Stisism

The Stisism Band, later known simply as Stisism, was an American punk rock band from Brooklyn, New York.

Stisism
OriginBrooklyn, New York, United States
GenresPunk rock
Years active1983-1998
LabelsMutha Records, Intensive Scare Records, Man's Ruin Records, The Orchard
Past membersChris Curylo
Stu Pendis
Mikey Plague
Fiona Lynn

The Stisism Band formed in the early 1980s as the duo of Chris Curylo (vocals, guitar) and Stu Pendis (drums). The band played snotty, humorous 1977-style punk rock, influenced by the Sex Pistols.[1] Tracks from self-released tapes like Dehydration Synthesis (1983) could often be heard on DJ Pat Duncan's long-running 1980s punk radio show on WFMU.[2]

By the time of their first official record, a four-song 7" EP called Introducing.... Stisism, released in 1984 on Mutha Records,[3] the band had been joined by lead vocalist Mikey Plague and bassist Fiona Lynn.[4]

The March 1986 issue of Maximumrocknroll featured an extensive five-page interview with the band.[5]

After a long silence, the band, with their name shortened simply to Stisism, returned in 1995 with the Punch in the Face EP, issued by Intensive Scare Records). followed by the 1996 7" single "Bacon Man". The band released their first full-length studio album, Coping With Society, in 1998, originally only on vinyl on Intensive Scare. It was issued on CD by Man's Ruin Records in 1999, and reissued in 2005 by The Orchard. In his review, AllMusic critic Alex Henderson said, "Recalling the Pistols, the Buzzcocks and others, Stisism brings a lot of exuberance and bratty aggression to this engaging album."[6]

Members

  • Chris Curylo – vocals, guitar (1983–1986, 1995–1998)
  • Stu Pendis – drums (1983–1986, 1995–1998)
  • Mikey Plague – vocals (1984–1986, 1995–1998)
  • Fiona Lynn – bass (1984–1986, 1995–1998)

Discography

Studio albums

  • Coping with Society (1998, Intensive Scare Records); 1999, Man's Ruin Records; 2005, The Orchard)

Singles and EPs

  • Introducing Stisism 7" EP (1984, Mutha Records)
  • Punch in the Face 7" EP (1995, Intensive Scare Records)
  • "Bacon Man" 7" single (1996, Intensive Scare Records)

Cassette albums

  • Dehydration Synthesis (1983, self-released)

Compilation appearances

  • "Never" and "Bacon Man" featured on Mutiny on the Bowery cassette (1988, Mystic Records)
  • "I'm a Corpse" and "Bacon Man" featured on Mutiny on the Bowery LP (1988, Mystic Records)
  • "Go Tell Your Mother" featured on Bands Only a Mutha Could Love Volume I cassette (1988, Mutha Records)
  • "Formaldehyde Baby" featured on It Comes from the East LP/CD (1996, Intensive Scare Records)
  • "It's Over" featured on It Smells Like Spring LP (1997, Intensive Scare Records)
  • "The First Time" featured on The 2nd Coming ... Frank Invites You to a Sonic Bowlingshow! 10" EP (1998, Frank Records)
gollark: Do any of these people actually like to see stuff like "Here's a Wumpus for now" in the UI?
gollark: And some languages have a grammatical formal/informal distinction - and they use the formal grammar, but with the really informal wording - which makes it even weirder.
gollark: Apparently they try and use the same sort of thing in other languages...
gollark: On a related note, it annoys me a lot that Discord seem to want to appeal to "gamers"; I don't even know *which* gamers, honestly; with the weird phrasing they use in the UI.
gollark: If it was federated and open, people would be able to move off it more easily.

References

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