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Lunachicks

Lunachicks are a rowdy, irreverent, and influential N.Y.C. band with a sound rooted in punk, hard rock, heavy metal, and twisted pop. Emerging in the late 1980s, the band amassed a rabid fan base in the '90s with their notorious live shows and uncompromising studio albums like Babysitters on Acid, Jerk of All Trades, and Luxury Problem. Despite going on hiatus in 2004, the bandmembers remained active -- post-Lunachicks projects include Theo and the Skyscrapers and Bantam -- and in 2021, they reunited for a series of shows and chronicled their rise from punk upstarts to feminist icons in the memoir Fallopian Rhapsody: The Story of the Lunachicks. The Lunachicks were formed by singer Theo Kogan, guitarist Gina Volpe, and bassist Sydney "Squid" Silver while all three were students at Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts in New York; they met up with Sindi Benezra, another rock-minded student who played guitar, and began writing songs, most informed by the more outrageous elements of popular culture or the concerns of semi-crazed teenagers (one early tune involved the non-accidental death of two of their teachers). With the arrival of drummer Becky Wreck, the group's first solid lineup was in place. Souping up their shows with outré costumes and deliberately offensive theatrics, the Lunachicks became regulars on what became known as the "Scumrock" scene (largely comprised of other noisy pre-grunge bands with equal portions of fuzzy guitar and snarky wit), and one memorable show was attended by Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth. Gordon and Moore were taken with the Lunachicks and told their friend Paul Smith of Blast First Records to check out the band. Blast First ended up signing the Lunachicks, and released a double 7" EP of early recordings in 1989, with their debut album, Babysitters on Acid, following in 1990 (the same year that saw the release of New York Scum Rock: Live at CBGB, a multi-artist collection recorded during a series of shows at the iconic New York punk venue that included the Lunachicks' "Makin' It [With Other Species]"). In 1992, the Lunachicks jumped to the American indie label Safe House, issuing their second LP, Binge & Purge. In 1994, Becky Wreck left the band; Kate Schellenbach of Luscious Jackson briefly filled in for Wreck until Chip English came aboard as the new Lunachicks drummer. English made her recording debut with the Lunachicks on the 1995 album Jerk of All Trades, which was also their first release on the New York punk rock label Go-Kart Records. In 1997, the Lunachicks returned with their fourth studio album, Pretty Ugly, but the year also saw the departure of guitarist Sindi Benezra, and the group opted to continue as a quartet. The concert album Drop Dead Live arrived in 1998, while 1999 brought the studio set Luxury Problem. By this time, the group had a busy touring schedule, headlining clubs in the United States, Europe, the U.K., and Japan, while opening for the likes of the Ramones, the Buzzcocks, No Doubt, the Go-Go's, Rancid, and NOFX and appearing on the Vans Warped Tour. In late 1999, Chip English left the group and Helen Destroy took over behind the drums, but in mid-2000, the Lunachicks were in need of a rest and announced they were going on hiatus. Since then, they haven't released any new recordings, and outside of two shows in 2002 and 2004 with Chip English on drums (one of which was a benefit), the band remained inactive. While the Lunachicks have been on hold, Theo Kogan has recorded and toured with her band Theo and the Skyscrapers, as well as pursuing careers in acting and modeling. Elsewhere, Sydney "Squid" Silver has worked as a tattoo artist and restaurateur, Gina Volpe formed and fronted her band Bantam, Chip English plays drums with the group Suicide King, Becky Wreck was percussionist for the Blare Bitch Project, and Helen Destroy tours with Led Zeppelin tribute band Lez Zeppelin. Lunachicks reconvened in 2021 and played their first live performance in 17 years at Punk Rock Bowling in Las Vegas. That same year saw the release of the memoir Fallopian Rhapsody: The Story of the Lunachicks. In 2022, the group performed at N.Y.C.'s Webster Hall and Chicago's Riot Fest.
© Mark Deming /TiVo

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