Billie Eilish becomes first solo female artist to win Triple J Hottest 100

Singer wins with her song Bad Guy beating hotly tipped Australian star Tones and I

Billie Eilish has beat hotly tipped favourite Tones and I to win Australia’s biggest song poll, the Triple J 2019 Hottest 100, with her song Bad Guy.

The 18-year-old pop sensation has become the first solo female artist to top the countdown, in a top 10 that included five songs by solo women. Previously, women have only placed first in the annual poll as part of a band (Angus and Julia Stone won in 2010 with Big Jet Plane) or as a feature artist (most recently, Canadian singer Kai appeared on Flume’s 2016 winning track Never Be Like You).

Bad Guy was one of five songs from the US artist to feature in this year’s Hottest 100.

It was a surprise victory for Eilish. Mornington Peninsula musician Tones and I was expected to take the number one spot with her single Dance Monkey, which has been a record-breaking success in her home country and abroad. The song spent 32 weeks at the top of the Aria charts, making it the longest-running number one song in Australia’s history. It has gone eight times platinum in Australia, hit number one in more than 30 countries worldwide and been streamed almost 1bn times on Spotify.

Dance Monkey placed at No 4. Twenty-year-old Queensland pop act Mallrat took No 3 with Charlie, while Flume snagged second place with Running Back featuring singer Vera Blue.

No 5 in this year’s poll was a cover of Rage Against the Machine’s anti-imperialist protest track, Bulls on Parade. Florida rapper Denzel Curry’s modern update of the 1996 anthem includes a verse from his own song, Sirens, which takes aim at Donald Trump. In an interview with Triple J last year, Curry said he chose to cover the song for the station’s Like A Version series to make a political statement about how Trump’s presidency is dividing America.

How good are the narratives for this year’s #Hottest100. It’s either Tones and I, first solo woman ever (and she’s Australian!) or Denzel Curry with an anti-cop song that references the Prophet Muhammad and compares Donald Trump to Donald Duck.

— Osman Faruqi (@oz_f) January 25, 2020

More than 3m votes were cast in this year’s Hottest 100, an increase of 16.4% from last year according to figures released by the broadcaster. 65 of the songs in this year’s poll came from Australian artists, with Flume, Tame Impala, Baker Boy, Lime Cordiale, Pnau and Ziggy Alberts among the local acts to feature. Ocean Alley, last year’s winners, won two spots in this year’s poll. Melbourne’s G Flip had four songs in the countdown, peaking at No 6 with Drink Too Much.

Another big winner this year was Thelma Plum, the Gamilaraay singer-songwriter who released her debut album in 2019. Her songs Not Angry Anymore, Homecoming Queen and Better in Blak all placed, with the latter landing at No 9 – making her the highest-ranking Indigenous artist in the history of the Hottest 100.

This marks the third year that Triple J has not held the Hottest 100 on 26 January, a date that marks the arrival of the first fleet and is considered a day of mourning by many Australians. The station began broadcasting the countdown on Australia Day in 2004, but announced plans to shift the date in 2017 after a national survey in which 60% of respondents voted in favour of moving the poll.

Yesss @triplej #hottest100, moves from Jan 26, starts with an acknowledgement of country 🔥

— Sally Rugg (@sallyrugg) January 25, 2020

The Hottest 100 wasn’t the only countdown under way: on Twitter, the account @OzKitsch provided comic relief with its “Coldest 100”, which looked back on curious Australian music moments, including a high school percussion ensemble performing AC/DC’s Highway to Hell. The Coldest 100 – which was trending alongside Triple J’s poll – was topped, perfectly, by a video of conservative broadcaster Alan Jones singing Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Love Changes Everything.

COLDEST 100
1.
Love Changes Everything (2010)
Alan Jones 🇦🇺#coldest100 #hottest100 pic.twitter.com/dzsHyhAfcN

— australian kitsch 🦘 (@OzKitsch) January 24, 2020

On Monday, Triple J will air the Hottest 200, revealing the songs that placed 200-101 in this year’s poll.

Contributor

Katie Cunningham

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Triple J’s Hottest 100: who will win Australia's biggest music poll?
Local artists Spacey Jane, Ball Park Music, G Flip and Flume are all in contention – but the UK’s Glass Animals are tipped to take the top spot on Saturday

Nathan Jolly

20, Jan, 2021 @4:30 PM

Article image
Triple J Hottest 100: could this be the countdown’s queerest year yet?
Troye Sivan, G Flip, Boygenius and Billie Eilish are all being tipped to place high in a year dominated by solo pop artists – but not Taylor Swift

Caitlin Welsh

24, Jan, 2024 @2:00 PM

Article image
From Justin Bieber to … the Wiggles? What to expect from Triple J’s Hottest 100
Saturday’s countdown looks set to be an odd one, with more mainstream music than usual – and a Tame Impala cover from a children’s group

Shaad D'Souza

19, Jan, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
Hottest 100: Californian rapper Kendrick Lamar wins Triple J poll
With his track Humble, Lamar becomes the first person of colour to win the countdown, in a landmark year for the station

Caitlin Welsh and Steph Harmon

27, Jan, 2018 @9:30 PM

Article image
Triple J Hottest 100: Ocean Alley wins Australia's biggest song poll
The Sydney six-piece came in at No 1 and No 100, in a broadcast which featured a strong turnout for women in the top 10

Steph Harmon

27, Jan, 2019 @10:08 AM

Article image
Triple J Hottest 100: does Australia's youth broadcaster have an identity crisis? | Shaun Prescott
The breezy tone of the station’s annual countdown sounded out of step with a mood of national unrest

Shaun Prescott

27, Jan, 2017 @4:52 AM

Article image
Triple J Hottest 100: who will win Australia’s biggest music poll this year?
After last year’s countdown was topped by a band for children, Saturday’s countdown is anyone’s guess – but we do have a few hunches

Nathan Jolly

25, Jan, 2023 @2:18 AM

Article image
Triple J Hottest 100: Flume tops Australia’s biggest music poll with Say Nothing
UK act Eliza Rose places No 2 in the countdown, with Spacey Jane landing at No 3, No 5 and No 6

Katie Cunningham

28, Jan, 2023 @9:26 AM

Article image
How well do you know the Triple J Hottest 100? Try our infinite quiz
This quiz features randomised questions dynamically generated from Hottest 100 data between 1993 and 2014

Nick Evershed

12, Dec, 2016 @2:08 AM

Article image
From Childish Gambino to Amy Shark: who’s set to sweep Triple J's Hottest 100?
Australian acts set to dominate top 20 of beloved music poll, with Sydney band Ocean Alley tipped to take the No 1 spot

Nathan Jolly

23, Jan, 2019 @5:00 PM