Bio
There have been gay
musicians hidden throughout rock music history, but Pansy Division when
began in 1991 in San Francisco, they were the first to to be so boldly
open about it. Founded by guitarist/singer Jon Ginoli and soon joined
by bassist/vocalist Chris Freeman, with the intent of forming a gay rock
band, Pansy Division blew the closet doors open.
Raised on a diet of 60s
pop and 70s punk, their sound was suitably crunchy and catchy as hell.
They wrote in-your-face lyrics, but did it with a sense of humor. Not
only did their music and stance defy stereotypical norms of rock musicians
being openly gay, they also broke gay cultural stereotypes that rock
wouldn’t interest gay people.
With album titles like Undressed and Deflowered,
and song titles like “Bill & Ted’s Homosexual Adventure,” their
bluntness and humor stood out amidst the ’90s alterna-rock scene. Says
Chris Freeman, “there was a lot of gay culture we couldn’t relate to, so
we tried to invent a place for ourselves in it, an alternative for
other queer misfits.” Having had the experience of being ostracized by
other musicians for being gay and by other gays for being into rock, “we
tried to turn our alienation into something positive,” says Ginoli.
“Instead of being depressed about it, we tried to make music that would
make us—and our audience—happy. We could laugh about it, so we put that
joy into the music.”
Beginning in 1993, they
put out an album a year for six years on Lookout Records. Their music
caught the attention of former Lookout labelmates Green Day, who took
Pansy Division on tour for a couple of months in 1994 at the height of
the mania surrounding their breakthrough album Dookie. Says
Ginoli, ”When we started our band we thought we’d be playing our music
to people in their 20s & 30s who were gay or gay-friendly. Suddenly
we faced thousands of high school kids each night, an amazing
opportunity we never expected to have.” The response was decidedly
mixed, but their popularity soared.
Pansy Division toured
and recorded almost non-stop during the 1990s, along the way recruiting a
permanent drummer (Luis Illades) and a lead guitarist (first Patrick
Goodwin, now Joel Reader).
1998’s Absurd Pop Song
Romance was a departure from their earlier work, a more serious album
both lyrically and sonically. The followup album Total Entertainment!
(for a new label, Alternative Tentacles) found a happy medium between
the broad humor of the early records and the more (dare we say it?)
mature approach of the previous album. In 2006, they released a 30-song
career overview titled The Essential Pansy Division, including a DVD of videos and concert footage.
In 2009 the band released That’s So Gay,
both raucous and raunchy as well as being serious-minded. With some of
their catchiest and most rocking songs ever, they’re still loads of fun
without being ironic or cynical.
From that album came
the 7” single of “Average Men,” containing a new non-album track (a
cover of a Green Day’s “Coming Clean”). A documentary film about the
band, Pansy Division: Life In A Gay Rock Band, played film
festivals throughout 2008, and came out on DVD (with a bonus live DVD)
at the same time. Also out in 2009 was Jon’s book Deflowered: My Life In Pansy Division, a memoir of Pansy Division stories and experiences.
After that the band released two digital-only archival releases. Lost Gems & Rare Tracks is exactly that, 14 songs from compilations, singles, and outtakes that never found their way onto a regular album. Pansy Division Live 1992-2003 is a whopping 53-song double disc that comprehensively documents the many phases of Pansy Division’s sound.
In 2013, the band
created a Bandcamp page (http://pansydivision.bandcamp.com), where their
entire catalog can be streamed for free and downloads can be purchased.
With bands members living in 4 cities on two coasts, gigs have been
infrequent.
In 2015 they recorded a new album, Quite Contrary,
in time to commemorate the band’s 25th anniversary. Released in
September 2016 on Alternative Tentacles Records, tours of the U.S. East
and West coasts followed. After a quiet couple of years, the band has
played a handful of shows in 2019, including their first European shows
in 20 years.
2020 sees an increased number shows in North America, doing a few 3-day weekends in different parts of the country throughout the year. The hope is for an EU tour is 2021, but scheduling the band around our lives is pretty difficult, so we’ll see.
To date PD has played 976 shows. The band’s goal is to get to 1000,
so if you want to see us live, don’t wait till next time, because
there’s a good chance this will be the last time around.
The Band:
Chris Freeman—bass, vocals
Jon Ginoli—rhythm guitar, vocals
Luis Illades—drums
Joel Reader—lead guitar, vocals