All Shows

Mar/20 · Donny Benet
Mar/22 · Elefante – 30th Anniversary Tour
Mar/26 · Eli
Mar/27 · Tophouse
Mar/28 · Sarah Kinsley
Mar/29 · THE EARLY NOVEMBER & HELLOGOODBYE: 20 Years Young
Mar/30 · Ruel – Kicking My Feet Tour
Mar/31 · Yellow Days: Rock And A Hard Place Tour
Apr/1 · COBRAH – TORN TOUR
Apr/2 · Mind Enterprises
Apr/3 · HOLYWATR
Apr/4 · Vandelux
Apr/7 · Lexa Gates
Apr/10 · FCUKERS
Apr/11 · United We Dance: The Ultimate Rave Experience
Apr/15 · THURSDAY presents FULL CITY DEVOLUCION
Apr/21 · Die Spitz
Apr/24 · Langhorne Slim: The Dreamin’ Kind Tour
Apr/25 · Talking Heads, Blondie & Devo Tribute Night
Apr/27 · The Brook & The Bluff: The Werewolf Tour
Apr/28 · Patrick Watson – Uh Oh Tour
Apr/29 · Claire Rosinkranz – My Lover Tour
Apr/30 · JENSEN MCRAE – God Has A Hitman Tour
May/1 · The Red Pears and Together Pangea
May/2 · José González – Against The Dying Of The Light Tour
May/3 · GOLDEN: A K-Pop Kids Party!
May/5 · Joy Crookes
May/8 · Powfu Presents: The Lofi Library Tour
May/9 · Earlybirds Club
May/17 · Dry Cleaning
May/22 · hemlocke springs: the apple tree under the sea tour
May/24 · Inner Wave & Los Mesoneros – North America Tour ’26
May/27 · Josiah and the Bonnevilles – The Redline North American Tour
May/29 · Kes – Roots, Rock, Soca Tour
May/30 · Clara La San – Chosen Silences Tour 2026
May/31 · Yot Club – Simpleton Tour
Jun/18 · The Crane Wives – ACT II
Jun/19 · The Crane Wives – ACT II
Jun/24 · underscores Galleria – North American Chapter
Jun/27 · Searows – Death in the Business of Whaling
Jun/28 · Searows – Death in the Business of Whaling
Jul/9 · Aaron Hibell
Jul/27 · of Montreal
Aug/25 · Diggy Graves – The No Vacancy Tour
Sep/5 · Slayyyter – WOR$T GIRL IN THE WORLD TOUR
Sep/11 · Eihwar – “Nordic Ritual Nights” USA Tour 2026
Sep/12 · Haute & Freddy’s Big Disgrace Tour
Sep/14 · Public Image Ltd – This Is Not The Last Tour
Sep/23 · ARLO PARKS – DESIRE TOUR
Sep/26 · deca joins
Jan/11 · Anna von Hausswolff: Iconoclasts Tour
Jan/31 · *POSTPONED until TBD* The Residents – Eskimo Live! Tour

All Shows

Upcoming Events

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Monqui Presents

With Schaus

Friday, March 20
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $50

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Medioticket Presents

Sunday, March 22
Doors : 8 pm, Show : 9 pm
all ages
$72.75 to $94.75

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Thursday, March 26
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$28

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Friday, March 27
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$37 to $104.06

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with girlpuppy

Saturday, March 28
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$36 to $89.79

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest The Dangerous Summer (Acoustic)

Sunday, March 29
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 7:30 pm
all ages
$27 to $60.75

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With Mercer Henderson and Chelsea Jordan

Monday, March 30
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$20 to $137.45

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with special guest Rue Jacobs

Tuesday, March 31
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$31.50 to $45

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Showbox Presents

Wednesday, April 1
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$41.25 to $127.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With special guest DJ Tasty T

Thursday, April 2
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$24 to $39.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Friday, April 3
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$30.50 to $38.75

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Showbox Presents

With special guest Rio Kosta 

Saturday, April 4
Doors : 8 pm, Show : 8 pm
ages 21 +
$41.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Outback Presents

Tuesday, April 7
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$35 to $126.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Sex Week

Friday, April 10
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, April 11
Doors : 8 pm, Show : 8:30 pm
ages 18 +
$24 to $28

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Chris Conley

Wednesday, April 15
Doors : 6 pm, Show : 7:15 pm
all ages
$50.50 to $67.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With special guest Rocket

Tuesday, April 21
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $45

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest Laney Jones and the Spirits

Friday, April 24
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$29 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

J-Fell Presents

Saturday, April 25
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest Ethan Tasch

Monday, April 27
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$29 to $167.70

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest La Force

Tuesday, April 28
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$41.50 to $68.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Wednesday, April 29
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$36.50 to $117.90

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest Marie Dresselhuis

Thursday, April 30
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With The High Curbs

Friday, May 1
Doors : 7:30 pm, Show : 8:30 pm
all ages
$34 to $45

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, May 2
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$56.25 to $158.68

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Sunday, May 3
Doors : 10:30 am, Show : 11 am
all ages
$28.75 to $47

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Tuesday, May 5
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With special guests Foster and Jomie

Friday, May 8
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $147.51

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, May 9
Show : 6 pm
ages 21 +
$39.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

With guest Hotline TNT

Sunday, May 17
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34.25 to $61.75

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with The Girl!

Friday, May 22
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$38.75 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Sunday, May 24
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $50.50

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Wednesday, May 27
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Friday, May 29
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$42.25 to $61.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, May 30
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$38.75 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Renny Conti

Sunday, May 31
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $82.30

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Yasmin Williams

Thursday, June 18
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$37 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Yasmin Williams

Friday, June 19
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$37 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Wednesday, June 24
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $100.85

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Mori

Saturday, June 27
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$35 to $120.47

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

with Mori

Sunday, June 28
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$35 to $120.47

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Thursday, July 9
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Monday, July 27
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Showbox Presents

Tuesday, August 25
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$41.25 to $127.24

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Showbox Presents

Saturday, September 5
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Showbox Presents

Friday, September 11
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, September 12
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $113.05

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Monday, September 14
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
ages 21 +

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Wednesday, September 23
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$45 to $67.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Saturday, September 26
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$44.50 to $61.75

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Monday, January 11
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages
$34 to $56.25

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.

Monqui Presents

Sunday, January 31
Doors : 7 pm, Show : 8 pm
all ages

About Public Image Ltd.:

Formed by John Lydon in the wake of the collapse of the Sex Pistols, Public Image Ltd. is a shape-shifting musical project in which the bilious singer and lyricist explored his ideas without compromise. Depending on what period of the band’s career you choose, Public Image Ltd. (officially abbreviated PiL) could sound like bass-heavy post-punk thunder (1978’s Public Image: First Issue), an inspired fusion of Krautrock and dub (1979’s Metal Box), muscular and expertly executed alternative rock (1986’s Album), or polished but angular dance-friendly pop (1989’s 9), with many other stops along the way. Despite a constantly shifting lineup and musical approach, Lydon’s bitter howl — full of anger, pain, and sometimes sardonic wit — gave PiL’s many guises a musical and thematic through line, and at their best, his collaborators created music as powerful and absorbing as Lydon’s intense charisma. Lydon revived PiL for live work in 2009, and the reunion albums This Is PiL (2012), What the World Needs Now (2015), and End of World (2023) featured some of his strongest work since the ’80s.

On January 14, 1978, the Sex Pistols played the final show on their American concert tour following the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols, and three days later, the band split up. John Lydon first traveled to Jamaica, where he and Virgin Records head Richard Branson scouted local reggae talent, and then Lydon returned to London. Lydon soon approached an old friend, Jah Wobble (aka John Wardle), about forming a new band. In May 1978, vocalist Lydon and bassist Wobble recruited onetime Clash guitarist Keith Levene and drummer Jim Walker, and the four began rehearsing. Two months later, Lydon named the band Public Image, adding the Ltd. several weeks later. Virgin Records quickly signed Lydon’s new act, and their debut single, “Public Image,” was released in October 1978. It was a chart success, and the following December, the band dropped their first album, Public Image: First Issue. While the record sold well in England and did well in America as an import, it would remain unreleased in the United States until 2013. The group, in suitably contrary fashion, played their first live show on Christmas Day 1978.