TISM (/ˈtɪzəm/TIZ-əm; an acronym of This Is Serious Mum) are a seven-piece anonymousalternative rock band, formed in Melbourne, Australia on 30 December 1982 by vocalist/drummer Humphrey B. Flaubert, bassist/vocalist Jock Cheese and keyboardist/vocalist Eugene de la Hot Croix Bun,[1] with vocalist Ron Hitler-Barassi joining the group the following year. These four members have formed the core of the band since their inception, with the line-up being rounded out by guitarists Leak Van Vlalen (1982–1991), Tokin' Blackman (1991–2004; died 2008) and Vladimir Lenin-McCartney (2022–present), as well as backing vocalists/dancers Les Miserables and Jon St. Peenis.
Noted for their dark humour, sarcastic delivery and melodic songwriting, the seven members of TISM appear in public as a pseudonymous, semi-paramilitary collective masked in a variety of balaclavas (usually as part of a more elaborate costume), and are known for their "chaotic" appearances in Australian media, often frustrating interviewers with absurd non sequiturs and tongue-in-cheek nihilism.[2][3][4] Their catalogue is replete with references to popular culture, particularly literature, music and Australian rules football; their (usually derogatory) references to celebrities have sometimes incurred controversy and even censorship.[2]
Following an almost 18-year hiatus, TISM reformed in June 2022,[4][7] returning to the stage for a series of three "secret" shows in Melbourne throughout November,[8] prior to their appearances on the line-up of Good Things festival in December.[4] They released their seventh album, Death to Art, in October 2024, following a 20-year gap since the release of The White Albun.
History
1982–1984: Early years, first break up and reunion
In December 1982, Humphrey B. Flaubert (Damian Cowell – drums and lead vocals) and Eugene de la Hot-Croix Bun (Eugene Cester – keyboards and backing vocals), previously members of a group called I Can Run, recorded a nine song demo tape titled Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance with guitarist Jock Cheese (Jack Holt – guitar, bass and backing vocals) under the name This Is Serious Mum. The line-up would soon expand to include Ron Hitler-Barassi (Peter Minack – vocals) and Leak Van Vlalen (Sean Kelly – guitar) by the following year.
This Is Serious Mum continued to record private home-made demos (with titles including Hooked on Crap and It's Novel! It's Unique! It's Shithouse!) throughout 1983, producing over one hundred songs within twelve months.[1] This period of activity culminated in the band's first public appearance, at the Duncan McKinnon Athletics Reserve in the small suburb of Murrumbeena on 6 December 1983. The so-called "Get Fucked Concert" was considered an "artistic and commercial failure", causing the band to split up; thus giving the show the dubious honour of simultaneously being the band's debut and farewell, and making every subsequent performance a "reunion" show.[6][9]
TISM returned to home-made recordings in February 1984. During this period they briefly experimented with dark ambient and industrial music, before returning to their former style. On 25 November 1984, the band performed their first "reunion" show at the University of Melbourne. At the show they released a self-titled demo tape which they recorded earlier that year at the home studio of Serious Young Insects drummer Mark White. Only eleven copies of the demo (which featured examples of their brief flirtation with industrial music) were made available at the show; all had sold by the time the band finished their short set.
1985–1990: First releases, Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance and Hot Dogma
By 1985, TISM were playing regularly around Melbourne. They released their debut single, "Defecate on My Face", in 1986; a 7" vinyl record packaged in a 12" sleeve with all four sides glued shut. The song is also found (in an unlisted "country" version) on the mini-album Form and Meaning Reach Ultimate Communion. Their next single, "40 Years – Then Death", was released in 1987 on transparent vinyl in a clear plastic sleeve with no cover art or labels. TISM's first radio-friendly single, despite the obscure packaging, was received well.[10]
TISM's debut album Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance was released in 1988, as a double vinyl release in an embossed gatefold sleeve. The first record contained twelve of TISM's most popular tracks, and the second was a collage of interviews, bedroom recordings and live "diatribes" from Ron Hitler-Barassi. Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance entered the lower reaches of Australia's mainstream Top 50, as did the single "Saturday Night Palsy", the following year.[11] The group appeared on the long-running variety TV program Hey Hey It's Saturday performing the single; during this appearance three additional seven-person line-ups joined the initial seven members of the band onstage, leading to a total of twenty-eight "members" of TISM miming the song by the end of the performance.[12][11]
In 1989, TISM self-published a book compiling lyrics, interviews and press releases titled The TISM Guide to Little Aesthetics,[13] however the book could not be released until early 1990 as TISM, having been threatened with legal action for libel, were required to censor the book, which they did by hand with a mixture of white-out and permanent marker (also placing stickers reading "CENSORED DUE TO LEGAL ADVICE" on the cover of each copy).[7] Despite this, some uncensored copies exist, and a document with the censored content is available.
In 1990, TISM entered negotiations with CBS Records and Phonogram Records and were signed by the latter. In April that year, the band began work on what would become their next album with producer Laurence Maddy. When Phonogram released Hot Dogma in 1990, it failed to reach the commercial charts, and TISM were fired six months later due to management issues, despite owing the label tens of thousands of dollars.[10]Hot Dogma is the first release to use the acronymic form of the band's name exclusively.
Over two nights in May 1991, the band were filmed live and released the video Incontinent in Ten Continents. These performances were the last for guitarist Leak Van Vlalen.[14]
1991–1998: Rise to fame, Machiavelli and the Four Seasons and www.tism.wanker.com
In mid-1991, TISM signed with independent record label Shock Records and re-issued Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance, as well as the EPGentlemen, Start Your Egos; a compilation of tracks previously unavailable on CD.[15] TISM, with producer Tony Cohen, released the EP Beasts of Suburban in 1992. A new guitarist, Tony Coitus (later Tokin' Blackman) joined the group onstage for the first time on 23 January 1992.[14] Les Miserables and Jon St. Peenis left following the Beasts of Suburban tour, replaced by two new dancers who inherited their stage names.
The 1993 EP, Australia the Lucky Cunt was the group's most controversial release to date. Courts issued an injunction order of the CD when the Ken Done Society threatened legal action over the artwork,[10] which parodied Done's signature style and depicted a koala sucking a syringe. The matter was settled for an undisclosed amount of money "fairly close to the amount that Radiohead spends on buying friends",[16] and the EP was re-released with a new cover graphic and title: Censored Due to Legal Advice.[16] During 1994, TISM sometimes played under the names "The Frank Vitkovic Jazz Quartet", "Machiavelli and the Four Seasons" (which would later be used as an album title) and "Late for Breakfast".
In 1996 TISM toured on the Big Day Out, during which Hitler-Barassi was either absent or requiring a wheelchair due to a detached retina and broken arm caused by a stage dive he performed at the Pacific Hotel, Lorne, Victoria prior to the tour.[22] Later the same year, TISM toured England, the group's sole Northern Hemisphere excursion.[14]
Taking a year off from touring, TISM spent 1997 working on their next album with producer Lachlan Magoo. The album, www.tism.wanker.com was released in 1998. The first official music video for the album, "I Might Be a Cunt, but I'm Not a Fucking Cunt" was rarely broadcast.[10]Returned and Services League of Australia head Bruce Ruxton wrote a letter of complaint to Shock Records describing it as "... Dropping [Australia's standards] through the floor into the proverbial sewer."[23] The letter was published on TISM's official website at the time, alongside the single's press release.[24]
www.tism.wanker.com sold well, thanks in part to an extensive Australian tour with Regurgitator, then at the height of their popularity, and the Fauves; however, sales were low compared to Machiavelli and the Four Seasons's success and TISM's contract with Shock ended by mutual agreement.
1999–2002: Festival Records and De RigueurMortis
Following the 1998 tour, TISM signed with Festival Mushroom Records, which re-released their entire back catalogue (except for Hot Dogma, their previous singles and the bonus discs for Machiavelli and wanker.com) on CD.
Their first and only official album with Festival Mushroom Records was De RigueurMortis, released in 2001. It débuted at No. 24 on the ARIA chart[25] and No. 3 on the Alternative ARIA Chart.[26] Flaubert predicted on Triple J radio that the album would "plummet out of the top 40 like a stone";[26] – the following week, it was not on the list. Touring became less thorough than in previous years, though no less active – at the closing of the Punters Club, the band ended up naked and tore the ceiling down during the gig.[27]
In early 2002, the track "Honk If You Love Fred Durst" was released as a single. In 2002, Festival Mushroom Records released tism.bestoff., a best of compilation which included their greatest hits, two new tracks and a disc of remastered Bedroom Recordings. The compilation was their third, and last, release with Festival Mushroom Records, as TISM's contract had ended. Finding themselves with no record label again, TISM returned to touring.
2003–2006: The White Albun and last appearances
On 6 January 2003, bassist Jock Cheese released a solo album, Platter, on Shock Records. The album was co-written by Cheese with Ron Hitler-Barassi and Humphrey B. Flaubert, and contained the full version of "Unfair", a track previously excerpted as the introduction to De RigeurMortis. Guitarist Tokin' Blackman contributes classical guitar to one track; otherwise most of the album's instruments were recorded by Cheese.
On September 26, TISM held a special one-off concert at the Hi-Fi Bar in Melbourne, presented as the "Save Our TISM" telethon, in which they solicited donations from the public to keep them from breaking up; despite apparently receiving the desired amount, the band "split" at the end of the show. The performance was filmed and released as part of the three-disc CD/DVD package The White Albun in 2004 by Madman Entertainment. Despite the "split", TISM continued to perform in order to promote the release of The White Albun, which also included the group's sixth (and to date, final) studio album, and an additional DVD containing a short documentary, the band's music videos, and a collection of home videos. The three disc set received good reviews;[28] however, it was not eligible for ARIA chart tracking.
At the band's penultimate concert on 13 November 2004, Hitler-Barassi delivered a diatribe saying that the band had "lost the election" and made references to Guy Sebastian winning that year's season of Australian Idol.[29] This show was followed by the band's last live performance for almost two decades, at the Earthcore festival later in the month. Following this show, TISM - quietly and without fanfare - disbanded.[30]
In October 2006, TISM were inducted into the EG Hall of Fame, at which they made an appearance and "a hilariously irreverent speech".[32] When asked about the current status of TISM at the time, Humphrey B. Flaubert remarked "we are slowly moving towards our deaths".[33]
2006–2019: Post-TISM activity
In early 2005, Damian Cowell (the former Humphrey B. Flaubert) formed a country and western band called Root!, producing a series of demos under the name "DC Root". The project continued until 2010, producing two albums and an EP.[34] Cowell followed Root! with The DC3, featuring Root! guitarist Henri Grawe. The project, which released its first single "I Was the Guy in TISM" in 2010, continued until 2013, producing two albums. Following The DC3, Cowell formed Damian Cowell's Disco Machine,[30] which to date has produced three albums.
On 9 April 2008, James "Jock" Paull (best known as TISM's long-time guitarist Tokin' Blackman) died of lung cancer.[35] In October 2009, the majority of TISM's back catalogue was re-released on iTunes with bonus material. In March 2010, a "21st century mix" of their single "Shut Up – The Footy's on the Radio" was released on iTunes. The 21st century mix features Humphrey B. Flaubert on vocals and Jock Cheese on guitars, and had wholly new lyrics. In April 2012, former guitarist Sean Kelly (aka Leak Van Vlalen) performed a series of songs live with satirist/musician Kieran Butler as "RealiTISM".[36] Kelly has continued to play TISM material live in years since.
In 2015, appetite for a TISM reunion began to build after Australia was formally invited to join that year's Eurovision Song Contest.[37] According to two competing Change.org petitions, TISM was 37 times more popular a choice for Australia's Eurovision representative than Kylie Minogue,[38] with the petition for TISM receiving over 14,000 signatures in support.[39] Flaubert refused to comment at the time, however suggested that "if a giant multinational with [a] horrendous human rights record was to give me a huge cheque I'll dob in my grandmother".[40] Australia's representative for the 2015 Eurovision song contest was ultimately Guy Sebastian with the song "Tonight Again", which came in fifth place.[41]
Australia has continued to participate in Eurovision in the years since, with TISM occasionally being suggested as Australia's representative - including in 2018 by the future 31st Prime Minister of AustraliaAnthony Albanese.[42] Albanese, a known TISM fan, also featured "(He'll Never Be An) Ol' Man River" in a DJ set at the Corner Hotel in Richmond in June 2016.[43][44] In September 2017, Albanese described TISM as having "a bit of dark humour, I think it's fair to say... but they were just great fun."[44]
In response to the growing demand for a TISM reunion, in April 2015 Damian Cowell said "if TISM came back, it would be shithouse. That's the answer... to that question. I think that's sort of the point that eludes most bands that make a comeback. They don't ask that question, 'will it be shithouse or not?' And because they don't ask that question, they go out and it's shithouse."[45]
2020–2021: Reissue campaign
On 22 January 2020, TISM released their back catalogue on Spotify.[46] In February, a proposal from Melbourne politician David Limbrick to rename the Mordialloc Freeway the "TISM Mordialloc Freeway" was rejected by the Victorian government.[47] On 10 April, Live at the Corner Hotel 30 May 1988, a recording of a concert at that venue which had previously circulated as a bootleg, was released digitally by the Australian Road Crew Initiative as a benefit for music employees put out of work by the COVID-19 pandemic.
On 14 October 2020, a press release credited (for the first time in 12 years)[35] to Ron Hitler-Barassi was published at www.tism.net.au. It concluded by saying that TISM would begin a CD and vinyl reissue campaign[48] with former head of Shock Records, David Williams. The reissue campaign began 21 December with the release of a recording of TISM's last live performance at the 2004 Earthcore festival, titled On Behalf of TISM I Would Like To Concede We Have Lost the Election, and a transparent vinyl disc containing almost two hours of silence (pressed at Abbey Road Studios), titled The TISM Omni-Album.[49] These were TISM's first vinyl releases in 30 years, and first physical releases since their final studio album, The White Albun, in 2004.
On 17 November 2020, a vinyl single featuring a cover of AC/DC's "For Those About to Rock" was released in a variety of editions, featuring cover art designed by four of the band's members.[50] The song had been recorded in the 1990s for an AC/DC tribute album but was never released, although excerpts had circulated in the TISM fan community for many years. The single's B-side was "Let's Hang Around the Shopping Centre", another unreleased song dating to the post-www.tism.wanker.com era. The release of the single was also accompanied by the first release of official TISM T-shirts (featuring two of the aforementioned cover designs) in 16 years.[51]
TISM's reissue campaign continued in 2021 with the June release of the Record Store Day exclusive limited edition 7" single "Mistah Eliot – He Wanker", featuring an unreleased version of "Kill Yourself Now and Avoid the Rush" on the B-side,[52] and in July, the first wide release of their 1984 self-titled demo This Is Serious Mum on vinyl and CD, and Punt Road, a 1987 rehearsal session, also on vinyl and CD.[52] In September a compilation of the group's remixes, Collected Remixes, was issued on vinyl only. In November, the mini-album Form and Meaning Reach Ultimate Communion was reissued on vinyl and, for the first time, on CD.
2022–present: Reunion and Death to Art
On 15 June 2022, TISM were announced as one of the headlining acts on the 2022 edition of Good Things, and were said to be playing their first performances since 2004 exclusively as part of the festival.[53] Shortly following this announcement, TISM founders Humphrey B. Flaubert and Ron Hitler-Barassi made their first media appearances in sixteen years, providing interviews to Music Feeds and Guardian Australia, as well as Double J and ABC Radio in Sydney and Melbourne,[7][4][54] and almost immediately prompting a (tongue-in-cheek) feud with Regurgitator, who were also appearing at Good Things.[55][56]
A box set edition of their first single "Defecate on My Face" (containing the 7" single along with an additional 12" record and CD) was released in August 2022,[57] alongside a compilation of the band's A-sides, Collected Versus: The Complete TISM Singles, on CD and vinyl.[58] The CD edition of Collected Versus contains the remix compilation Collected Remixes on the second disc, and features liner notes from former Rolling Stone Australia editor and known TISM fan Tyler Jenke, while the LP version features liner notes by Williams. An alternate edition of Collected Versus was released for the American market in early November, with a different second disc, titled Kill Americans: A TISM Primer, featuring a selection of album tracks.[59][60]
On 17 October, former guitarist Sean Kelly (Leak Van Vlalen) confirmed he was not rejoining TISM, as the band required a guitarist who could comfortably cover both Kelly's parts and those of the late James "Jock" Paull (or Tokin' Blackman).[61] Shortly afterwards, it was announced (via the launch of an official Instagram page) that TISM's new guitarist was named Vladimir Lenin-McCartney.[62][63] Lenin-McCartney's stage name is a riff on Russian politician Vladimir Lenin and the songwriting duo Lennon–McCartney.
Three weeks ahead of Good Things, on 12 November 2022, the reunited TISM held their first concert in 18 years, an hour-long secret show (billed as "Open Mic Tryouts") at the Croxton Bandroom in Thornbury.[8][64][65] A second secret show (billed as "Banjo Paterson-Lakes") followed the weekend after, at the Prince Bandroom in St. Kilda, on 19 November.[66] Later that night, Flaubert and Hitler-Barassi made their second appearance on the music program Rage, again providing an eclectic and eccentric series of programming choices, such as a 1970s Four Corners report on the middle class, and tracks by Crazy Frog, Mark "Jacko" Jackson and Jim Steinman.[67]
On 25 November 2022, www.tism.wanker.com was reissued on CD and limited edition blue-coloured vinyl, preceding an expanded seven-disc vinyl box set edition entitled Wanker Box, which was eventually released in May 2023.[68][69][70] A two-disc limited coloured vinyl edition of the live album Machines Against the Rage was also released on 25 November.[71] The following day, TISM performed their third secret warm-up show at 170 Russell in Melbourne, billed as "Rex Oedipus and Jack'Elephant' Titus".
TISM played all three dates of Good Things from 2–4 December 2022 in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. During these three shows, the band were outfitted in silver costumes with large helium balloons attached; a group of tradesmen also appeared onstage during the set and erected a set of foam letters reading "TISN".[72][73][74] The balloons worn by the band were later sold on their website.
On 19 May 2023,[75] the band released a seven-disc box set of their fourth album, www.tism.wanker.com celebrating its 25th anniversary.[76]
On 18 August 2023, the band released Hot Dogma Sing Sing Sessions, a demo tape recorded for their album Hot Dogma containing previously unreleased songs and six recordings that previously appeared on Collected Recordings 1986–1993.[77]
On 10 November 2023, their EP The Beasts of Suburban was reissued as a 3CD/4LP box set, containing over 50 unreleased demo recordings made by the band between 1991 and 1992, as well as the four iTunes bonus tracks for the first time on a physical release.[78]
16 November 2023 saw the band announcing a performance at the Museum of Old and New Art, for which Cowell had previously composed an album over a decade prior, to take place on 2 March 2024.[79]
On 30 November 2023,[80][81] the band released the single "I've Gone Hillsong" on music streaming services, a satire from the perspective of the Hillsong Church. It marked their first new song in 19 years, and the first with Lenin-McCartney on guitar. The B-side of the single contained a new diatribe performed by Hitler-Barassi, "Schopenhauer's SUV".[82] The band also teased three new shows on Australia's east coast for early 2024 to accompany the Museum of Old and New Art concert.[83] On 8 December 2023, the band announced their new EP The "C" Word and was released the following week on 15 December 2023.[84][85] It was the band's first EP in 30 years, since the release of Australia the Lucky Cunt in 1993. "The 'C' Word" and "I've Gone Hillsong" hit No. 1 and No. 3 on the Australian Independent Record Labels Association's single charts.[86]
TISM performed a secret show at the Pier Bandroom in Frankston on 24 February 2024, under the name "Dua Liposuction", with The Bennies supporting. At that show, three new songs were debuted: "Old Skool TISM" (whose lyrics were originally recited as a diatribe at the end of the 2022 secret shows), "Somebody to Hate" and "Destroy All Art" (which would later be retitled to "Death to Art"), as well as a new version of "40 Years - Then Death", entitled "14 Years - Then Death". The band would go on to perform the same setlist at MONA FOMA in Launceston the following week, which opened with a parody TED talk skit, which continued behind the band for the duration of the show. This was also Lenin-McCartney's last show with the band - he left around this time, and his guitar would later be sold on eBay.
On 16 April 2024, the band released No Penis, No God, a gospel album they had recorded in January 1996, which had remained for the most part unreleased (nine tracks had been previously issued as iTunes bonus tracks on www.tism.wanker.com in 2009), as a limited-edition bootleg-style LP.[87]
11 July saw the band debuting "Death to Art" on Double J. The song was released as a single two days later, with another diatribe, "Suspected Illegal Entry Vessel 915 (The Ballad of Jen and Steve)", as the B-side.[88]
On 7 August, the band released the music video to "Death to Art", which was crowdsourced by fans, also announcing that it is the title track of their upcoming album, the first in 20 years and the first with McCartney on guitar, and a headline tour of Australia in October and November that month, to be supported by The Mavis's, Machine Gun Fellatio, Ben Lee and Eskimo Joe. The 26th of that month saw Jenke announce a 33 1/3 book about Machiavelli and the Four Seasons, with a 1 May 2025 release date.[89]
On 6 September, the band released "'70s Football", the fourth single from the album, as a music video on YouTube. On 18 September, a warmup show was announced at The Gov in Adelaide for 6 October, which sold out within two days. At that show, TISM performed with a new left-handed guitarist, who inherited his stage name from his predecessor, and a brass section.
On 16 October, a music video was released for "Old Skool TISM", composed of archival live footage of the band, from 1988's Shoddy and Poor VHS up to Good Things Festival. On 24 November, the band appeared on Spicks and Specks, performing a mashup of the Gorillaz' "Clint Eastwood" with parts of "Tradies Get the Ladies", a diatribe the band had recited at Good Things.
The Death to Art tour ended on 29 November at the Hordern Pavilion. At the end of the show, TISM took a bow then posed for a photo with the other bands and the artists from the stage show.
Members
TISM members are pseudonymous and anonymous, and wear balaclavas during almost all of their public appearances. However, most of their names have been revealed (see below).[90]
St. Peenis also played saxophone on earlier recordings.[92] Cheese plays guitar on various recordings and live shows,[93] and Blackman arranged orchestral sections on The White Albun (2004).[94] Flaubert programs rhythms and samples, and has occasionally played acoustic drumkits live.[95]
There has been more than one person performing under the Les Miserables name, as confirmed by Sean Kelly (Leak Van Vlalen) during the "RealiTISM" video.
Identities
TISM have never officially revealed their names, instead choosing to use pseudonyms on their records and in interviews, all the while concealing their faces. Usually this involves the wearing of a balaclava, but outrageous costumes have been created for the purpose, including Ku Klux Klan uniforms made of newspaper,[96] silver suits with puffy arms and legs to mimic an inflated cask wine bladder,[96] giant foam paintings worn on the head,[96] large foam signs bearing the name of a Beatle,[97] fat 'businessman' suits,[96] and eight-foot-high inflatable headpieces[22] among others.
Who TISM are beneath the masks has been the cause of much speculation by fans, with one theory contending that TISM is composed of members of other bands who do not want their fans to find out: popular targets of this theory include Painters and Dockers, Machine Gun Fellatio and even The Wiggles.[98][99][100] A theory based on the band's tour schedule's roughly coinciding with school holidays, and the fact that the Ringwood Secondary College Choir and Orchestra feature in the filmclip to Thunderbirds Are Coming Out, proposes that TISM are school teachers.[101][102] Another common theory, based on the high incidence of Australian rules football references in their lyrics, is that they are or were players in the AFL,[102] however Humphrey B. Flaubert has stated that "We're actually not AFL, we're more violent and crappy... so you're looking at the VFL there."[103]
When asked why they wear masks, Flaubert replied:
The answer that makes me sound good is that we desired to circumvent the cult of personality that is inherent in rock music by choosing to remain anonymous. Unlike every other band in rock we chose to be anonymous. The answer that makes me sound good would probably also incorporate some lengthy discussion about Brechtianalienation techniques, about our post modernist grasp of ever cooling universe, and a dehumanising society encapsulated in the somewhat paramilitary aspect of our clothing. All of those things would make me sound good, but actually we’re really boring guys."
— Humphrey B. Flaubert, Return of the Pop Vigilantes[104] (21 February 2002)
However, when TISM performed on John Safran's Music Jamboree in 2002 playing "(He'll Never Be An) Ol' Man River" on instruments from Greece, the song writers' names were revealed during the credit roll which read "'(He'll Never Be An) Ol' Man River' by Damian Cowell / Peter Minack / Jack Holt / James Paull / Eugene Cester ... Performed by TISM."[105] Up until then, the songwriters' names were publicly available on the APRA/AMCOS database, but now the songwriting credits on the site just say "TISM" instead of the members' real names; Damian Cowell's real name is listed as one of the songwriters of ROOT!'s songs, however.
However, vigilant fans would have noticed the names some years earlier: Hitler-Barassi was photographed in 1993 at the opening night of Madame Butterfly, which was published on 4 April 1993;[108] the book revealed the member to be Peter Minack, who later released a book of his own (Campaigning With Grant) in 2000 about the American Civil War.[109] The book contains thin references to TISM.[110] In interviews about his book, Minack revealed he was a teacher, his father fought in World War II for the Germans, and that he is fanatical about the Richmond Football Club, explaining his stage moniker.[111]
Guitarist Tokin Blackman's real name was James "Jock" Paull. Paull died of cancer on 9 April 2008 at the age of 50.[35]
Eugene Cester was revealed in an Age column as being the uncle of Nic and Chris Cester of Melbourne's Jet,[112] however, it did not state which member he is. It is believed that he is Eugene De La Hot Croix Bun.
On 28 March 2007, a Myspace page opened for a Melbourne band called Root! which the lead singer claimed to be "the friend of the uncle of the guys in Jet".[113] The page also lists James Paull as a "friend". Humphrey B. Flaubert's real name is Damian Cowell, who performs in the band as D.C. Root.[114]
Timeline
Style
TISM are distinguished from other "joke" or "gimmick" bands by, among other things, their musical style. The band rarely, in any seriousness, state actual influences on the type of music they played, except that The Residents were a band which TISM "did" notice and "possibly" took some influence from.[104] A clear link can be drawn from The Residents' 1977 promotional video The Third Reich 'n' Roll, in which that group wore Ku Klux Klan uniforms made of newspapers[115] (TISM did exactly this at their first gig). Other bands which may have influenced TISM are difficult to pinpoint, although a Sydney Morning Herald article on the band described them as "a cross between Skyhooks, Dave Warner, Talking Heads and The Residents".[116]
In 2021, co-founder Humphrey B. Flaubert noted that part of the band's style was "never breaking out of character. Whether that character was 99% the real us, it was still a character. Listen to any interview and you'll get the sense that those guys are constantly 'on'. The persona never wanes. The metaphorical mask never drops. And while that may have annoyed some journalists, it's what set that band apart from every other band. It's what made that band's interviews more interesting for the listener than fucking Joe Blow going on about the creative inspiration behind his new album."[3]
TISM's early keyboard sound was provided by an Optigan which keyboardist Eugene de la Hot-Croix Bun ran through a flanger.[citation needed] They mainly use standard tuning; however, Eb tuning and drop D were employed in some songs. Jock Cheese's bass is prominent in the songs to a degree that head of Festival Mushroom Records, Michael Parisi, described the sound as "aggressive".[121]
The band were sometimes criticised as unoriginal for continually opting for standard pop song structures. One reason for this is clarified in their book, The TISM Guide To Little Aesthetics, in the following paragraphs, when asked why their ideas are post-modern but their music is not:
"Give me a pop-song, mate. Give me a fucking pop-song. Not only is it more fun, it's pretty fuckin' hard to write as well. You can bung in as many out-of-tune oboes as you want, but putting chords together so they sound pleasant isn't as simple as it might appear. It mightn't be the Sistine Chapel, but what is? Ollie fucking Olsen with his stupid feedback and cough mixture? The Jesus and Mary Chain, with their stupid feedback, and their stupid stage show with 800 powerful stupid lights and enough stupid dry ice to enhance their stupid stupidity up its own bullshit crappy teenage pretentious one dimensional dick witted puissant artistic enigma?
So ... what have you listened to for a good time that isn't, after all, a 'traditional' song? Still playing the Mike Oldfield records, huh? Still whipping Yessongs on for a good time? Wanna count on one hand how many people have fun at a Sonic Youth gig? I'm not supporting The Choirboys, old man, I'm just saying that the day some jumped-up over-paid self-important post-modernist cocksucker puts his foot upon his Fairlight computer in the middle of his 47-minute opus "The Silent Forgiveness of the Pig-God" and belts out the chords to "Johnny B. Goode" is the day I'll join you at the footlights of post-modernism.
^note TISM promoted themselves under various aliases, often for one-off events, including: The Frank Vitkovic Jazz Quartet; Machiavelli and the Four Seasons; Late for Breakfast; Jesus Education Salvation Uniform Squad; Open Mic Tryouts; Banjo Paterson-Lakes; Rex Oedipus; Jack 'Elephant' Titus; Herb Alpert And The Tijuana Brass; Dua Lipasuction
^ abFlaubert, Humphrey B. (2005). The Big Day Out Part Two The Rest Of AustraliaArchived 7 September 2007 at the Wayback MachineAustralian Traveller Magazine; they also toured in 1993–1995 and again in 1999 after German heavy metal band Rammstein withdrew. Retrieved on 17 November 2007.
^Patrick Donovan and Tessie Virgiotis (7 September 2007). "A love letter to Berlin". The Age. Archived from the original on 15 April 2009. Retrieved 16 October 2007.
^Album notes for The White Albun (2004) [inset]. Madman Entertainment, Melbourne, Australia (MMA2204). The White AlbunArchived 11 July 2012 at archive.today at MusicBrainz.
^The White Albun (2004) [DVD]. Madman Entertainment, Melbourne, Australia (MMA2204). Disc Three : A Docunentary. Dumb 'n' Bass recorded live by Channel V.
^ abcdThe White Albun (2004) [DVD]. Madman Entertainment, Melbourne, Australia (MMA2204). Disc 1: A film by Antonionioni and Disc 3: Home Videos
^"Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 March 2016. Retrieved 23 February 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
^Dwyer, Michael. (2 July 2004) The phantom menaceArchived 3 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine and related video (produced by Libby Chow, 2004). (article). (video). The Age. Retrieved 11 December 2007.
^Kroenert, Tim. (12 November 2007). [The Chaser's 'just war' on celebrity worship] Tim Kroenert (essay) Retrieved (12 November 2007)
^Geniac Satan Loves YOU!Archived 4 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine (lyric archive – "self rated MA: contains drug references"). Retrieved (11 December 2007).
^"17th Annual ARIA Awards". Australian Recording Industry Association. Archived from the original on 22 February 2004. Retrieved 6 December 2013. Note: User may be required to access archived information by selecting 'The History', then 'By Year', '7th Annual ARIA Awards (1993)', and 'Option Show Nominations'