Destroy All Lines, David Roy Williams & Double J Presents
TISM
DEATH TO ART TOUR
FIRST HEADLINE TOUR IN 20 YEARS
WITH AN UNBELIEVABLE LINE-UP OF SPECIAL GUESTS
ESKIMO JOE
MACHINE GUN FELLATIO
BEN LEE
THE MAVIS’S
TISM ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM DEATH TO ART
OUT FRIDAY OCTOBER 4
Tickets from destroyalllines.com
Australia, this is serious. After teasing a new album and flaunting their wares onstage at Good Things Festival in 2022, today TISM return armed with a tantalising trifecta, locking in their first headline run since 2004 this October and November, unveiling a brand new single and video, and confirming the upcoming release of their new studio album. With all three announcements sharing the same name, Death To Art, the upcoming Death To Art Tour is also bound to go down in Australian music history, with TISM set to be joined by fellow Aussie icons ESKIMO JOE, MACHINE GUN FELLATIO, BEN LEE and THE MAVIS’S.
With four of the country’s most iconic acts teaming up for the Death To Art Tour, this historic run of shows will kick off on Sunday 20 October in Brisbane, before heading to Melbourne on Saturday 9 November, and closing out in Sydney on Friday 29 November. Not only marking the extremely anticipated first headline performances in over two decades for TISM, the Death To Art Tour will also see fellow sonic scoundrels MACHINE GUN FELLATIO reform for the first time in 19 years, as well as THE MAVIS’S reforming for the first time in six years.
Releasing a brand new single I’ve Gone Hillsong in 2022, the group’s first new material in close to 20 years, TISM also teased at the time an album which did not exist. Fast-forward to 2024, and TISM have since released a new EP, 2023’s The “C” Word, complete with caterwauling commentary and chaotic charisma. And, as of today, the beloved unruly collective have ventured into a brand new chapter, unleashing the title track single and video from their forthcoming full length album Death To Art, officially due out on October 4.
TISM have retained their anonymous and cult-like status since first forming back in the early 1980s. Laced with nihilistic humour and gleeful sarcasm, as well as a razor-sharp penchant for hybrid dance, pop and rock, TISM may have kept their identities a secret all this time, but their impact on the Australian musical landscape remains undeniable.
With six studio albums under their balaclavas, including their 1988 debut Great Truck’ Songs of the Renaissance and 2004’s The White Albun, TISM have also released multiple live and compilation albums and EPs over the years, spawning enduring fan-favourites, including ‘(He’ll Never Be An) Ol’ Man River‘ and ‘Greg! The Stop Sign!!‘, millions of streams, and also snagging the seal of approval from longtime fan, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. And as any fan who has ever attended a live show will attest to, there really isn’t anything quite in this universe like a TISM performance, whether clad in their balaclava best or attaching giant balloons to their jumpsuits as seen at their illustrious appearances at Good Things Festival in 2022 alongside Bring Me The Horizon, Deftones and many more.
Once dubbed “the most dangerous band in Australia”, MACHINE GUN FELLATIO have remained as one of the country’s most prolific acts; a fact made even more impressive since they broke up back in 2005. In 2024, the group’s live shows are still being talked about, with their touring history spanning two Big Day Out appearances, sold out shows in the UK and the USA, tours alongside Robbie Williams, Kiss, Primus and Duran Duran, and plenty of hedonistic headline shows packed to the rafters. With singles that dominated the airwaves, including ‘Pussytown‘ and ‘The Girl Of My Dreams (Is Giving Me Nightmares)‘ and an ARIA Award in their wake, MGF band members Pinky and Chit Chat also helped to pen The Whitlam’s hit 1997 single ‘No Aphrodisiac’. Calling it a day back in 2005, MACHINE GUN FELLATIO are roaring back and re-forming for three special shows with their friends, heroes, and fellow rascals, TISM.
From humble beginnings in Fremantle through to commanding 35 ARIA Award nominations, repeated triple j Hottest 100 appearances, an international fanbase, and six studio albums, indie rockers ESKIMO JOE are undoubtedly one of Australia’s most beloved acts; and this trio certainly aren’t slowing down anytime soon. Recently releasing a brand new single The First Time, ESKIMO JOE also appeared at the 2023 edition of Good Things Festival alongside Fall Out Boy, Limp Bizkit, Devo and many, many more, performing to packed and adoring crowds that spurred them to release new music. From their 2001 debut album Girl through to their breakout albums, 2004’s A Song Is A City and 2006’s platinum Black Fingernails, Red Wine, ESKIMO JOE have also snagged eight ARIA Award wins and multiple nominations, all while continuously charming audiences across the globe with their dynamic live show.
Discovered in his teens during the 90s as part of the Aussie lofi punk act Noise Addict, BEN LEE‘s prolific career has been nothing short of astonishing. Turning his gaze to a solo career in the mid 90s, BEN LEE has established himself as one of Australia’s bona fide finest, whether penning chart-smashing hits (‘Cigarettes Will Kill You‘, ‘Gamble Everything For Love‘ and ‘Catch My Disease‘), instrumental albums (Ayahuasca: Welcome to the Work) or children’s albums (Ben Lee Sings Songs About Islam For The Whole Family). Entertaining and unpredictable, BEN LEE has collaborated with Josh Radnor, Ben Folds, Ben Kweller, and Sara Silverman, won four ARIA Awards along with multiple nominations, prime time performances, including at the 2006 Commonwealth Games closing ceremony and on Australia’s The Masked Singer, and he continues to tour extensively after decades of wowing crowds across the world.
Forming in Ballarat as a fun, DIY project in the late 80s, THE MAVIS’S quickly became fan favourites of the 90s Aussie music scene. Spearheaded by siblings Matt Doll and Beki Colada, and an array of shiny clothes and coloured hair, the band cemented their place in musical history with their 1998 synth-laden track ‘Cry‘ – which became one of the most played Australian songs that same year. The group featured on triple j’s Hottest 100 three times (‘Thunder‘ in 1996, ‘Naughty Boy‘ in 1997 and ‘Cry‘ in 1998), performed on the 90s TV institutions Hey Hey It’s Saturday and Recovery, releasing three studio albums, earned multiple ARIA Award nominations, and toured alongside the likes of Green Day and Kylie Minogue amongst many others. Officially disbanding in 2001, THE MAVIS’S briefly reunited in 2018 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Pink Pills, with 2024 marking their first live shows in six years.
In 2024, Australian music history will be made. Don’t miss this unbelievable lineup of Aussie icons all in one space this October and November.
DEATH TO ART TRACK LISTING:
01. Old Skool TISM
02. Death to Art
03. Cunts v Cunts
04. The ‘C’ Word
05. VFA
06. I’ve Gone Hillsong
07. Everybody Needs Somebody To Hate
08. I Can’t Wait for My Generation to Die
09. Creed of Steve Bannon
10. We’re Going to Springvale
11. ’70s Football
12. Selling Drugs, Corner King St and Flinders Lane
13. Cabal of Bozos (Dedicated to Australia’s Laziest Class, the Australian Business Class)
14. Cnut, the Dyslexic King
15. My Man’s Band’s T-Shirt
16. Mein Bandkampf
17. TISM’s Last Will and Testicle