Regurgitator | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Genres | |
Years active | 1993 (hiatus 2013–2015) | –present
Labels | |
Members | |
Past members |
|
Website | regurgitator |
Regurgitator are an Australian alternative rock band from Brisbane, Queensland, formed in late 1993 by Quan Yeomans on lead vocals, guitar and keyboards; Ben Ely on bass guitar, keyboards and vocals; and Martin Lee on drums. [1] Their debut studio album, Tu-Plang was released in May 1996; it was followed by Unit in November 1997 which was certified triple platinum. Unit won five categories at the ARIA Music Awards of 1998: Album of the Year, Best Alternative Album, Producer of the Year (for Magoo), Engineer of the Year (Magoo) and Best Cover Art (for The Shits). Their third album, ...Art was released in August 1999.
Regurgitator had two singles reach the top 20 with "Polyester Girl" (May 1998) peaking at No. 14 in Australia and No. 16 in New Zealand; while "Happiness (Rotting My Brain)" (July 1999) also appeared at No. 16 in New Zealand. Martin Lee left Regurgitator in late 1999 and was replaced by Peter Kostic on drums, who was simultaneously a member of Front End Loader (1991–present) and the Hard-Ons (2002–2011). Casual members have included Seja Vogel, from Sekiden; Shane Rudken (Ponyloaf); Dave Atkins (Pangaea, Resin Dogs) among others. Regurgitator's fourth studio album, Eduardo and Rodriguez Wage War on T-Wrecks was released in July 2001 and was their final studio album for Warner before mutually agreeing to terminate their recording agreement. They then went on to issue four more independent studio albums— Mish Mash! recorded as part of the multimedia reality show parody Band in a Bubble ; Love and Paranoia recorded in Rio de Janeiro on Corcovado after licensing the Band in a Bubble project to a US version staged in New York City; Super Happy Fun Times Friends recorded over three weeks in their home studio; and Dirty Pop Fantasy recorded in a Hong Kong apartment before announcing an extended hiatus in December 2013. They commenced playing shows again in mid-2015.
The group's spin-off project Regurgitator's Pogogo Show released their debut album of children's music in 2019.
Regurgitator was originally a 3-piece indie rock band with Quan Yeomans (guitar and vocals), Ben Ely (bass and vocals) and Martin Lee (drums). [2] [1] The three had purportedly met on a bus in inner Brisbane. At this time, all three were already in several bands - Pangaea, Zooerastia, Precision Oiler, Brazilia among others. Regurgitator at this time was not considered to be the main focus of any members, rather as a side-project to their other bands.
The band released its debut self-titled EP in October 1994. With the emergence of Brisbane's underground music scene in the early 1990s, major labels, such as Warner Music Group, took the initiative to expand its Australian music roster. A&R representative Michael Parisi initially pursued Pangaea, a popular and established band in Brisbane's underground that Ben Ely fronted. It wasn't until Parisi was supplied with Pangaea recordings by their manager Paul Curtis that he discovered Regurgitator, whose material was also presented as part of a potential Valve label P&D deal. Ironically, Parisi would push for the less-established band to be signed because "it was the hook that Pangaea, for all the excitement [it] had generated on stage, had lacked." [3]
The band signed with Warner early in 1995, who re-released its debut EP in February 1995, which charted at number 45 on the ARIA singles chart. Regurgitator quickly released another EP, titled New , which featured radio hits "Track 1" and "Blubber Boy". New peaked at number 30 on the ARIA singles chart.
Following the success of their first two EPs, the band made an unusual move by travelling to Thailand to record their first full-length album. Made on a comparatively small budget [4] at a famed pop studio in Bangkok, Tu-Plang (ตู้เพลง; Thai for 'Jukebox'), largely featured a mixture of rock and hip hop, which was particularly evident on its third single release "Kong Foo Sing". The band also experimented in a number of genres including techno, musak, surf rock and dub. Yeomans gained notoriety for his uniquely cynical and obscene lyrical style, most notably the controversial pop-rock tune "I Sucked a Lot of Cock to Get Where I Am", which was attacked by Australian radio identity Alan Jones, who campaigned to have it removed from airplay. [5] Tu-Plang peaked at number 3 on the ARIA Charts, was certified platinum and won Best Alternative Release and Breakthrough Artist at the ARIA Music Awards of 1996.
The band recorded their second studio album in a warehouse in Brisbane which they affectionately named "The Dirty Room". In contrast with their rock-oriented works of the past, the band moved on with a more electronic and pop based sound. The band openly acknowledged their stylistic change with the album's opening track, ironically titled "I Like Your Old Stuff Better Than Your New Stuff". The band released "Everyday Formula" as the first single, with Yeomans and Magoo later admitting it was a conscious decision to ease their fans into the new sound with a heavier track. [6] The single release in October 1997 peaked at number 41 on the ARIA Charts. Unit was released in November and peaked at number 4 on the ARIA Charts. "Black Bugs", "Polyester Girl" and "! (The Song Formerly Known As)" (an homage to 1980s era Prince) were all released as singles and gained significant amounts of airplay. Unit is Regurgitator's most commercially successful album, going platinum three times in Australia. Whilst it no doubt increased the popularity of the band, fans of their first generation of work are still divided in their responses to it. [7] [8] [9]
During the Unit tour in late 1997 drummer Martin Lee had failed to appear at a show at the University of Western Australia. After disappearing from a Perth nightclub, he was found the next day, unconscious, and was taken to hospital where he remained comatose for a week. No-one, including Lee once he had recovered, had any recollection of the circumstances that had landed him there. Jon Coghill of Brisbane rock band Powderfinger was his fill-in for the rest of the tour, though the arrangement purportedly caused a rift between the two bands as Coghill and Lee were high school friends and, as Yeomans explained in a 2011 interview, "...those guys (Powderfinger) are kind of from a different scene I guess, if you like. Almost a different social strata in a weird way; they're all private school boys so we never had that much in common". [10]
At the ARIA Music Awards of 1998, Unit won 5 Awards, including Album of the Year and Producer of the Year. [11] [12]
After a short break in 1998 working with respective side projects (Quan formed Happyland with Spiderbait's Janet English and Ben Ely revived Pangaea) the band moved into Wategoes Beachhouse at Byron Bay on the New South Wales coast to begin recording their third album, ...art , which was released in August 1999 and peaked at number 2 on the ARIA Chart. Having rebuilt "The Dirty Room" studio with the assumption it would be used for the recording, Lee felt undervalued when Yeomans made it clear he needed a change in working environment. [13] Ely admitted that tension had always existed between the two. [14] Since the Unit sessions he had felt excluded from the creative process as his material would rarely be used and he was often replaced by a drum machine in the studio. [15] After an extended absence during the album recording and a string of absences on the supporting tour schedule it was announced in late 1999 that Lee would be leaving the group due to 'creative differences'. [16] [17] He formed The Boat Show with Matthew Strong of Custard when Custard disbanded. [18] Lee was replaced by Front End Loader and Hard-Ons drummer, Peter Kostic in late 1999.
The band's fourth album, Eduardo and Rodriguez Wage War on T-Wrecks was released in July 2001; a hip-hop-focused album that Yeomans and Ely recorded and produced in London. At this time, a turbulent relationship commenced with the Warner label who were unable to grasp the band's lack of motivation and refusal to compromise for the sake of commercial success. [19] [20] [21] After the fourth album, discussions led to a mutual request to end the deal, and the compilation album Jingles was released.
In 2004, Regurgitator created and participated in the Band in a Bubble project; a new reality TV-inspired media stunt sponsored and broadcast by Australian music channel, Channel V. The band entered a small glass recording studio, built in Federation Square in the centre of Melbourne, to record their new album; their first on new label Valve Records. Pedestrians could look into most rooms of the "bubble" and could watch the band work, or tune into a 24-hour digital cable television channel and watch their work on that. Nobody could enter or leave the bubble, a la Big Brother . In addition to the three band members, their longtime Australian producer Magoo, engineer Hugh Webb and Channel V host Jabba were all also locked into the bubble with the band.
The first single from the session was released in October 2004 as "The Drop" and the album, Mish Mash! was released in November 2004 and it peaked at number 52 on the ARIA Charts.
In August 2005, the band released the #?*! (or Pillowhead) EP which contained B-sides from Mish Mash!.
In 2006, Regurgitator took a break during with Elys working on his project Jump 2 Light Speed and Yeomans working on his solo career. The band also licensed their Band in a Bubble concept to Initial TV in the UK. In 2007, Yeomans released an EP with Sydney-based musician Spod called Blox.
In 2007, the band reunited and recorded their sixth album in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Love and Paranoia was released in Australia on 15 September 2007 and peaked at number 74. It features 80s style keyboard-driven poprock tunes, with new member Seja Vogel on keyboards. Two singles were released from the album, "Blood and Spunk" and "Romance of the Damned".
In 2008, Regurgitator supported the album with a tour of UK and Asia. It was the first time in 5 years that the band had toured the UK. Simultaneously, Ben Ely and Quan Yeomans both launched solo projects with "Ben Ely's Radio 5" becoming his second solo project while Yeomans's album Quan: The Amateur was his debut solo album which was recorded in Hong Kong.
At the beginning of May 2010, Regurgitator announced on the news section of their website that they had begun work on new music and would release music 'as they go along' instead of an album. [22] In August 2010, the band released the single "Making No Sense" [23] and in September, a four-track EP titled Distractions . In December 2010, the band released another single titled, "Nrob Bmud".
In July 2011, the band released "One Day", the lead single from their seventh studio album Super Happy Fun Times Friends in August 2011. The album debuted on the AIR chart at No. 18 and the ARIA chart at No. 91. [24]
In June 2012, it was announced that Regurgitator would be playing their first two albums, Tu Plang and Unit, in their entirety in an Australian tour named RetroTech. [25]
In early 2013, the band announced that they were working on their eighth studio album in Hong Kong. Entitled Dirty Pop Fantasy, the album was released on 6 September 2013 through Valve Records. The album was streamed online on 23 August 2013 on the Deezer website. [26] During the band's keynote address at the Big Sound music conference in early September 2013, the band explained that the lower level of productivity during the latter part of their career is due to the geographical spread of the two primary band members, Ely and Yeomans—Ely is based in Melbourne, Australia, while Yeomans resides in Hong Kong. A post on the band's Facebook page on 18 September 2013 then revealed that Regurgitator will enter a period of indefinite hiatus following a national Australian and Asian tour that ended in December 2013 due to the birth of Yeomans's first child. [27] [28] Their last show for the foreseeable future was in Beijing on 7 December 2013 as part of the Converse Rubber Tracks event with touring friends Chinese band New Pants.
In May 2015, following an 18 month hiatus commencing in September 2013, Regurgitator announced their Cheap Imitations tour-ché across Australia from August to September 2015. [29]
In April 2016, they performed at the National Gallery of Victoria covering Velvet Underground's debut album, The Velvet Underground and Nico as part of the Andy Warhol-Ai Weiwei exhibition. [30] Regurgitator's line-up was Yeomans, Ely, Kostic and joined by Seja Vogel on keyboards/vocals and Mindy Meng Wang on guzheng. [30] In homage to Prince, they added a cover of his song, "When Doves Cry" to their set list on 22 April. [31]
In October 2017, Regurgitator performed a special one-off show at the Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre as a part of EB Games Expo, celebrating the 20th anniversary of their 1997 album Unit. The concert was also filmed and was later released on DVD in 2019.
2018 saw the release of the band's 9th studio album, Headroxx .
In 2019, the group announced their new children's music spin-off project Regurgitator's Pogogo Show. Their debut offering, The Really Really Really Really Boring Album was released on 1 March 2019. [32] At the ARIA Music Awards of 2019, The Really Really Really Really Boring Album was nominated for ARIA Award for Best Children's Album. [33]
In October 2019, the group released a best of album titled Quarter Pounder: 25 Years of Being Consumed, alongside a national tour. In May 2023, Regurgitator toured around Australia for 25 years of Unit, with Custard, DZ Deathrays, Butterfingers & Glitoris. In October of that same year, they opened for Weezer for their two headlining Australian shows in early October 2023. The two bands also supported Kiss at their last Australian concert at Accor Stadium in Sydney. [34]
In 2024, Regurgitator announced their 11th studio album Invader, alongside a national tour around Australia with Party Dozen. [35]
Current members
Current touring musicians
Former members
Guest musicians
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | Certifications (sales thresholds) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [44] | NZ [45] | |||
1996 | Tu-Plang
| 3 | 27 | |
1997 | Unit
| 4 | 7 |
|
1999 | ...art
| 2 | 12 |
|
2001 | Eduardo and Rodriguez Wage War on T-Wrecks
| 7 | — | |
2004 | Mish Mash!
| 52 | — | |
2007 | Love and Paranoia
| 74 | — | |
2011 | Super Happy Fun Times Friends
| 91 | — | |
2013 | Dirty Pop Fantasy
| — | — | |
2018 | Headroxx
| — | — | |
2019 | The Really Really Really Really Boring Album (as Regurgitator's Pogogo Show)
| — | — | |
2024 | Invader
| TBA |
Year | Album details | |
---|---|---|
2015 | Nothing Less than Cheap Imitations
| |
2019 | Live at WO'HOL, Osaka 24 Sept 1996
| |
2021 | Live at GAELIC CLUB, Sydney 26 Aug 2005
| |
2023 | UNIT20 (Live 2017 Gold Coast)
|
Year | Album details |
---|---|
2001 | Generic City Pileup
|
2002 | Jingles: The Best Of
|
2019 | Quarter Pounder: 25 Years of Being Consumed
|
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions |
---|---|---|
AUS [44] | ||
1994 | Regurgitator
| 45 |
1995 | New
| 30 |
2000 | Crush the Losers
| 64 |
2000 | Generic City (Regurgitator meets Pnau, Friendly & Sugiurumn)
| — |
2005 | #?*! (aka Pillowhead)
| — |
2010 | Distractions
| — |
Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Certifications | Album | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AUS [44] | NZ [45] | UK [51] | ||||
1994 | "Couldn't Do It" | [upper-alpha 1] | — | — | Regurgitator EP | |
1995 | "Like It Like That" | — | — | |||
"Track 1" | — | — | New EP | |||
"Blubber Boy" | — | — | ||||
1996 | "F.S.O." | 51 | — | — | Tu-Plang | |
"Kong Foo Sing" | 33 | — | — | |||
"Miffy's Simplicity" | 54 | — | — | |||
"I Sucked a Lot of Cock to Get Where I Am" | [upper-alpha 2] | — | — | |||
1997 | "Everyday Formula" | 41 | — | — | Unit | |
"Black Bugs" | 32 | — | 88 | |||
1998 | "Polyester Girl" | 14 | 16 | 132 |
| |
"! (The Song Formerly Known As)"/"Modern Life" | 28 | — | — | |||
1999 | "Happiness (Rotting My Brain)" | 44 | 16 | — | ...art | |
"I Wanna Be a Nudist" | 75 | — | — | |||
2000 | "Freshmint!" | 44 | — | — | ||
"Crush the Losers" | [upper-alpha 3] | — | — | Crush the Losers | ||
2001 | "Fat Cop" | 34 | — | — | Eduardo and Rodriguez Wage War on T-Wrecks | |
"Super Straight" | 55 | — | — | |||
2002 | "Hullabaloo" | — | — | — | ||
2004 | "Bong in My Eye" | — | — | — | Non-album single | |
"The Drop" | 69 | — | — | Mish Mash! | ||
"My Friend Robot" | — | — | — | |||
2005 | "My Ego" | — | — | — | ||
"Pretty Girls Swear" | [upper-alpha 4] | — | — | #?*! EP | ||
2007 | "Blood and Spunk" | — | — | — | Love and Paranoia | |
2008 | "Romance of the Damned" | — | — | — | ||
2010 | "Making No Sense" [53] | — | — | — | Distractions | |
"Nrob Bmud" [54] | — | — | — | Non-album single | ||
2011 | "One Day" | — | — | — | Super Happy Fun Times Friends | |
"No Show" [55] | — | — | — | |||
2012 | "Be Still My Noisy Mind" [56] | — | — | — | ||
"All Fake Everything" [57] | — | — | — | |||
2013 | "Dirty Pop Fantasy" | — | — | — | Dirty Pop Fantasy | |
"Made to Break" [58] | — | — | — | |||
"Sine Wave" [59] | — | — | — | |||
2018 | "Don't Stress"/"Light Me On Fire" [60] | — | — | — | Headroxx | |
"Party Looks" [61] | — | — | — | |||
"I Get the Internet" [62] | — | — | — | |||
2019 | "Not Alone" [63] | — | — | — | ||
"No Point" [64] | — | — | — | |||
"The Pogogo Show Theme" [65] (as Regurgitator's Pogogo Show) | — | — | — | The Really Really Really Really Boring Album | ||
"The Box" [66] (as Regurgitator's Pogogo Show) | — | — | — | |||
"Animals" [67] (as Regurgitator's Pogogo Show) | — | — | — | non-album single | ||
"Best Friends Forever" [68] (as Regurgitator's Pogogo Show) | — | — | — | The Really, Really, Really, Really Boring Album | ||
2024 | "This Is Not A Pop Song (featuring Peaches)" [69] | — | — | — | Invader | |
"Cocaine Runaway" | — | — | — | |||
Notes
Year | Details | Certification |
---|---|---|
1996 | Regurgitated
|
|
1999 | Live in Brisbane (Festival Hall 1998)
| |
2002 | Jingles (Infomercials)
| |
2003 | Nein, Nein, Nein... The Slumber of the Beast Tour 02/03 - The DVD
| |
2008 | Band in a Bubble: The DVD
| |
2019 | UNIT20
|
The Australian Independent Record Awards (commonly known informally as AIR Awards) is an annual awards night to recognise, promote and celebrate the success of Australia's Independent Music sector. They commenced in 2006.
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
AIR Awards of 2020 [71] | The Really Really Really Really Boring Album | Best Independent Children's Album or EP | Won |
The ARIA Music Awards are annual awards, which recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of Australian music. Regurgitator have won 7 awards from 23 nominations. [72]
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Regurgitator | Best Alternative Release | Nominated |
1996 | Tu-Plang | Album of the Year | Nominated |
Best Group | Nominated | ||
Breakthrough Artist - Album | Won | ||
Best Alternative Release | Won | ||
Magoo and Regurgitator for Tu-Plang | Producer of the Year | Nominated | |
Magoo for Tu-Plang | Engineer of the Year | Nominated | |
New [nb 1] | Highest Selling Single | Nominated | |
Rockin' Doodles, Quan Yeomans and Ben Ely for Tu-Plang | Best Cover Art | Nominated | |
1998 | Unit | Album of the Year | Won |
Best Group | Nominated | ||
Best Alternative Release | Won | ||
Jeremy Hydnes, George Pinn for "Polyester Girl" | Best Video | Nominated | |
Quan Yeomans for "Black Bugs" | Best Video | Nominated | |
Magoo and Regurgitator for Unit | Producer of the Year | Won | |
Magoo for Unit | Engineer of the Year | Won | |
The Shits [nb 2] for Unit | Best Cover Art | Won | |
1999 | Unit | Highest Selling Album | Nominated |
"! (The Song Formerly Known As)" | Single of the Year | Nominated | |
Best Group | Nominated | ||
Tony McGrath for "! (The Song Formerly Known As)" | Best Video | Nominated | |
2000 | Paul Butler, Scott Walton for "Happiness (Rotting My Brain)" | Best Video | Nominated |
2019 | The Really Really Really Really Boring Album | Best Children's Album | Nominated |
The Helpmann Awards is an awards show, celebrating live entertainment and performing arts in Australia, presented by industry group Live Performance Australia since 2001. [74] Note: 2020 and 2021 were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Regurgitator and Sydney Opera House - Akira | Helpmann Award for Best Australian Contemporary Concert | Nominated | [75] |
Helpmann Award for Best Original Score | Nominated |
Spiderbait is an Australian alternative rock band from Finley, New South Wales, formed in 1989 by bass guitarist and singer Janet English, drummer and singer Kram, and guitarist Damian Whitty. In 2004 the group's cover version of the 1930s Lead Belly song "Black Betty" reached number one on the ARIA Singles Chart. They have five top 20 albums: The Unfinished Spanish Galleon of Finley Lake (1995), Ivy and the Big Apples (1996), Grand Slam (1999), Tonight Alright (2004), and Greatest Hits (2005). The group have won two ARIA Music Awards with the first in 1997 as 'Best Alternative Release' for Ivy and the Big Apples and the second in 2000 as 'Best Cover-Art' for their single "Glockenpop". In November 2013 the band released its first studio album in nine years, Spiderbait.
Tu-Plang is the first album released by Australian rock band Regurgitator. After making two EPs, the band chose to record the album in Bangkok, Thailand, to the quandary of its label, Warner Music, which was uncertain as to what terms A&R executive Michael Parisi had contracted. Ely later said, "We didn't want to do it in just any old place, so we had a tour in Europe and Japan booked and our drummer Martin said, 'let's stop in Thailand on the way and check out some studios,' so we did and we found this place."
Unit is the second studio album by Australian rock band Regurgitator, released in November 1997. Its style is a mixture of 1980s style synthesised pop music and alternative rock, with some hip hop influences. The album debuted and peaked at number 4 on the ARIA Charts. At the ARIA Music Awards of 1998, the album won five ARIA Music Awards; including ARIA Award for Album of the Year.
Happyland were an Australian punk rock duo formed in Brisbane, Queensland in 1997 as a side project by Janet English on bass guitar and lead vocals and her then-boyfriend, Quan Yeomans on lead guitar and vocals. They were originally named, The Shampoodles, but decided on Happyland. Their only album, Welcome to Happyland, was released on 25 August 1998, via the Polydor Australia label, which reached No. 18 on the ARIA Albums Chart. It provided the single, "Don't You Know Who I Am?", which peaked at No. 24 on the ARIA Singles Chart.
Quan Yeomans is an Australian musician best known as the frontman of the band Regurgitator.
...art is the third studio album from the Australian rock band, Regurgitator, released in August 1999. The album was recorded in Byron Bay and was the final album with drummer Martin Lee. ...art peaked at number 2 on the ARIA Charts and was certified gold.
Magoo is the professional name of Lachlan Goold, a multi award-winning Australian music producer based in Brisbane, Queensland.
The 10th Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards was held on 30 September 1996 at the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre. Presenters distributed 28 awards with the big winner for the year was You Am I gaining six awards.
The 12th Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards was held on 20 October 1998 at the Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre. Presenters, including Democrats deputy leader Natasha Stott Despoja and former Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, distributed 29 awards with the big winner Natalie Imbruglia receiving six trophies.
The 13th Australian Recording Industry Association Music Awards was held on 12 October 1999 at the Sydney Entertainment Centre. Hosted by Paul McDermott and Bob Downe, and presenters, including Melanie C of the Spice Girls, Tina Cousins, Fiona Horne and Molly Meldrum, distributed 33 awards. The big winner for the year was Powderfinger with four awards.
Rüfüs Du Sol are an Australian alternative dance group from Sydney, that consists of Tyrone Lindqvist, Jon George and James Hunt.
"Polyester Girl" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in May 1998 as the third single from the band's second studio album Unit. "Polyester Girl" peaked at No. 14 in Australia and No. 16 in New Zealand and it also ranked at No. 26 on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1998.
"Everyday Formula" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in October 1997 as the lead single from the band's second studio album Unit. The single peaked at number 41 in Australia and it also ranked at number 19 on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1997.
"Black Bugs" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. It was released in January 1998 as the second single from the band's second studio album, Unit (1997). The single peaked at number 32 in Australia and was ranked at the same position on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1998. The single also peaked at number 88 in the United Kingdom, becoming Regurgitator's first and only song to enter the top 100 in that country.
The Really Really Really Really Boring Album is the tenth studio and first children's album by Australian rock band, Regurgitator, and was released in Australia on 1 March 2019.
Distractions is an extended play by Australian rock band Regurgitator and released in September 2010. The album was supported by a September Distractions tour.
"I Sucked a Lot of Cock to Get Where I Am" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator, lifted from the band's debut studio album Tu-Plang. The song was not commercially released in Australia, however a 7" Vinyl single was released in US in November 1996 and in the UK in 1998.
"F.S.O." is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in February 1996 as the band's first commercially released single and first single from the band's debut studio album Tu-Plang. The single peaked at number 51 in Australia.
"Kong Foo Sing" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in April 1996 as the second single and first single from the band's debut studio album Tu-Plang. The single peaked at number 33 in Australia. The song ranked at number 15 on Triple J's Hottest 100 in 1996.
"Miffy's Simplicity" is a song by Australian rock band Regurgitator. The song was released in September 1996 as the third and final single from the band's debut studio album Tu-Plang. The single peaked at number 54 in Australia.