
Day 2 of Triple J week here on Collapse Board and business as usual, with not a whole lot of difference from yesterday.
| Country | Total Plays | Percentage |
| Australia | 52 | 48.15% |
| USA | 32 | 29.63% |
| UK | 13 | 12.04% |
| Canada | 4 | 3.70% |
| New Zealand | 2 | 1.85% |
| Sweden | 2 | 1.85% |
| Belgium | 1 | 0.93% |
| Ethiopia | 1 | 0.93% |
| France | 1 | 0.93% |
| Grand Total | 108 | 100.00% |
As with yesterday, it’s all about new music and again the day’s playlist only included one song from before the start of the millennium , Powderfinger’s Don’t Want To be Left Out from 1998.
| Year | Total Plays | Percentage |
| 1998 | 1 | 0.93% |
| 2001 | 1 | 0.93% |
| 2004 | 1 | 0.93% |
| 2005 | 4 | 3.70% |
| 2006 | 4 | 3.70% |
| 2007 | 4 | 3.70% |
| 2008 | 3 | 2.78% |
| 2009 | 11 | 10.19% |
| 2010 | 79 | 73.15% |
| Grand Total | 108 | 100.00% |
As yesterday, Melbourne acts dominated the Australian artists played, followed by Sydney, Perth and Brisbane again in fourth place, although with a higher tally than the pitiful two plays that were managed yesterday. The breakdown of plays by city/area is in the following table.
| City | Total Plays | Percentage |
| Melbourne | 19 | 36.54% |
| Sydney | 14 | 26.92% |
| Perth | 9 | 17.31% |
| Brisbane | 6 | 11.54% |
| Adelaide | 2 | 3.85% |
| Blue Mountains | 1 | 1.92% |
| Newcastle | 1 | 1.92% |
| Grand Total | 52 | 100.00% |
The six Brisbane songs played today were:
I have assumed that Washington is a Brisbane act, but maybe she’s now classed as Melbourne now (her Myspace lists her as ‘mid-air, AU’. Zany). What’s depressing is that three of the bands played (Hungry Kids, John Steel Singers and Ball Park Music) are playing the Triple J Australian Music Month gig at the Hi-Fi in a couple weeks and their being played is accompanied with an advert/plug for the show. It makes you wonder whether they would be played if it wasn’t for Triple J promoting the gig, whether they would play something else from Brisbane or whether they’d just ignore Brisbane music in favour of playing some more songs from Melbourne and Sydney acts.
The Brisbane music played is hardly indicative of the breadth of music coming out either, which is disappointing (but perhaps not surprising).
Luckily we have such an epic community radio station that is committed to playing great bands from Brisbane!
4ZzZ all the way!