Iconic Kylie Minogue song narrowly missed the Hottest 100 of Australian Songs
If you were wondering where the likes of Sia, Troye Sivan, Hoodoo Gurus, Christine Anu, The Triffids, Archie Roach and more wound up, then you'll find what you're hunting for in the other big countdown: the Hottest 200 to 101.
The Hottest 200 has been a triple j tradition dating back to at least 2008, satisfying curious listeners and offering a broader picture of voting trends.
The song that just missed clocking into the main countdown? It comes from the one and only Kylie Minogue.
Released June 19, 2000, the glossy Spinning Around was a reminder of what Kylie does best: a euphoric, undeniable disco-pop banger with instantly memorable hooks.
Spinning Around was voted in at #101, and is taken from the Australian pop royal's album Light Years. Her seventh studio record came after Minogue had dabbled in various reinventions, most dramatically with dance music and indie rock on 1997's Impossible Princess, to mixed success.
As the lead single, the lyrics of Spinning Around even seemed to be a self-referential wink to Minogue's return to form. "You know you like it like this," sang Minogue. "Threw away my old clothes, got myself a better wardrobe."
Indeed, the song's music video featured Minogue's now-iconic gold lamé hotpants, playfully parading her way through a club in a way that would upset the squeaky-clean sensibilities of her 1980s svengalis, Stock Aitken Waterman.
Originally bought for 50 pence ($1) at a British flea market by Minogue's long-time friend, photographer Katerina Jebb, and rumoured to be worth around $10 million, the hotpants were donated in 2014 to the Arts Centre Melbourne, where they are housed as "one of the most notable treasures" at Hamer Hall's public Australian Performing Arts Collection.
Spinning Around was originally written by Paula Abdul, who intended to record it for herself. It began as a soulful, much slower number inspired by Abdul's divorce from her second husband.
You would be hard-pressed to glean those origins from Minogue's giddy finished result.
While hunting for material for what would become Light Years, one of Minogue's New York A&R reps, Jamie Nelson, discovered the demo.
"[He] arrived home waving his arms about saying 'I've got this great song here, I think it'd be perfect for you," Minogue explained in an interview with the authors of the book 1000 UK Number One Hits.
"And we all listened to it, and loved it straightaway even in demo form, it had something."
The track went to now-prolific but then-fledgling British producer Mike Spencer, who worked up an instrumental featuring crack studio musicians such as Jamiroquai guitarist Rob Harris and Winston Blissett, a bassist whose credits include Cher, Massive Attack and Robbie Williams.
"We upped the tempo and made it into a disco record," Spencer told UK's Official Charts in 1998. "We didn't know if it was necessarily the right thing to do, but it felt like a return to where she'd come from, back to what [Minogue] does best.
"People at this point had assumed Kylie couldn't get back inside the Top 20. Obviously she's really famous and an iconic artist, but her career had gone adrift somewhat. I guess it was just one of those records that struck a chord."
That's an understatement. Spinning Around shot Minogue back to the top of the charts, debuting at number one in both the UK and Australia, and kick-starting a successful new chapter in a career that has now spanned five decades.
Beyond Spinning Around, Minogue charted two more songs in the Hottest 200 (Confide In Me at #175 and Nick Cave duet Where The Wild Roses Grow at #179) as well as reaching #27 in Saturday's Hottest 100 of Australian Songs countdown with her 2001 signature anthem Can't Get You Out Of My Head.
It follows her smashing a Hottest 100 record last year for the longest time between countdown appearances, with global comeback hit Padam Padam closing a 26-year gap since Did It Again charted in the Hottest 100 of 1997.
Coming in at #102 was another internationally renowned pop sensation, Sia, and her 2014 chart-buster Chandelier.
The lead single to her Australian and US chart-topping album 1000 Forms of Fear, Chandelier cemented the Adelaide-bred singer's transition from songwriter-to-the-stars (such as Beyoncé, Rihanna, and David Guetta) to a blockbuster solo artist in her own right.
Grinspoon ranked at #103 with their brief, brilliant Just Ace, Ben Lee's mid-2000s radio staple Catch My Disease was #104, followed by Spiderbait at #105 with Buy Me A Pony — the first-ever Australian song to reach number one in the Hottest 100, back in 1996.
Parkway Drive repped the homegrown heavy music scene with Carrion at #106; Savage Garden's tender ballad Truly Madly Deeply reached #107, followed by Birds Of Tokyo's Lanterns at #108, The Middle East's beloved breakout Blood at #109, and Pete Murray's Better Days at #110.
We have run the numbers to bring you some juicy stats (another Hottest 100 tradition) to whip out at the pub and ponder over.
A stack of artists reappeared from the Hottest 100 (24 to be exact), but more than half of the 200–101 comprised artists that did not appear in Saturday's countdown.
Of those 53 acts, quite a few scored more than one song in the Hottest 200. Kylie Minogue had the most, with three, but you have got to feel for these artists who all had two songs in the 200 but none in the main countdown: Sia, Birds of Tokyo, Pete Murray, Boy & Bear, Jebediah, and John Butler Trio.
There have been 19 Australian songs to go number one in a Hottest 100 over the years: 12 of them featured in the main countdown, and four more appeared in the Hottest 200.
Namely, Spiderbait's Buy Me A Pony at #105 (number one in 1996); Alex Lloyd's Amazing (2001) at #112; The Rubens — Hoops (2015) at #135, and Flume's Say Nothing ft. MAY-A (2022) at #176.
Five First Nations acts appeared in the 200 — Christine Anu, Archie Roach, A.B. Original, Xavier Rudd and Warumpi Band — while 31 songs featured female representation.
Sixteen songs came from solo female artists (namely Kylie Minogue, Sia, Christine Anu, Missy Higgins, Amy Shark, Vanessa Amorosi, Nikki Webster, Mallrat, Angie McMahon, Tina Arena, Olivia Newton-John, Ruby Fields, Helen Reddy and Kate Miller-Heidke).
Fifteen songs featured women as part of a band or as guest vocalist (Spiderbait, The Middle East, The Triffids, Divinyls, Something For Kate, Cub Sport, Sneaky Sound System, Amyl & The Sniffers, Ball Park Music, Killing Heidi, Middle Kids, The Go-Betweens and Giselle — vocalist on Crave by Flight Facilities).
The shortest song was at #196 — Hot Potato by The Wiggles, running at 1 minute 21 seconds, 30 seconds less than the shortest song in the Hottest 100 list (Spiderbait's Calypso).
The longest song was at #114 — To The Moon & Back by Savage Garden, running at 5m41s, almost half the length of the Hottest 100's longest song: Stevie Wright's Evie (Parts 1, 2 & 3), running at 11m8s.
The oldest track to chart in the Hottest 200 was at #186 — Helen Reddy's 1975 anthem I Am Woman — and the newest was at #165 — Amyl & The Sniffers' 2024 single U Should Not Be Doing That. The Melbourne pub-punks were also the newest entry in the main countdown, with their 2021 track Hertz.
The most popular decade in the main countdown was the 2000s, which also performed well in the Hottest 200, with 31 song entries. But the most popular was the 2010s, at 34 songs, followed by the 1990s (16 songs), 1980s (9), 2020s (7), and 1970s (3).
Historically, the Hottest 100 is quite a menagerie, and this Hottest 200 was no exception, with tracks like Zebra, Songbird, Oysters In My Pocket, Dinosaurs, Spiderbait's Buy Me A Pony, Tame Impala's Elephant, and acts like Boy & Bear, Birds of Tokyo, Cub Sport, Mallrat, and Amy Shark.
Feeling hungry? A few tracks focused on food and drink, titled Feeding The Family, Strawberry Kisses, Rum Rage, Feeding Line, and Hot Potato.
With a whole history of excellent homegrown music to fill our voting ballots with, we could do a Hottest 300 of Australian Songs full of classics… or how about the Hottest 1,000?
The takeaway being that this country has produced so much beloved music, and ranking it all in a list is not the point as much as reigniting passionate conversations about the quality and quantity of Australian music, and making noise to ensure that the future can sound as good as our past.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Daily Telegraph
39 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
AFLW: Chloe Molloy, Kate Hore and Ally Anderson open up about league's future ahead of 2025 season
Don't miss out on the headlines from Stellar. Followed categories will be added to My News. Posing on set for Stellar's shoot in Sydney's eastern suburbs is worlds away from the footy field, yet Chloe Molloy – co-captain of Sydney Swans' AFLW team – embraces being out of her comfort zone. 'I can respect what models do,' Molloy tells Stellar with a laugh. 'I get so awkward – I'm not camera shy but then … I am slightly camera shy.' Molloy, who grew up in the Victorian town of Whittlesea, made her AFLW debut in 2017 – and won the AFLW Rising Star Award, was named All-Australian three times, and nabbed a Best and Fairest at her former club Collingwood, before signing with the Swans in 2023. Ahead of the start of the 2025 AFLW season – marking the league's tenth overall (two seasons were played in 2022) – Molloy and her cohorts, Brisbane Lions dual premiership player Ally Anderson and Melbourne captain Kate Hore – reflect on how the league has changed since its inception in 2017. Ally Anderson, Chloe Molloy and Kate Hore on Stellar's set. Picture: Steven Chee for Stellar 'The game has evolved a lot,' Molloy says. As for what she would like to see in its future? 'I'd love for there to be more analysis [of matches]. I'd love more camera angles [during broadcasts]. I think you can get caught up with what we don't have … and forget how far we have come.' The trio is hopeful that, like them, more AFLW players will be able to earn a full-time salary from playing in the coming years – an ambition shared by the AFL. '[The AFL] is committed to us being full-time,' Molloy notes. 'When that is, hopefully sooner rather than later. There's growth in the game that's happening and still needs to happen. Salaries not only for the players but salaries around [for support staff]. Hopefully in the next few years [there will be] full time wages not just for the players, but for everyone around us.' Molloy, 26, is on track to make her return to the Swans after an Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) injury ruled her out of last season. 'It was very hard to process that I had even done it,' Molloy says. 'And you just know straight away that you are on the sidelines for so long. I didn't realise how mentally taxing it would be: 10, 11 months. One that I wouldn't wish upon anybody. It is a rehab beast – at times, it definitely defeated me. Now, I look ahead and everything that I have been through. It kind of makes me think, I just want to play football. I don't have a return date set. Fingers crossed [for a round one return].' The trio discuss the future of the AFLW ahead of its milestone tenth season in a Stellar exclusive. Picture: Steven Chee for Stellar Brisbane Lions midfielder Anderson, who played in two premierships with the club and is a three-time AFLW All-Australian, is firmly focused on avenging the Lions crushing Grand Final loss to North Melbourne last season. 'It was super devastating and a bit emotional,' Brisbane-born Anderson – a proud Gangulu / Wakka Wakka woman – tells Stellar. 'And it wasn't the first Grand Final that we'd lost,' the 31-year-old adds. 'I have been on both sides and it never gets any easier. You sort of have a really big break in the off-season away from footy. 'As a team, we have worked together. The position we have put ourselves in throughout the whole pre-season to … get back to what we were and do one better. 'We all want to redeem ourselves.' Swans co-captain Chloe Molloy, right, takes on the Pies at North Sydney Oval last season. Picture: Phil Hillyard Molloy, left, with teammate Sofia Hurley (centre). Picture: Phil Hillyard 'It never gets any easier.' Ally Anderson of the Brisbane Lions on THAT Grand Final loss. Picture: Getty Images Picture: Getty Images Like Molloy, Anderson made her AFLW debut in 2017 and she adds: 'I've played every game since'. The winner of the 2022 AFL Women's best and fairest award, Anderson notes: 'I'm one of the lucky ones – for the past 3-4 years, I've been able to dedicate myself to footy. I've been able to work on my fitness and I have had a lot of improvement over the past few years. I never thought I'd be a full-time professional athlete.' Ahead of the new season, Hore says she is more aware than ever about being a role model to the next generation 'It definitely took me a bit of time for it to sink in,' the 30-year-old says. 'My idols in footy growing up were all male, so for young girls to now have AFLW athletes to look up to is pretty cool. 'The saying 'you can't be what you can't see' resonates with me.' Kate Hore is the captain of Melbourne's AFLW team. Picture: Getty Images 'A big part of our lives!' Kate Hore, right, in action during Melbourne's clash against GWS last season. Picture: Getty Images Hore, a three-time All-Australian player, Best & Fairest winner, and the league's leading goalkicker in 2023, is in a relationship with Corey Maynard, a former footballer who now works in player development at North Melbourne – and the couple share their Melbourne home with a Golden Retriever puppy, Benny. 'Footy is obviously a big part of our lives but we love getting out of the footy bubble whenever we can,' Hore says. 'We are both very competitive, so when either of our teams lose we're probably not much fun to be around. He's incredibly supportive of my footy career.' The 2025 NAB AFLW Premiership season starts on Thursday, August 14. See Read the full interviews with Chloe Molloy, Ally Anderson and Kate Hore and see the shoot inside Sunday's Stellar, via The Sunday Telegraph (NSW), Sunday Herald Sun (Victoria), The Sunday Mail (Queensland) and Sunday Mail (SA). For more from Stellar, click here.

Daily Telegraph
39 minutes ago
- Daily Telegraph
Original Naked Gun creator's swipe at reboot and star Liam Neeson: ‘Not a fresh idea'
Don't miss out on the headlines from New Movies. Followed categories will be added to My News. The director and co-writer of the original The Naked Gun film has taken a brutal swipe at the reboot and its star, Liam Neeson. David Zucker, along with his brother Jerry Zucker and Jim Abrahams, created the 1988 spoof comedy as well as the TV show that spawned it, Police Squad, but was not invited to join the team behind the new instalment. Instead, its co-written and directed by Saturday Night Live's Akiva Schaffer and produced by Family Guy's Seth Macfarlane. 'I don't plan on seeing it because, why would I?,' Zucker, 77, told the Daily Mail recently. 'I wrote a whole script for Naked Gun 4 on spec for Paramount. I understand the studio's thinking to go with Seth Macfarlane. He's a proven commodity and Liam Neeson is a big star, but it's not a fresh idea.' Never miss the latest entertainment news from Australia and around the world - download the app direct to your phone. Neeson has stepped into the lead role of the new reboot. Picture: Paramount Nielsen was the original Detective Frank Drebin. Picture: Paramount Zucker also claimed that Neeson was not the right fit for the beloved franchise he created. 'OJ [Simpson] … he didn't need to be funny,' he said. 'And even Leslie Nielsen doesn't need to be funny. He just had to be a B-movie actor. 'That's what we did … We didn't pretend to cast Laurence Olivier or even Al Pacino. But Liam Neeson, for example, he's like Oscar quality. I think he may have won for Schindler's List. So I mean, what's he making fun of?' According to Zucker, despite being shut out of the production, Macfarlane had eventually called him up personally. 'I had a conversation with Seth and he spent 10 minutes just telling me how he idolised Naked Gun, Airplane, Top Secret,' he said. 'How can you be mad at anybody who tells you how great you are? But it's not enough to be a fan … The guy at my dry cleaners is a big fan, but it doesn't mean he can do Naked Gun.' The new film in the beloved franchise sees Detective Frank Drebin's son, the equally bumbling Detective Frank Drebin Jr. (Neeson) caught up in a murder case, part of a broader sinister plot for mass destruction, which he must solve in order to prevent the police department from shutting down. Pamela Anderson co-stars as his love interest and investigative partner, Beth Davenport. Anderson co-stars as Beth Davenport. Picture: Paramount Just like those in the original franchise, the latest Naked Gun movie leans in to the most bonkers humour – and even co-writer Doug Mand admitted to that he was shocked they got most of the jokes over the line. 'I can't believe this movie got made,' he revealed at the UK premiere. 'You dream about writing something that's silly and fun and joyful and they're not making a lot of movies like this anymore. Every joke that's on screen [in The Naked Gun], I can't believe they shot it, and I can't believe they spent money on shooting it.' Zucker had a brutal verdict on the latest Naked Gun film. Picture: Geoff Ward. Neeson revealed to that he'd needed to be 'convinced' to go through with some of the movie's more 'outrageous' scenes. 'There were a couple of apprehensions, mainly to do with the script,' the Taken actor, 73, said. 'There were certain scenes that were too outrageous.' After voicing his concerns, however, he was eventually thoroughly 'convinced they would work' by the production team. The Naked Gun certainly shows off a whole new side of the actor, who's known for his intimidating and stoic on-screen presence. But his latest role is actually more aligned with his sense of humour, as Anderson, 58, told joking that he was inherently 'a silly little boy'. 'He's very funny. I think with most people, there are so many sides to them, and that's what makes them interesting.' She added: 'Playing it straight was very important to make this film work – we had to make sure we weren't trying to be funny. That we were in the relationship, and in the situation, and then the comedy came from the circumstances.' The Naked Gun is in cinemas from August 21. Originally published as Original Naked Gun creator's swipe at reboot and star Liam Neeson

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
First Nations fashion on show at Darwin's 10th Country to Couture
This week, one of the country's most unique fashion events kicks off in Darwin: The 10th Country to Couture, which brings together First Nations designers, stylists and models. It's Australia's largest showcase of Indigenous fashion, and it's a runway that has launched models and designers from remote Australia onto the international stage.