Tom Holliston was born on April 21, 1960, in Victoria, British Columbia, into a musical family; his earliest musical memories were of Frank Crumit, John McCormack, and Pablo Casals. His older brother Robert pursued a career in classical music as an accompanist and chamber player, performing with Eugene Fodor, Richard Margison, and others. Tom remained uninterested in music until a sports injury kept him away from school for a month, during which time he became absorbed by the Beatles' White Album, leading his siblings to give him more of their music to study. The Victoria scene was heavily inspired by the Ramones and the exuberance emergence of D.O.A. as a "local" punk band, spawning countless young bands in a short period of time (including the influential Nomeansno and Day Glo Abortions). Holliston, self-taught on bass guitar, played in his first band -- Pat Bay the Malahats -- in 1978, which he has described as "one of a thousand score bad punk bands." Mercifully, there are no known recordings. As Nomeansno's local and national popularity grew, Holliston found himself being often mistaken for NMN guitarist Andy Kerr, who lived in the same Victoria neighborhood and looked vaguely similar, leading eventually to their meeting in 1984.
Holliston became fascinated by home recording, and began work on a collection of songs that would eventually emerge in 1989 under the name of Gold Love, attributed to Show Business Giants, and a more developed follow-up with 1990's The Benevolent Horn, both released on cassette only. At this time Nomeansno decided to perform a Halloween show in Vancouver as a tribute to the Ramones, and asked Holliston to join on guitar. "Nomeansno Clones the Ramones" was promoted with a poster of the first Ramones album cover, with happy faces pasted over those of the Ramones; the concert featured the first two Ramones albums played breathlessly in sequence. The concert received a delirious reception, planting the seeds of the Nomeansno side project the Hanson Brothers.
Andy Kerr and John Wright from Nomeansno both joined Holliston on the recording of 1991's I Thought It Was a Fig by Show Business Giants, and both occasionally performed as part of the SBG ensemble. Concurrently, Nomeansno created a new act called the Hanson Brothers, combining the music of the Ramones with the imagery of the cult hockey movie #Slap Shot, appearing with D.O.A. and SNFU as part of a Hockey Night at the Commodore concert series. Again enormously popular, the Hanson Brothers, including "Tommy Hanson" on guitar, recorded a debut album for Alternative Tentacles and began touring hockey-mad Canada as the Hanson Brothers. Tommy Hanson's bespectacled dimwitted persona has become an integral part of the Hanson Brothers' identity, as have his one-note guitar solos and incredible ability to drool at length.
Holliston continued to record with Show Business Giants, who now regularly included such local luminaries as guitarist/producer Scott Henderson, multi-instrumentalist Ford Pier, and bassist Keith Rose, as well as Nomeansno's John Wright on drums. After releasing Maybe It's Just Me in 1993, Holliston was asked by Nomeansno to fill in the lead guitar position vacated by Andy Kerr, who had decided to retire from that band to marry and live in Europe. Holliston was initially reluctant, given the enormous void created in the band by the loss of the eclectic and talented Kerr, but agreed to join the band, after receiving relentless guitar instruction from Rob Wright, first learning Kerr's guitar parts by rote, then eventually developing into a solid contributing partner in the band.
In 1995 Virgin Records made a distribution deal with Vancouver independent label Essential Noise, which released albums by D.O.A. and the Hanson Brothers, as well as Let's Have a Talk with the Dead by Show Business Giants. Let's Have a Talk was warmly received by Canadian college radio, with several tracks getting considerable rotation; however, Virgin was unable to market the album (or any other Essential Noise release) outside of Canada, leading to the dissolution of the distribution agreement. Nevertheless, the interest generated by the album enabled Show Business Giants to finally begin touring, leading to performances across Canada and in the United States and Europe. Three more Show Business Giants albums were released in the next three years: 1997's Will There Be Corn, 2000's Self-Aggrandizement Keeps Us Going..., and the 2001 Internet-only release When Wrestling Meant Something.
In 2002 Holliston began releasing records under his own name, developing a rootsier, less punk approach. Tom Holliston His Opportunists was released in 2002, followed by 2003's I Want You to Twist with Me and 2005's excellent Boy in Tub; Rabbit. All were released independently by Holliston in North America, while being distributed overseas by independent Smoeff Records, leading to more tour dates in Europe. Future plans for Holliston include another solo album and another Nomeansno album, and he has not ruled out the possibility of future Show Business Giants recordings -- all of which is good news for his growing fan base. ~ Laurie Mercer, Rovi