Prayer for MeRüfüsAustralia
56Keeping Score (Like a Version)Paces featuring Guy SebastianAustralia
57TwiceCatfish and the BottlemenUnited Kingdom
58Girlie BitsAli BarterAustralia
59SoloFrank OceanUnited States
60DrinkeeSofi TukkerGermany/United States
61Gamma KnifeKing Gizzard & the Lizard WizardAustralia
62MarinadeDope LemonAustralia
63Life ItselfGlass AnimalsUnited Kingdom
64AlaskaMaggie RogersUnited States
65All Fucked UpThe Amity AfflictionAustralia
66Hold UpBeyoncéUnited States
67I Bring the Weather with MeThe Amity AfflictionAustralia
68Next to YouL D R U featuring SavoiAustralia
69So SentimentalViolent SohoAustralia
70WolfieGolden Features featuring Julia StoneAustralia
71FreeBroodsNew Zealand
72FamousKanye WestUnited States
73No ShadeViolent SohoAustralia
74Lost: Season OneCamp CopeAustralia
75Because I'm MeThe AvalanchesAustralia
76This Could Be HeartbreakThe Amity AfflictionAustralia
77SoundcheckCatfish and the BottlemenUnited Kingdom
78SettleVera BlueAustralia
79Burn the WitchRadioheadUnited Kingdom
80Gemini FeedBanksUnited States
81PandaDesiignerUnited States
82Think About ItThundamentals featuring Peta & the WolvesAustralia
83SimulationTkay MaidzaAustralia
84Pink + WhiteFrank OceanUnited States
85My Love Is GoneSafiaAustralia
86DopamineBliss n Eso featuring ThiefAustralia
87Uptown FolksDope LemonAustralia
88Me and Your MamaChildish GambinoUnited States
89Over YouSafiaAustralia
90Anything Near ConvictionLuca BrasiAustralia
91SubwaysThe AvalanchesAustralia
92How to TasteViolent SohoAustralia
93High and LowEmpire of the SunAustralia
94FadingVallis AlpsAustralia
95Lose ItFlume featuring Vic MensaAustralia/United States
96Hanging by a ThreadElk Road featuring Natalie FosterAustralia
97You Don't Think You Like People Like MeAlex LaheyAustralia
98Season 2 Episode 3Glass AnimalsUnited Kingdom
99Too GoodDrake featuring RihannaCanada/Barbados
100BraceBirds of TokyoAustralia

Artists with multiple entries

Five entries

Four entries

Three entries

Two entries

Countries represented

  • Australia – 66[1]
  • United States – 21
  • United Kingdom – 12
  • Canada – 5
  • Sweden – 3
  • France – 2
  • Germany – 2
  • New Zealand – 2
  • Barbados – 1
  • Denmark – 1
  • Nigeria – 1

Notes

  • The four highest-ranked tracks in the 2016 Hottest 100 were all by Australian artists (excluding the vocal feature of Canadian singer Kai on "Never Be like You"), which marks the longest continuous streak of Australians at the countdown's top, and the first time that the top four songs were by artists from the same country.
  • The 2016 list includes four covers recorded for Triple J's Like a Version: the DMA's cover of Cher; the A.B. Original cover of Paul Kelly; the Halsey cover of Justin Bieber; and the Paces cover of L D R U. This breaks the record of three Like a Version covers set by Chet Faker, Chvrches, and Meg Mac in 2014.
  • Nine songs in a row were by Australian artists in 2016, between positions #97 and #89, breaking the longest run of eight consecutive Australian songs set in 1999, 2012, and 2014.
  • Paul Kelly's feature on the A.B. Original cover of "Dumb Things" set the record for the longest absence between countdowns; Kelly last appeared in the 2000 countdown.
    • Earlier in the same countdown, The Avalanches' "Subways" broke the prior record of 13 years for the longest absence between countdowns; they last appeared in 2001.
  • The 2016 list features 11 different nationalities, equaling the record set in 1994 and 2015.
    • Wizkid's feature on "One Dance" made him Nigeria's first artist to appear in a Hottest 100, and the Hottest 100's first artist representing an African nation since Angélique Kidjo in 1996.
    • Rihanna's feature on "Too Good" allowed for the first ever appearance of the established pop star, and of an artist from Barbados, in a Hottest 100.
  • Five of Violent Soho's tracks feature in the countdown, making them the first artist with over four tracks in one countdown since Hilltop Hoods in 2006.
  • The song "Keeping Score" by L D R U made the countdown for the second consecutive year with a cover by Paces and Guy Sebastian.
  • This countdown marks the first time the top three tracks have featured female vocalists.
  • Gretta Ray's entry in the countdown with her song "Drive" at #27 marks the best Hottest 100 performance by an Unearthed High winner.

Top 10 Albums of 2016

The annual Triple J album poll was held in December and announced on 18 December.[15] J Award winner D.D Dumbo missed out on the top 10, with his album Utopia Defeated coming in 11th place.

Note: Australian artists

Bold indicates winner.

# Artist Album Country of origin Tracks in the Hottest 100
1 Violent Soho Waco Australia 14, 53, 69, 73, 92, (15 in 2015)
2 Flume Skin Australia 1, 8, 37, 95
3 The Avalanches Wildflower Australia 28, 75, 91
4 Rüfüs Bloom Australia 30, 55 (12, 28 in 2015)
5 Ball Park Music Every Night the Same Dream Australia DNC (141, 143, 156 in Hottest 200)
6 Sticky Fingers Westway (The Glitter & the Slums) Australia 29, 36, 51
7 DMA's Hills End Australia 39, (77 in 2015), (48 in 2014)
8 Radiohead A Moon Shaped Pool United Kingdom 79
9 King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard Nonagon Infinity Australia 61
10 Frank Ocean Blonde United States 59, 84

References

  1. Tom Williams (25 January 2017). "Triple J Teases Tomorrow's Hottest 100 Results With Some Juicy Stats". Music Feeds. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  2. "2016 VOTING LIST, ARTIST A-Z" (PDF). ABC. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  3. "Triple J opens the voting lines for the Hottest 100". Mumbrella. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  4. "Dr Karl Boils Triple J's Hottest 100 Down To A Science; Voting Now Open". themusic.com.au. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  5. Nathan Jolly (12 December 2016). "DR. KARL GETS LOOSE & DOES A SHOEY FOR THE HOTTEST 100". Tonedeaf. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  6. "Hottest 100 votes: Flume, The Rubens, Montaigne, Violent Soho, & more share their picks". Triple J Music News. 12 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  7. "Presenter Votes | Hottest 100 2016". ABC. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  8. "Presenter Votes | Hottest 100 2016". ABC. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  9. "Artist Votes | Hottest 100 2016". ABC. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  10. "Is This The Last Year We Hear The Hottest 100 On 26 January?". themusic.com.au. 24 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  11. Steph Harmon (24 January 2017). "Change the Date: hip-hop artists collaborate on new Australia Day track". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  12. "Triple J Hottest 100 - Best Song Betting Odds". Odds Checker. 25 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  13. "Could Amy Shark or Flume reach No. 1 on this year's Hottest 100?". Herald Sun. 23 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  14. Tom Williams (25 January 2017). "Hottest 100 Favourites Flume & Amy Shark Big Each Other Up Ahead Of This Year's Countdown". Moshtix. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  15. "Here's the 10 best albums of 2016, according to you | Music News | triple j". www.abc.net.au. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
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