Looks like triple j has officially un-blacklisted Sticky Fingers
It looks like triple j may have lifted their silent ban on Sticky Fingers, after their track 'Australia Street' was played during Requestival today.

It looks as if triple j has lifted their silent blacklist on Sticky Fingers.
In June 2018, The Industry Observer revealed that triple j had silently boycotted Sticky Fingers. Data collected from J Play — the now-defunct industry resource that once showcased the artists and songs that are played on triple j radio in Australia— revealed that Sticky Fingers were no longer being played on the youth broadcaster.
Now it seems that triple j have lifted the ban amid their week-long Requestival. The station played the bands most popular cut, 'Australia Street' earlier today — marking the second time triple j has played the music of Sticky Fingers this year.
In January, the station executed their monolithic Hottest 200 of the Decade countdown. The listener-voted playlist saw Sticky Fingers appear four times — with Caress Your Soul tracks 'Caress Your Soul' and 'Australia Street' coming in at #140 and #15 respectively, whilst Land of Pleasure tracks 'Gold Snafu' and 'Rum Rage' coming in at #58 and #33.
Up until the Hottest 200 of the Decade countdown, Sticky Fingers had not been played on triple j since April 2018, following that trainwreck interview on triple j’s Hack segment, where frontman Dylan Frost defended himself from allegations of violence and threatening behaviour with the nail-in-coffin line “boys will be boys”.
Though the station never made an official statement on the matter, the band remained absent from the triple j playlist, causing bassist Paddy Cornwall to attack the station’s apparent blacklist just last year.


Reporting from inside the Australian music business since '94.
Requestival marks the first time the station has played a song by the band on their own volition. Which begs the question, has the station lifted their ban?
triple j reportedly received 73,000 requests during Requestival, avoiding playing the music of an act so detested by the Australian public would have been as easy as pandering to a listener's ironic yearning to hear a Sugababes classic.
More from The Music Network
Reporting from inside the Australian music business since '94.
Get our top stories straight to your inbox daily by signing up to our Newsletter




