The Fismits Release ‘Falling Joy’ EP, Completing a 30-Year Creative Arc

The Fismits have issued the EP ‘Falling Joy’, a five-track release that draws on material originally written in the early 1990s by founding member Mark Biagio and former collaborator Bruce Barrett.
The Fismits performing at Railways Cafe during the launch of their EP Falling Joy. The Fismits performing at Railways Cafe during the launch of their EP Falling Joy.

The Fismits have released their new EP ‘Falling Joy’, a five-track project that brings to completion song ideas first sketched more than three decades ago. The release arrives alongside the single ‘When’, a track written in the mid-1990s that anchors the EP’s reflective tone.

Three Decades in the Making

Founding member Mark Biagio began developing the core material in the early 1990s while performing with songwriter Bruce Barrett in the band The Mind Theatre. Many of those early pieces were performed live but never formally recorded or finished, remaining in rehearsal archives and fragmented drafts for years. Biagio returned to the compositions recently, reinterpreting them with a contemporary approach rather than attempting to recreate their original sound.

Track by Track

The EP’s five songs trace a path from layered guitar work to stripped-back vulnerability:

  • ‘Scars’ (released March 2026) – Built on a strong guitar foundation and rhythmic structure, this track was long considered one of Bruce Barrett’s most compelling compositions. Biagio refined it over decades before arriving at a definitive version.
  • ‘Independence’ (released May 2026) – Originally rooted in British indie influences, the song was reworked with electronic textures and looping elements, pushing it into more experimental territory.
  • ‘When’ – Written in the mid-1990s, the current focus single explores themes of uncertainty and direction. The 2026 recording adds a layer of lived experience to lyrics that once looked toward an unknown future.
  • ‘Falling Joy’ – The title track leans into introspection and atmosphere, reinforcing the EP’s emotional arc.
  • ‘Too Small A Word’ – Once imagined as a large-scale rock statement, the closing track was stripped back to a quieter, more restrained arrangement, favouring simplicity over earlier ambition.

Launch Performance

The Fismits marked the release with a launch performance at Railways Cafe on Friday, 26 June, linking the new material to the band’s early beginnings in Durban’s student rehearsal spaces.

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