Quan Yeomans | |
|---|---|
Yeomans performing with Regurgitator in Sydney on 31 December 2012 | |
| Background information | |
| Born | (1972-12-12)12 December 1972 (age 53) Sydney,New South Wales, Australia |
| Genres | Rock,alternative rock,hip hop,electronica |
| Occupations | Musician, songwriter, animator, producer |
| Instruments | Guitar, vocals, keyboard, synthesizer, drums |
| Years active | 1993–present |
| Labels | Valve Records,Warner Bros. |
| Website | [1] |
Quan Yeomans (born 12 December 1972) is an Australian musician best known as the frontman of the bandRegurgitator.
Yeomans was born in Sydney to a fifth-generationAustralian father, Neville, and his mother Lien, a well-knownVietnamese Australian chef and author. His parents divorced during his childhood, during which he recalls listening to variousFleetwood Mac albums.[1][2] At an early age Lien arranged for family friend andChannel Seven newsreader Peter Waltham to give music lessons for Quan in exchange for cooking lessons. In 1984, his family relocated toBrisbane and he attended Bardon Primary School before attendingKelvin Grove State High School until graduation in 1989. Yeomans travelled with his father in 1991 toRio de Janeiro to theWorld Economic Forum, where he heard Indian scientist and authorVandana Shiva speak about the crippling, cyclic effects of debt on the Third World. He has stated, "To find out about that was a critical moment for me and inspired a lot of work that I did in the band [Regurgitator]".[3]
In 1993, Yeomans was a drummer for Brisbanepunk band Zooerastia. After meetingPangaea bassist/vocalistBen Ely on a bus, they would formRegurgitator with Yeomans on guitar/vocals and Martin Lee on drums. He has stated that he felt like a hypocrite signing to major labelWarner Music because of his views on the music industry as the mouthpiece of global capitalism.[4]
Yeomans is the dominant composer in the group, owning the writing credits to over half the songs on each album. The majority of songs chosen for single releases are also his. Regurgitator's shift towards synth-driven 80s pop on their second albumUnit, which contrasted greatly to their earlier rock/hip hop orientated works, is largely due to Yeomans' frustration with their male-dominant audience who embraced their heavier sound. Manager Paul Curtis recalls that he had once stated "thank godGrinspoon came along because they took all the male angst away from our shows".[5]
In 1996, Yeomans became acquainted with Janet English, bassist/vocalist forMelbourne-based bandSpiderbait. The two started dating and the relationship lasted several years. The pair formedHappyland,[6] anart pop band and releasedWelcome to Happyland in 1998, which spawned a few hits that received airplay onTriple J. The project has been inactive since 2000.
Yeomans formed a solo project entitled "BLOX" and Quan the Amateur, releasing aself-titled album in December 2008 under the latter moniker.Quan: The Amateur was recorded in Hong Kong, where he resided at the time of recording, and Yeomans then performed the album on the 2009 Big Day Out tour.[7][8]
Yeomans' hip-hop project Disaster!, featuring former girlfriend Emilie Goegan, played shows in Japan and Australia. Disaster! has ceased due to the couple ending their relationship.[9]
From late 2013 to well into 2015, Regurgitator was on a period of indefinite hiatus due to personal matters and the geographical locations of Ely and Yeomans (the former resides in Melbourne, Australia, while the latter resides in Hong Kong).[10] They started touring again in 2015 before recordingHeadroxx in 2018 and a children's albumThe Really Really Really Really Boring Album in 2019.
In 2023, Yeomans released the solo 'Night Cream' EP.[11] Quan with fellow Regurgitator beings regrouped in 2022 with new recordings in mind, these will come to the world in 2024 as the albumInvader.[12]
Yeomans' lyrical style has been described as a trademark postmodern lyricism and sceptical cynicism.[13] He is known for the explicit lyrical content that appeared on Regurgitator's earlier releases. Songs such as "I Like It Like That", "Pop Porn" and "The World of Sleaze" deals with issues of sexism. Yeomans has acknowledged feminist performance artist and friendKiley Gaffney as a major influence. He has also credited his father, a psychiatrist, as his "greatest intellectual and emotional influence. It is through his insights that I discovered the true nature of subversion, subtlety and brutality."[14] Their attendance at the 1991World Economic Forum directly influenced the lyrics for the song "G7 Dick Electro Boogie". Another reoccurring theme in Yeomans' lyrics is about musicians dealing with fame, which is possibly influenced by his own career. Regurgitator bassist/co-vocalist Ben Ely noted that "Quan was really playing around hardcore topics with cute pop songs"[15] when asked about the controversial track "I Sucked A Lot of Cock To Get Where I Am".
Yeomans had lived inHong Kong with his partner and their first child was born in late 2013.[10][16] As of 2019, he was residing in Melbourne. He has two children.[17]
TheARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres ofAustralian music. They commenced in 1987.
| Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | "Black Bugs" | Best Video | Nominated | [18] |
| Quan Yeomans and Janet English forHappyland –Welcome to Happyland | Best Cover Art | Nominated |