If it’s not clear from their name, 5 Seconds of Summer know a thing or two about the warmest season. That’s especially apparent across the radiant choruses that populate their fourth album, 2022’s 5SOS5. The chart-topping Sydney quartet also know their way around Aussie pop and rock songs that are catchy and emotional all at once—as proven by the selections for their summer-themed Apple Music playlist. Those span classic ballads like Cold Chisel’s “Khe Sanh” and Savage Garden’s “To the Moon and Back” as well as dancefloor fillers from The Presets, Cut Copy, The Avalanches, and Art vs. Science. And there’s still plenty of room for world-conquering radio rockers courtesy of Wolfmother, Jet and, The Temper Trap. Read on for three members of 5SOS singling out their individual favorites. Gotye, “Eyes Wide Open” “Here at 5SOS, we’re all huge fans of Gotye. Big, powerful melodies strung to lyrics that’ll make you revisit the corners of your mind. Perfectly demonstrated in ‘Eyes Wide Open’.” – Calum Hood Kisschasy, “Opinions Won’t Keep You Warm At Night” “I was only 12 when this song came out, and that was when I started really getting into music videos that were on Channel [V] and VH1. This song spoke to me because the musicality felt super hooky, but still raw in a way. The melodies were really memorable and catchy, and it helped me understand more about the type of music I wanted to make. We were lucky enough that there were some really incredible rock bands coming out of Australia at the time.” – Michael Clifford INXS, “Never Tear Us Apart” “Growing up in Australia, I listened to the main radio station going to school with my dad. That’s where I learned all the Australian bands of the ’70s, ’80s, ’90s and 2000s, and ‘Never Tear Us Apart’ was on that playlist. The song holds more weight as I’ve grown up, and at the time I didn’t realize how influential INXS were worldwide. They really were a blueprint for us, as an Australian rock band, to reach the global charts and have songs that hold the same weight and meaning to people through generations.” – Luke Hemmings