Lydia Lunch
Cafe Du Nord, 2170 Market (at Sanchez), S.F.
She reads with Daphne Gottlieb and Bucky Sinister
Sunday, Dec. 14, at 8 p.m.
Admission is $10
861-5016
Lydia Lunch was 19 in 1978, and she didn't have Kelly or Brody or Gwen to encourage her, but she went ahead and tried to destroy rock music with her band Teenage Jesus & the Jerks anyway. In truth, Lunch and her compatriots considered punk rock passé even then -- but that's always been the sign of a true punker.
Despite the mainstreaming of oddness, the concerns that brought Lunch to that stage in the first place -- kids in high school being criminalized for their political views; the United States fighting a mean, dirty war; sexual abuse of children -- are still around. That's why dissonant, harsh, angry music, whatever you call it, is still important. These issues also keep Lunch busy with what seems like a million other methods of resisting complacency: Famous for her film collaborations with the notoriously gnarly Richard Kern and her many intense, intelligent publications, Lunch is currently most interested in spoken-word poetry.
If you haven't heard her work already, we know what you're thinking. Performance poetry is really easy to do badly, and many mistakes have been made publicly in its name. But this is Lydia Lunch we're talking about. She's one of the reasons so many people want to do this kind of performing -- and one of the best at it. She may not be quote-unquote punk, but she sure does have a loud mouth and a bad attitude.
Tags: Night&Day, Highlights, Lydia Lunch, Hot Topic Inc., Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, Richard Kern
