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The 'Best Group' award was presented by Gough Whitlam, who announced the winners as "It's my family". [7] At the conclusion of the ARIA Awards ceremony the Whitlams performed a cover of the Skyhooks' "Women in Uniform", [27] this was subsequently released in March 1999 as a limited edition single.
Best Group winners the Whitlams received their award from the group's namesake Gough Whitlam. [3] The former Prime Minister announced "It's my family." [ 4 ] Once on stage the members knelt at his feet. [ 4 ]
Eternal Nightcap – Canadian Release contains 13 tracks selected from two of their studio albums, Eternal Nightcap and Undeniably The Whitlams – Reworked. This album was released by Black Yak Phantom/Warner Music Canada in 2000, coinciding with The Whitlams Canadian tour supporting Blue Rodeo .
Upon release, Tim Freedman said, "I decided to leave a couple of singles off, because I wanted to tell a story of The Whitlams in song, and I needed to put a couple of early tunes in there, and a couple of songs which were about the dramas that the band lived through, and I tried to make a nice mix between the popular songs and those that are ...
The Whitlams – "No Aphrodisiac" (with Tim Freedman, Matt Ford) (Won the 1998 ARIA Award for Song of the Year) [11] The Whitlams – Chunky Chunky Air Guitar (With Matt Ford, Ross Johnson and Tim Freedman) Tex, Don and Charlie – "Fake That Emotion" (with Tex Perkins) The Grandmasters – "Love Dies Slow" (with Jackie Orzarcsky)
The Guardian said, "No Aphrodisiac is a demarcation in the Whitlams’ sound: gone were the boyish songs about mates and girls, replaced by melancholic, clever songs about being lonely and drinking too much (and girls). In a neat encapsulation of the band’s shift, Lewis even swapped his double bass for an electric bass halfway through the track."
"I Make Hamburgers" is a song by The Whitlams. It was first released to radio in February 1995 [2] as the band's debut single. It was released on CD single in November 1995 as the first single from their second album, Undeniably. The song was number 79 in the 1996 Triple J Hottest 100, a ranking of songs voted for by Triple J listeners. It was ...
"Thank You (for Loving Me at My Worst)" is a song by Australian band, The Whitlams. It was released in January 2000 as the lead single from their fourth album, Love This City . It peaked at number 63 on the ARIA charts.