16.07.26
Tickets PANSY DIVISION, + 2 Supports in Berlin

PANSY DIVISION + 2 Supports 16.07.26 in Berlin, Lido

Donnerstag 16.07.26
Einlass: 19:00 Uhr, Beginn: 20:00 Uhr
Lido, Cuvrystraße 7, 10997 Berlin

Tickets – PANSY DIVISION Berlin

PreiskategoriePreisAnzahl 
Stehplatz23,65 € 

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Pansy Division is a gay pop-punk formed in San Francisco in 1991. There have been gay musicians throughout rock music history, but when Pansy Division began they were one of the first to be so boldly open about it.  Founded by guitarist/singer Jon Ginoli and bassist/vocalist Chris Freeman, with the intent of forming a gay rock band, and joined later by drummer Luis Illades and guitarist Joel Reader, 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 “The Cocksucker Club” and "I'm Gonna Be a Slut," their bluntness and humor stood out amidst the ’90s underground music 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.” 

Writing upbeat catchy songs and combining them with overtly sexual and sometimes humorous lyrics, Pansy Division toured North and America and Europe in the '90s and developed a cult following worldwide that exists to this day. They took a stand poking fun at homophobes and asserting a positive message of inclusion while singing about topics rarely heard in the world of rock and punk. They have been going for over 30 years and their approach remains relevant now. 


Signing to Berkeley's Lookout Records, they recorded six albums and reached a wider audience opening for former Lookout Records alumni Green Day on their Dookie tour in 1994. Later they moved to Jello Biafra's Alternative Tentacles Records, and have released three albums and a compilation since, including the most recent Quite Contrary. 


Their 2026 tour will be their first tour of Europe since 1998, apart from the Punk Rock Raduno festival in Italy which they played in 2019 and are playing again this year.