Pansy Division comes to The Earl in East Atlanta Village on Friday, April 6, as part of its tour celebrating the 30th anniversary of “Deflowered.”
When Jon Ginoli and Chris Freeman stormed onto San Francisco’s punk rock scene as Pansy Division in the early 1990s, they quickly gained a following for their catchy melodies, witty lyrics and bold message of queer sexual freedom and identity.
“We were blunt. We were outspoken. We were funny,” said Ginoli, lead singer/guitarist.
Pansy Division emerged during the height of the AIDS epidemic when many people were dying. Freddie Mercury, lead singer of Queen, died in 1991 due to complication from AIDS after a career in the closet.
LGBTQ people faced a steady stream of hate and discrimination by government leaders, most notably the conservative senator from North Carolina, Jesse Helms.
“It was a grim time,” Ginoli said. “And we thought, ‘We want to have a pro-sex, in-your-face band at a time when that is under attack … let’s be Jesse Helms’ worst nightmare.’”
“When Freddie Mercury died, I realized that’s why we’re doing this,” Freeman said. “I didn’t want to live in that world anymore, where gay musicians can’t be out doing their thing. There’s no reason that I had to go through all the shame I went through.”
Pansy Division’s second album, “Deflowered,” was released in 1994 on Lookout! Records. Green Day picked Pansy Division to tour with them that year. The gay Bay Area band used to playing in small venues was now playing arenas in front of large crowds of hard rock fans.
“Deflowered” has humorous and very queer songs such as “James Bondage,” “Groovy Underwear” and “Beer Can Boy.” But it also has romantic and wistful songs like “Deep Water” about the loneliness of being gay in high school, and “Denny,” about a man suffering from AIDS.
“We were playing for all these Green Day teenagers and we didn’t…
Read the full article here