1997 Triple J Hottest 100 | |
---|---|
Countdown details | |
Date of countdown | 26 January 1998 |
Countdown highlights | |
Winning song | The Whitlams ("No Aphrodisiac") |
Most entries | The Whitlams (2) The Verve (2) Radiohead (2) Jebediah (2) Silverchair (2) The Living End (2) Faith No More (2) Grinspoon (2) Ween (2) The Bloodhound Gang (2) Arkarna (2) Everclear (2) |
The 1997 Triple J Hottest 100 , was a countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J, and was broadcast on Australia Day 1998. A CD featuring 31 of the songs was released. A countdown of the videos of most of the songs was also shown on the ABC music series Rage . The most popular song was announced by former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, the namesake of the winning group.
Note: Australian artists |
# | Song | Artist | Country of origin |
---|---|---|---|
1 | No Aphrodisiac | The Whitlams | Australia |
2 | Song 2 | Blur | United Kingdom |
3 | Tubthumping | Chumbawamba | United Kingdom |
4 | Bitter Sweet Symphony | The Verve | United Kingdom |
5 | Back Door Man | Pauline Pantsdown | Australia |
6 | Dammit | Blink-182 | United States |
7 | Paranoid Android | Radiohead | United Kingdom |
8 | The Beautiful People | Marilyn Manson | United States |
9 | Karma Police | Radiohead | United Kingdom |
10 | Leaving Home | Jebediah | Australia |
11 | Walkin' on the Sun | Smash Mouth | United States |
12 | One Angry Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces | Ben Folds Five | United States |
13 | Freak | Silverchair | Australia |
14 | Down Again | The Superjesus | Australia |
15 | Prisoner of Society | The Living End | Australia |
16 | Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen) | Quindon Tarver | United States |
17 | Crazy | Cordrazine | Australia |
18 | Into My Arms | Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds | Australia |
19 | Everyday Formula | Regurgitator | Australia |
20 | I Will Survive | Cake | United States |
21 | Monkey Wrench | Foo Fighters | United States |
22 | The Drugs Don't Work | The Verve | United Kingdom |
23 | Calypso | Spiderbait | Australia |
24 | A.D.I.D.A.S. | Korn | United States |
25 | Hitchin' a Ride | Green Day | United States |
26 | The Perfect Drug | Nine Inch Nails | United States |
27 | The Door | Silverchair | Australia |
28 | Cows with Guns | Dana Lyons | United States |
29 | Semi-Charmed Life | Third Eye Blind | United States |
30 | Forty Six & 2 | Tool | United States |
31 | Ashes to Ashes | Faith No More | United States |
32 | Coma | Pendulum | Australia |
33 | Military Strongmen | Jebediah | Australia |
34 | DC×3 | Grinspoon | Australia |
35 | Summertime | The Sundays | United Kingdom |
36 | Mutilated Lips | Ween | United States |
37 | Naughty Boy | The Mavis's | Australia |
38 | The Memory Remains | Metallica | United States |
39 | Captain (Million Miles an Hour) | Something for Kate | Australia |
40 | Why's Everybody Always Pickin' on Me? | Bloodhound Gang | United States |
41 | Deadweight | Beck | United States |
42 | Brimful of Asha | Cornershop | United Kingdom |
43 | You're Not the Only One Who Feels This Way | Ammonia | Australia |
44 | Temptation | The Tea Party | Canada |
45 | Wrong Number | The Cure | United Kingdom |
46 | Fire Water Burn | Bloodhound Gang | United States |
47 | (Can't You) Trip Like I Do | Filter and The Crystal Method | United States |
48 | Anatomically Correct | Custard | Australia |
49 | From Here on In | The Living End | Australia |
50 | Eat Me | Arkarna | United Kingdom |
51 | So Much for the Afterglow | Everclear | United States |
52 | #1 Crush | Garbage | United States |
53 | You Sound Like Louis Burdett | The Whitlams | Australia |
54 | Everything to Everyone | Everclear | United States |
55 | Love Rollercoaster | Red Hot Chili Peppers | United States |
56 | Funky Shit | The Prodigy | United Kingdom |
57 | Girl at the Bus Stop | My Drug Hell | United Kingdom |
58 | I Go Off | Diana Ah Naid | Australia |
59 | Your Woman | White Town | United Kingdom |
60 | New York City | They Might Be Giants | United States |
61 | Block Rockin' Beats | The Chemical Brothers | United Kingdom |
62 | The End Is the Beginning Is the End | The Smashing Pumpkins | United States |
63 | Repeat | Grinspoon | Australia |
64 | Stripsearch | Faith No More | United States |
65 | Outdoor Type | The Lemonheads | United States |
66 | JC | Powderfinger | Australia |
67 | I Choose | The Offspring | United States |
68 | Cosmic Girl | Jamiroquai | United Kingdom |
69 | Waving My Dick in the Wind | Ween | United States |
70 | Place Your Hands | Reef | United Kingdom |
71 | Sick with Love | Robyn Loau | Australia |
72 | Pulse | Front End Loader | Australia |
73 | Lakini's Juice | Live | United States |
74 | The Ghost of Tom Joad | Rage Against the Machine | United States |
75 | Female of the Species | Space | United Kingdom |
76 | Legend of a Cowgirl | Imani Coppola | United States |
77 | Lovefool | The Cardigans | Sweden |
78 | Degenerate Boy | The Mark of Cain | Australia |
79 | All Mine | Portishead | United Kingdom |
80 | Faded | Ben Harper | United States |
81 | Did It Again | Kylie Minogue | Australia |
82 | Shake Hands with Beef | Primus | United States |
83 | I Wanna Be a Drug-Sniffing Dog | Lard | United States |
84 | Feelin' Kinda Sporty | Dave Graney | Australia |
85 | Nightmare | Brainbug | United Kingdom |
86 | Smokin' Johnny Cash | The Blackeyed Susans | Australia |
87 | 6 Underground | Sneaker Pimps | United Kingdom |
88 | Nothing | Beaverloop | Australia |
89 | Not If You Were the Last Junkie on Earth | The Dandy Warhols | United States |
90 | Society | Pennywise | United States |
91 | Remember Me | Blue Boy | United Kingdom |
92 | Titanic Days | Sidewinder | Australia |
93 | Weightlessness | Skunkhour | Australia |
94 | Way of All Things | Rebecca's Empire | Australia |
95 | Don't Leave | Faithless | United Kingdom |
96 | Bound for the Floor | Local H | United States |
97 | The Futures Overrated | Arkarna | United Kingdom |
98 | Da Funk | Daft Punk | France |
99 | Naked Eye | Luscious Jackson | United States |
100 | I Give In | Effigy | Australia |
34 of the 100 songs were by Australian artists (marked with a green background).
Two entries
The CD also has an interactive component [1] [ better source needed ] that could be accessed on a PC.
A later version, released under the Warner label, omitted "The Beautiful People", "One Angry Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces", "Lakini's Juice, and "The Perfect Drug", but included "Cows with Guns" by Dana Lyons on the first disc and "Cosmic Girl" by Jamiroquai on the second disc.[ citation needed ]
Triple J is a government-funded, national Australian radio station that began broadcasting in 1975 as a division of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). It aims to appeal to young listeners of alternative music, and plays more Australian content than commercial networks.
The Triple J Hottest 100 is an annual music listener poll hosted by the publicly funded national Australian youth radio station Triple J. Members of the public are invited to vote for their favourite Australian and alternative music of the year in an online poll conducted two weeks prior to the new year.
The Whitlams are an Australian Indie rock band formed in late 1992. The original line-up was Tim Freedman on keyboards and lead vocals, Andy Lewis on double bass and Stevie Plunder on guitar and lead vocals. Other than mainstay Freedman, the line-up has changed numerous times. From 2001 to 2022, he was joined by Warwick Hornby on bass guitar, Jak Housden on guitar and Terepai Richmond on drums – forming the band's longest-lasting and best-known line-up. Four of their studio albums have reached the ARIA Albums Chart top 20: Eternal Nightcap, Love This City, Torch the Moon and Little Cloud. Their highest charting singles are "Blow Up the Pokies" and "Fall for You" – both reached number 21. The group's single, "No Aphrodisiac" was listed at number one on the Triple J Hottest 100, 1997 by listeners of national radio station, Triple J. In January 1996 Stevie Plunder was found dead at the base of Wentworth Falls. Andy Lewis died in February 2000.
The 2002 Triple J Hottest 100, announced on 26 January 2003, was the tenth of such countdowns of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. As in previous years, a CD featuring 39 songs was released. For the first time, a DVD, containing film clips of songs from the Hottest 100 was also released. This was also the last time that phone voting was allowed; in the 2003 poll, only internet voting was permitted. SMS voting was removed for the 2003 poll but was reinstated in the 2004 event
The 2001 Triple J Hottest 100, announced in January 2002, was the ninth such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. As in previous years, a CD was released, this time featuring 34 songs.
The 2000 Triple J Hottest 100, announced in January 2001, was the eighth such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. As in previous years, a CD featuring 37 songs was released. The CD featured Queens of the Stone Age's song "Feel Good Hit of the Summer" despite it not making the top 100, hinting that it may have placed at No. 101.
The 1999 Triple J Hottest 100, announced in January 2000, was the seventh such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. As in previous years, a CD featuring 36 songs was released.
The 1998 Triple J Hottest 100, announced in January 1999, was the sixth such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. As in previous years, a CD featuring 36 of the songs was released. In August 1998 a Hottest 100 of All Time was conducted separate to normal countdown.
The 1996 Triple J Hottest 100, counted down in January 1997, was a countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. A CD featuring 31 of the songs was released. A countdown of the videos of most of the songs was also shown on the ABC music series Rage. The 1996 chart marked the first time an Australian band had topped the chart, with Spiderbait taking out top honours.
The 1995 Triple J Hottest 100, counted down in January 1996, was a countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. A CD featuring 32 of the songs was released. A countdown of the videos of most of the songs was also shown on the ABC music series Rage.
The 1994 Triple J Hottest 100, counted down in January 1995, was a countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J. A CD featuring 32 of the songs was released. A countdown of the videos of most of the songs was also shown on the ABC music series Rage.
The 1993 Triple J Hottest 100, counted down in January 1994, was the inaugural countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J ; the change to make the countdown an annual poll was made after organisers realised that the poll's results were unlikely to significantly change from year to year. About 50,000 votes were counted for this countdown.
The 2005 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on 26 January 2006. It was the thirteenth such countdown of the most popular songs of the year, according to listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J.
State of the Art is the fifth studio album released by Australian hip hop trio, Hilltop Hoods, on 12 June 2009.
The 2011 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on Australia Day 26 January 2012. It is the nineteenth countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as chosen by the listeners of Australian radio station Triple J.
The 2012 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on Australia Day 26 January 2013. It was the 20th countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as chosen by the listeners of Australian radio station Triple J.
The 2013 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on Australia Day 26 January 2014. It is the 21st countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as chosen by the listeners to Australian radio station Triple J. The countdown received 1.49 million votes.
"Cry" is a song by Australian alternative rock group the Mavis's. The song was released in January 1998 as the second single from their second studio album, Pink Pills (1998). The single peaked at number 13 in Australia, becoming the group's highest-charting single.
The 2020 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on 23 January 2021. It is the 28th countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as chosen by listeners of Australian radio station triple j. The countdown was announced on the fourth weekend of January.
The 2021 Triple J Hottest 100 was announced on 22 January 2022. It was the 29th annual countdown of the most popular songs of the year, as voted for by listeners of Australian radio station triple j.