ACTIVIST SINGER
- Share via
Looking more like a punked-out Canter’s waitress than a rock singer, Vi Subversa and her band, Poison Girls, served up a platter of intriguing, if monochromatic, songs about sexual, social and partisan politics at Club Lingerie on Saturday night. The best part about this eye-catching British quartet--the 50-year-old Subversa plus three younger male musicians--is the intelligence and dry wit in its uncompromisingly activist songs, which range from caustic examinations of English politics to a more kind-hearted tune Subversa said she wrote “for my own generation.”
Poison Girls’ music tries to cover a similarly broad range (including a surprisingly large number of folk-derived tunes), but in concert the songs’ differences are undercut by the sameness of the guitar/bass/drums lineup and by Subversa’s tough, growlly monotone.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.