Ben Lee’s radical plan for popular Australian music vote
Social media was underwater with users who shared the best Australian songs (even Prime Minister Anthony Anthony Albane took action). While Lee sees that people who vote for their songs “act incredibly”, a one -time celebration of Australian music is shortened.
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“If I’m honest, a little postponement festival, or he says. “It’s not Missy Higgins and Powderfinger, who should stand up right now.
Lee adds: “Triple J should give the hottest 100 to Kyle and Jackie O, allow the commercial radio to work national as the main stream phenomenon, and Triple J’s job must be the 100th hotter of Australia.”
Triple J has the authority to play a 40 percent Australian music, a target that music director Nick Findlay has exceeded.
“We are constantly playing more than 50 percent of weekly Australian music,” Findlay said.
The station is adapted to young people that flow is the primary method of consuming music. 10 Genes Z Australian has a music subscription service, while seven out of 10,000 years.
Numbers speak with Triple J’s existential problem: young people do not listen to the radio, and the flow of algorithms that increase overseas actions.
According to Nick Kelly, the common host Hot Hit with Nic & Loren In 2DAYFM, changing the format of the hottest 100 will damage the station’s relationship with the younger demography.
“Triple J’s in the last five years, playing more pop music, interacting with the Zeitgeist, to benefit from the online online social follow -up, is the view of welcoming this demography where they are. “So now it would be a step back to leave it.”
“My suggestion would be the best 20 -countdown of the best Australian songs of the year to start something new, and it would sit with the hottest of the hottest instead of replacing it,” he says.
Glenn Richards, Augie March’s front man, Hit A crowded clock The triple J is above the 100 hott at the end of 2006. “This is not when the hottest 100 starts, and I do not believe that changing will suddenly open people’s ears to Australian music.”
Augie March’s crowded clock has entered the 2006 hottest countdown.
“When we won, we were small and are still small, whereas the Australian groups that make the hottest 100 are often quite big actions.”
According to Kelly, it will provide a future way to offer viewers more opportunities to discover new music. “Triple J is very good in encouraging society with the countdown model, people get excited and join social media, or he says.
In response to the questions that the station will consider changing the format of the hottest 100, Triple J Lachlan Macara president said: “To see that local artists are with great international names is part of the hot 100th thing that makes the 100th so special.
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