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TISM (an acronym of This Is Serious Mum) are a seven-piece anonymous alternative rock band from Melbourne, Australia. The group was formed on 30 December 1982 by vocalist/drummer Humphrey B. Flaubert, bassist/vocalist Jock Cheese and keyboardist/vocalist Eugene de la Hot Croix Bun, and enjoyed a large underground/independent following. Their third album, Machiavelli and the Four Seasons, reached the Australian national top 10 in 1995.

TISM
Also known asThis Is Serious Mum; The Frank Vitkovic Jazz Quartet; Machiavelli and the Four Seasons; Late for Breakfast
OriginMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
GenresAlternative rock, alternative dance, synthpop, dance-rock
Years active
  • 1982–1983
  • 1984–2004
  • 2022–present
LabelsElvis, Musicland, Phonogram, Shock, FMR, Madman, Sony BMG, genre b.goode
Members
Past members
  • Genre B. Goode
  • Leek Van Vlalen
  • Jon St. Peenis
  • Les Miserables
  • Tokin' Blackman
Websitetism.store

History



1982–1991: Early years, Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance & Hot Dogma


In 1982, Damian Cowell ("Humphrey B. Flaubert" – drums and lead vocals), Jack Holt ("Jock Cheese" – guitar, bass and backing vocals) and Eugene Cester ("Eugene de la Hot Croix Bun" – keyboards and backing vocals), recorded a nine-song session called Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance under the name This Is Serious Mum at the home of friend Peter Minack ("Ron Hitler-Barassi"). Cowell and Cester were members of a group called I Can Run, which slowly evolved into This Is Serious Mum.

The band's first concert was on 6 December 1983. The Get Fucked Concert at the Duncan McKinnon Athletics Reserve in the small suburb of Murrumbeena was considered a complete failure which caused the band to split up. They reformed in February 1984 and returned to their recordings, experimenting with dark ambient and industrial music, before returning to their rock style. They consider every subsequent performance a "re-union gig".[1][2]

On 25 November 1984, the band made their public debut at the University of Melbourne, at which they released a self-titled demo tape recorded earlier that year at the home studio of Serious Young Insects drummer Mark White. Only eleven copies were made available at the show, and all had sold by the time the group finished their short set.

By 1985 the band were playing regularly around Melbourne and released their début single, "Defecate on My Face" in 1986, a 7" vinyl record packaged in a 12" sleeve with all four sides glued shut. This song is also found (but is unlisted) on the EP Form and Meaning Reach Ultimate Communion as a country version. 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.[1]

The début 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 pastiche of interviews, bedroom recordings and live diatribes. Despite this odd combination, Truckin' Songs entered the lower reaches of Australia's mainstream Top 50, as did the single "Saturday Night Palsy".[1]

Later that year, The TISM Guide To Little Aesthetics, a book compiling lyrics, interviews and press releases, was published, but could not be released until early 1990, as TISM, having been threatened with legal action for libel, were asked to hand-censor the book with a mixture of white-out and permanent marker, as well as place "CENSORED DUE TO LEGAL ADVICE" stickers on each copy of the book. 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.[1] 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 Leek Van Vlalen.[3]


1991–1998: Rise to fame, Machiavelli and the Four Seasons & 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 EP Gentlemen, Start Your Egos 1991; a compilation of tracks previously unavailable on CD.[4] 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.[3]

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,[1] 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"[5] and was re-released with new artwork as Censored Due To Legal Advice.[5] 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".

TISM's biggest success was the 1995 album Machiavelli and the Four Seasons. The release was a shift from alternative-rock to synth-driven techno and dance which retained vocal melodies and loud guitars. The album was certified gold and won the ARIA Award for Best Independent Release.[1] Three of its singles reached Triple J's Hottest 100, two of them in the top 10 in 1995.[6] On 27 April 1995 the band appeared on the RMITV show Under Melbourne Tonight and performed "Protest Song" and "(He'll Never Be An) Ol' Man River".[7][8][9] Success exposed TISM to mainstream Australian radio and television, most of which was perplexed by the band's guerrilla approach to interviews and lack of interest in the music industry. A four CD box set of early albums was released and steady record sales allowed extensive tours of Australia and New Zealand.

In 1996 TISM toured on the Big Day Out, during which Ron Hitler-Barassi was either absent or wheelchair-bound 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.[10] Later the same year, TISM toured England, the group's sole Northern Hemisphere excursion.[3]

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.[1] 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."[11] The letter was published on TISM's website at the time.[12]

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 & 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[13] and No. 3 on the Alternative ARIA Chart.[14] Flaubert predicted on Triple J radio that the album would "plummet out of the top 40 like a stone";[14] – 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.[15]

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.


2003–2005: The White Albun and break-up


Finding themselves with no record label again, TISM returned to touring. In late 2003, a special one-off concert was filmed and released on DVD as The White Albun in 2004 by Madman Entertainment. A documentary and full length album were also included, making it a 3-disc set which received good reviews;[16] however, the release was not eligible for ARIA chart tracking. The concert DVD is presented as a telethon at which TISM breaks up. Ironically, TISM performed after that concert in order to promote the set.

Snapshot of the Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me music video
Snapshot of the "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me" music video

At the band's penultimate concert on 13 November 2004, Ron Hitler-Barassi delivered a diatribe saying that the band had "lost the election" and made references to Guy Sebastian winning the year's season of Australian Idol. This opening remark can be interpreted as the band announcing their breakup.[17] The opening remark about losing the election later became the title of a live album. For all appearances, it had appeared that TISM had split, with no announcement or fanfare.

In 2005, TISM released the German CD-single "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me". Sony/BMG Germany expressed interest when the song's animated clip was an Internet hit thanks to bloggers and sites such as YouTube. The single reached the German commercial charts.[18]


2006–2021: Post TISM activity


In a 2006 interview with Triple J, when asked about the current status of TISM, Flaubert remarked: "we are slowly moving towards our deaths".[19] In October 2006, TISM were inducted into the EG Hall of Fame, at which they made an appearance and "a hilariously irreverent speech".[20]

In early 2007, a Melbourne country and western band called Root! formed, with Humphrey B. Flaubert (now called DC Root) on vocals.[21] Their debut album was released in December 2007.

On 9 April 2008, guitarist James Paull (Tokin' Blackman) died of cancer.[22]

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.

On 22 January 2020, the group released its back catalogue onto Spotify.[23] Live at the Corner Hotel 30 May 1988, a recording of a concert at that venue previously circulated as a bootleg by TISM fans, was released digitally on 10 April 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 to Ron Hitler-Barassi (his first writings in 14 years) was published at www.tism.net.au and on fans' social media accounts. It concluded by saying that TISM would begin a CD and vinyl reissue campaign[24] with former head of Shock Records, David Williams. The first two releases will be a live recording of TISM's final gig, titled On Behalf of TISM I Would Like To Concede We Have Lost the Election, and a vinyl disc that contains only silence, titled The TISM Deluxe Omni-Album. These releases constitute the band's first vinyl album output in 30 years and first physical releases since 2004's The White Albun.

Two weeks later, it was revealed a vinyl single would also be released in November 2020.[25] The single was announced as a cover of AC/DC's "For Those About to Rock", excerpts of which had previously circulated in the TISM fan community, backed with an unreleased song dating to the post-www.tism.wanker.com era, and released on 17 November. The single includes artwork designed by four of the band's members, and the first release of official TISM T-shirts (featuring two of the aforementioned covers) in 16 years.[26]

On 15 April 2021, TISM announced three more reissues, including their 1984 demo tape, a rehearsal session from 1987 and a Record Store Day-exclusive 7" single of "Mistah Eliot – He Wanker", with an unreleased version of "Kill Yourself Now and Avoid the Rush" on the B-side.[27]


2022–present: Reunion


On 15 June 2022, TISM were announced as one of the acts on the 2022 edition of the Good Things Festival, with the group confirmed as playing their first performances since 2004 exclusively as part of the festival.[28] A new greatest hits album, Collected Versus, was also announced for release on 19 August.[29] It was officially announced on TISM's Facebook page that Vladimir Lenin-McCartney is the new lead guitarist.[30] The reunited TISM held their first concert on 12 November 2022, an hour long secret show (billed as "Open Mic Tryouts") at the Croxton Bandroom in Melbourne.


Members


TISM members were pseudonymous and anonymous, and wore balaclavas during all their public appearances. However, most of their names have been revealed (see below).[31]

Current
Stage name Real name Role Period
Ron Hitler-Barassi Peter Minack Vocals 1982–2004, 2022–
Humphrey B. Flaubert Damian Cowell Drums, vocals 1982–2004, 2022–
Jock Cheese John "Jack" Holt Bass, vocals, guitar 1982–2004, 2022–
Vladimir Lenin-McCartney Guitar 2022–
Eugene de la Hot-Croix Bun Eugene Cester Keyboards, vocals 1982–2004, 2022–
Jon St. Peenis Saxophone, vocals 1991–2004, 2022–
Les Miserables Dancing, vocals 1991–2004, 2022–
Former
Stage name Real name Role Period
Tokin' Blackman (first billed as Tony Coitus) James Paull Guitar 1991–2004 (deceased)[32]
Leak Van Vlalen Sean Kelly Guitar 1982–1991
Genre B. Goode Vocals 1982–1985
Les Miserables Andrew Miglietti Dancing 1982–1991
Jon St. Peenis Mark Fessey Saxophone, vocals 1982–1991

St. Peenis also played saxophone on earlier recordings.[33] Cheese plays guitar on various recordings and live shows,[34] and Blackman arranged orchestral sections on The White Albun (2004).[35] Flaubert programs rhythms and samples, and has occasionally played acoustic drumkits live.[36]

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,[37] silver suits with puffy arms and legs to mimic an inflated cask wine bladder,[37] giant foam paintings worn on the head,[37] large foam signs bearing the name of a Beatle,[38] fat 'businessman' suits,[37] and eight-foot-high inflatable headpieces[10] 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.[39][40][41] 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.[42][43] 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,[43] 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."[44]

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 Brechtian alienation 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[45] (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."[46] 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.

The song writers' names were also published later, alongside information on "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me" when it hit success in Sweden and Germany in 2004.[47][48]

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;[49] 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.[50] The book contains thin references to TISM.[51] 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.[52]

Guitarist Tokin Blackman's real name was James "Jock" Paull. Paull died of cancer on 9 April 2008 at the age of 50.[22]

Eugene Cester was revealed in an Age column as being the uncle of Nic and Chris Cester of Melbourne's Jet,[53] 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".[54] 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.[55]

In the Jock Cheese-penned song "Let's Club It to Death" from Hot Dogma, Cheese mentions his real first name in the first verse ("My friends call me John / But you can call me Breaker Morant").


Timeline



Style


TISM were distinguished from other 'joke' or 'gimmick bands', by, among other things, their musical style. The band rarely in any seriousness stated 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.[45] A clear link can be drawn from The Residents' The Third Reich 'n' Roll video, in which that band wore Ku Klux Klan uniforms made of newspaper:[56] TISM did exactly this at their first gig. Another link may be drawn to early TISM tracks "The Ballad of the Semitic Nazi" or "I'm Gonna Treat Ya to a Neitschze Double Feature" (sic) which use a similar naming convention to The Residents. 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".[57]

The band were 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.

Besides which, pop songs sell more."[58]

As with most bands, recurring themes were present throughout TISM's extensive output, the most common being death, violence,[59] fame and prominent figures,[60][61] drugs, including alcohol,[62] and the Australian Football League.[61] Many of TISM's lyrics are tinged in fatalism, mocking both the superficial and the sublime side of the human condition[61] and the desire for people to be loved and respected[61] (even just in the titles of such songs as "If You're Not Famous at Fourteen, You're Finished", "If You're Ugly, Forget It" and "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me").

TISM's keyboard sound was provided by an Optigan which keyboardist Eugene Cester ran through a flanger.[citation needed] They mainly used standard tuning; however, Eb tuning and drop D were employed in some songs. Jock Cheese's bass was prominent in the songs to a degree that head of Festival Mushroom Records, Michael Parisi, described the sound as "aggressive".[63]


Discography



Studio albums


Title Details Peak chart positions Certifications
AUS
[64]

[65]

Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance
  • Released: 26 September 1988
  • Label: Elvis Records (ER 1206)
  • Format: 2xLP, 2xCassette, CD
48
Hot Dogma
  • Released: 1 October 1990
  • Label: Phonogram (846901-1)
  • Format: LP, Cassette, CD
86
Machiavelli and the Four Seasons
  • Released: 4 May 1995
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (G002)
  • Format: Cassette, CD
8
www.tism.wanker.com
  • Released: 2 June 1998
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (G0012)
  • Format: CD
26
De RigueurMortis
  • Released: 29 October 2001
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (TISM007)
  • Format: CD, Download
24
The White Albun
  • Released: 24 June 2004
  • Label: Genre B.Goode
  • Format: CD, 2xLP, Download
[upper-alpha 1]

Live albums


Title Details Peak chart positions
AUS
[65]
Machines Against the Rage (aka Machiavelli – Live)
  • Released: December 1996
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (G007)
  • Format: LP, Cassette, CD
87
Live at the Corner Hotel 30 May 1988
  • Released: 10 April 2020[66][67]
  • Label: Genre B.Goode, Black Box Records/ MGM Distribution
  • Format: CD (limited), DD, streaming
  • Recorded 30 May 1988
On Behalf of TISM, I Would Like to Concede We Have Lost the Election
  • Released: December 2020
  • Label: Genre B.Goode
  • Format: CD, LP, Digital download
  • Recorded at the Earthcore Festival, 27 November 2004

Compilation albums


Title Details Peak chart positions
AUS
[64][65]
Gentlemen, Start Your Egos
  • Released: 1991
  • Label: Shock (SHOCK CD0017)
  • Format: Cassette, CD
Collected Recordings 1986–1993s
  • Released: December 1995
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (G006)
  • Format: 4×CD
Tism.bestoff.
  • Released: 29 July 2002
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (TISM010)
  • Format: CD, 2×CD, digital download
44
Collected Remixes
  • Released: 17 September 2021
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (GBG0017)
  • Format: 2xLP
-
Collected Versus
  • Released: 19 August 2022
  • Label: Genre B.Goode (GBG0024)
  • Format: 2xLP, 2xCD
-

Demo albums


Title Details
This Is Serious Mum
  • Released: 25 November 1984[68]
  • Label: self-released
  • Format: Cassette
  • Re-released on 9 July 2021
Punt Road
  • Released: 9 July 2021[68]
  • Label: Genre B.Goode
  • Format: LP
  • Recorded in 1987, during rehearsals for the "40 Years – Then Death" single launch

Extended plays


Title Details
Form and Meaning Reach Ultimate Communion
  • Released: 1986
  • Label: Elvis Records
  • Format: LP
Beasts of Suburban
  • Released: 20 July 1992
  • Label: Shock
  • Format: CD, Cassette
Australia The Lucky Cunt
(Re-issue title: Censored Due to Legal Advice)
  • Released: 3 September 1993
  • Label: Shock
  • Format: CD, Cassette

Charting singles


List of singles which had a chart position within a national top 100
Title Year Chart peak positions Album
AUS
[64][65]
GER
[69]
"(He'll Never Be An) Ol' Man River" 1995 23 Machiavelli and the Four Seasons
"Greg! The Stop Sign" 59
"Shut Up – The Footy's on the Radio" 1997 90 Non-album single
"I Might Be a Cunt, but I'm Not a Fucking Cunt" 1998 90 www.tism.wanker.com
"Whatareya?" 66
"Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me" 2004 [upper-alpha 2]63 The White Albun

Notes


  1. The White Albun did not enter the ARIA top 100 album chart, but peaked at number 14 on the DVD Chart.[65]
  2. "Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me" was released as a radio promotional single, and was ineligible to chart in Australia in 2004[70][71]

Awards and nominations



ARIA Music Awards


The ARIA Music Awards are a set of annual ceremonies presented by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), which recognise excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of the music of Australia. They commenced in 1987.

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
1989 "I'm Interested in Apathy" ARIA Award for Best Independent Release Won [72]
1993 Beasts of Suburban Best Independent Release Nominated [72]
Tony Cohen for TISM – "Get Thee to a Nunnery" ARIA Award for Producer of the Year Nominated [73]
1995 Machiavelli and the Four Seasons Best Independent Release Won [72]
1996 "Greg! The Stop Sign!!" Best Independent Release Nominated [72]
1998 www.tism.wanker.com Best Independent Release Nominated [72]

The Age EG Awards


The Age EG Awards are an annual awards night celebrating Victorian music. They commenced in 2005.

Year Nominee / work Award Result Ref.
2006TISMHall of Fameinductee[74]

References


  1. TISM – The History of This Is Serious Mum (2000). Archived on 6 December 2000 by the Internet Archive. Retrieved on 16 October 2007.
  2. TISM Archive – 1983.12.06: Duncan McKinnon Hall, Murrumbeena (1983). Archived on 25 February 2021 by the Internet Archive. Retrieved on 25 February 2021.
  3. This Is Serious Mum live dates: 1991 (list) (2004). Archived on 23 September 2004 by the Internet Archive. Retrieved on 9 December 2007.
  4. Shock Records – T.I.S.M – Official page at the Shock Records website. Archived by the Internet Archive on 5 February 2006. Accessed on 10 December 2007.
  5. Humphrey B. Flaubert (5 December 2002). Album cover censorship on John Safran's Music Jamboree (.mov). SBS TV, Melbourne, Australia. Hosted by brittletina. Retrieved on 16 October 2007.
  6. Triple J (1995). "Hottest 100 | History | 1995 Archived 18 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine" (list) (1995). Retrieved (11 December 2007).
  7. "TISM – Unauthorised, Unofficial, Unendorsed, Underpants (File) at Discogs". Discogs.com. 5 December 2011. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  8. "TISM on Under Melbourne Tonight (Channel 31, 27/04/95)". YouTube. 1 October 2012. Archived from the original on 25 September 2016. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  9. "Free Music Videos, Video Interviews, Music Video News, Live Sessions and Clips". NME. 13 August 2014. Archived from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 21 August 2014.
  10. Flaubert, Humphrey B. (2005). The Big Day Out Part Two The Rest Of Australia Archived 7 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Australian Traveller Magazine; they also toured in 1993–1995 and again in 1999 after German heavy metal band Rammstein withdrew. Retrieved on 17 November 2007.
  11. Ruxton, Bruce (5 May 1998). Bruce Ruxton denounces TISM in a letter to Shock Records. letter. Bruce Ruxton. Hosted by tismselfstorage. Retrieved on 18 October 2007.
  12. TISM (1998) I Might Be A Cunt, But I'm Not A Fucking Cunt from the website www.tism.wanker.com. Archived on 11 November 1998 by the Internet Archive. Retrieved 9 December 2007.
  13. TISM – De Rigueurmortis Archived 9 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine chart information from australian-charts.com Archived 27 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 18 October 2007
  14. Official TISM Website – New Album News (5 February 2002). Archived on 9 July 2005 by the Internet Archive. Retrieved on 17 October 2007.
  15. Ms.45 (2002). "TISM Self Storage goes to the Punters". Ms.45. tismselfstorage. review. (external link contains explicit material) Retrieved 19 November 2007.
  16. Anton (30 June 2004). "TISM – The White Albun Archived 19 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine" (review) (2004). Retrieved (11 December 2007).
  17. Peter Aylward (22 December 2009). "RHB HIFI 13-11-2004.wmv". Archived from the original on 28 June 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2016 via YouTube.
  18. TISM – Everyone Else Has Had More Sex Than Me. Chart information from charts-surfer.de. (A search for TISM brings up the Max. Pos. 63.) Retrieved (11 December 2007). Archived 2 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  19. "Jay and The Doctor". Triple J. 3 October 2006. Archived from the original on 17 October 2007. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  20. Donovan, Patrick (22 December 2007). "Sticky Carpet". The Age. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 16 October 2007.
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