Shoulda Been Higher is an affectionate, energetic celebration of three decades of Triple J’s Hottest 100 — a cultural ritual that has shaped, reflected, and occasionally divided Australian music fans since 1993. Spanning every countdown from the inaugural list through to 2022, the book offers a nostalgic deep dive that feels especially timely in the lead up to this year’s event.
One of the Tom Clarke’s most compelling through lines is the reminder that the Hottest 100 has never been a list of the best songs of the year. Instead, it captures listeners’ favourite songs — a far more democratic, emotionally driven measure. That distinction becomes a lens through which the entire history of the countdown makes more sense: each year becomes less a canon and more a snapshot of collective taste, identity, and the shifting sensibilities of Triple J’s audience.
The book’s structure reinforces by grouping songs into six overarching genres — rock, pop, folk, hard rock, electronic, and hip hop — Clarke traces how the countdown has evolved over time. The early years are unmistakably rock centric, almost a time capsule of 90s alternative culture, while the shift around 2010 toward pop dominance reveals just how dramatically the musical landscape (and the station’s audience) has changed. Watching that evolution unfold across the decades is one of the book’s quiet pleasures.
There’s also a playful, opinionated streak in the author’s ranking of every Hottest 100 year from worst to best. Whether you agree or not, the commentary invites you to revisit your own memories of particular countdowns — the songs you loved, the ones you argued about, and the ones you still think were robbed.
Above all, Shoulda Been Higher is simply fun. It’s the kind of book that sends you down listening rabbit holes, sparks debates with friends, and reminds you why the Hottest 100 remains such a beloved part of Australian music culture. As a companion to the upcoming countdown, it’s been a perfect warm up — nostalgic, surprising, and full of the joy that comes from rediscovering the soundtrack of the last 30 years.