Defecate on My Face
"Defecate on My Face" was the first single released by Australian alternative rock band, TISM. It was released in 1986 and became a mainstay of TISM's live show. According to Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, it "explored the sexual interplay between Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun in Nazi Germany, and it became a dance club favourite."
"Defecate on My Face" | ||||
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Single by TISM | ||||
B-side |
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Released | June 1986 | |||
Recorded |
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Genre | New wave, synthpop | |||
Length | 4:42 | |||
Label | Elvis | |||
Songwriter(s) | TISM | |||
TISM singles chronology | ||||
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The single was released on 7" vinyl packaged in a 12" cardboard sleeve sealed on all four sides, so that one side had to be broken to hear the record. The original single has become a collectors' item among fans.
Song
Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, declared that "Defecate on My Face", "explored the sexual interplay between Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun in Nazi Germany, and it became a dance club favourite."[1] It tells the story of Adolf Hitler and his rise through history as a great dictator. It follows his various successes throughout the Second World War, and in doing so, it reveals that his dramatic rise to power is made possible, or perhaps hampered, by his one weakness: he requires that Eva Braun defecate on his face, presumably as a fetish. When, one day she refuses, his dictatorship goes awry and several misfortunes befall him. The song reveals this to be the cause of the (real-life) failure of his plans to conquer the world, and his demise.
The idea of Hitler's coprophilia was first suggested in The Mind of Adolf Hitler, a psychological analysis prepared in 1943 for the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) by psychoanalyst Walter C. Langer. One of the report's conclusions was that Hitler had "coprophagic tendencies or their milder manifestations" in his heterosexual relationships, and masochistically derived "sexual gratification from the act of having a woman urinate or defecate on him."[2]
The chorus contains the lines: "There's trouble brewing in the Warsaw Pact; So hurry up Eva and move your digestive tract". The Warsaw Pact was not established until 1955, several years after Hitler's death. The song was written in D minor.
AllMusic's Jonathan Lewis compares TISM with United States alternative rockers, Ween, "While Ween writes songs that are happily crass, even they would hesitate to record a song called 'Defecate on My Face,' let alone release it as a single. But TISM shows no such restraint."[3]
Video
The video was filmed in 1985 and features stock footage of Nazi soldiers and several high-ranking Nazi officials inter-cut with footage of bombs dropping and aftermath of these events. One scene involves a man who looks up just as bombs are dropped from a plane, a subtle nod towards the song's theme.[4] Also in the video are TISM dancing in front of a white screen in their trademark black balaclavas and Ku Klux Klan uniforms. One part features a TISM member with a white sheet over his head trying to eat popcorn through the sheet.
One moment in the video features a piece of card featuring a quote, apparently from T. S. Eliot which reads "Hurry Up" and a caption "To his kettle". Below it is small print that says "THIS WRITING IS FOR PEOPLE WHO SLOW DOWN THEIR VIDEOS". At two minutes into the video, two unmasked TISM members can be seen.
Controversy
The song could not be played on radio until 1993 because of the lyrics that included extensive references to Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, his mistress, Eva Braun and coprophilia.
The second B-side, "The Art-Income Dialectic" was recorded as a prize for winning a 3RRR battle of the bands competition. It was recorded at the Aztec Studios on 24 November 1985, alongside two other tracks: "If You Want the Toilet, You're in It" and "When You're Happy and You Know It, Kill Yourself". "If You Want the Toilet..." was released on Collected Recordings 1986-1993 in 1995, while "When You're Happy..." remains unreleased as of 2018, however it was played live in 1986.
The record sleeve is pink, with red writing stating "THIS IS SERIOUS MUM" in all four edges, while faux biographies of the band members are written in the main field in black, with a large red "TISM" in the centre of each. If viewed from a distance, the artwork resembles a backwards swastika. The text would later be published in The TISM Guide to Little Aesthetics in 1990.
Other versions
"Defecate on My Face" has become the most re-released TISM song, appearing on several recordings.
The song was written in 1983 and appears on the bedroom tape "Hooked on Crap" from that year, which remains unreleased. The first released version was a dark, bass-driven version of the track, with an extensive scratching solo, appearing on "This Is Serious Mum Demo Tape" (1984).
The next version was a 7" single, which contained a version of "Defecate..." that would later appear on tism.bestoff. (2002) along with a remix by Machine Gun Fellatio. This version, recorded in October 1985 at York Street Studios, is performed in a style similar to the demo version but incorporating elements of Australian pub rock, featuring heavy guitars in the pre-choruses and choruses and retaining the scratching solo and was the one used for the music video.
The most well-known, a completely pub rock version, appears on their album, Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance (1988), with the turntable solo replaced by a Beatles sample. A country and western version was recorded for Form and Meaning Reach Ultimate Communion (1986) and re-appeared on Gentlemen, Start Your Egos (1991). That version is played in A minor as opposed to the D minor of the rock version.
Machines Against the Rage (1996) and The White Albun (2004) both included live versions, the former featuring extra guitar noodling by Tokin' Blackman. A live version appearing on the band's first VHS, Shoddy and Poor, features a keyboard solo by Eugene de la Hot Croix Bun in lieu of any samples.
Track list
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Defecate on My Dace" | 4:49 |
2. | "Death Death Death" | 3:05 |
3. | "The Art/Income Dialectic" | 1:24 |
4. | "Death Death Death (Live at the Users Club Flaubert Drum Solo version)" (Bonus track, only available with iTunes and Spotify re-releases) | 13:31 |
Personnel
- Peter Minack - lead vocals
- Sean Kelly - guitar, backing vocals
- John Holt - bass, backing vocals
- Damian Cowell - drum programming, backing vocals
- Eugene Cester - keyboards, backing vocals, scratching solo
- Mark Fessey - saxophone
References
- McFarlane, Ian (1999). "Encyclopedia entry for 'This Is Serious Mum (TISM)'". Encyclopedia of Australian Rock and Pop. St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86508-072-1. Archived from the original on 13 August 2004.
- The Mind of Adolf Hitler p. 149-50, 193. In his Introduction, Langer relates an anecdote: he was chatting with a colleague who asked about Hitler's childhood. Langer spoke about it for a while, and the colleague announced that she now knew what Hitler's perversion was. To his amazement, she had come to the same diagnosis. When he asked how she had performed this extraordinary feat, she related that it was based on her clinical experience in other cases.
- Lewis, Jonathan. "Great Truckin' Songs of the Renaissance – T.I.S.M. | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
- Feb 28, 1991 newsgroup account of Defecate On My Face song/video