Rebels of Lunch
Skimpy Piranhas’s debut album, Rebels of Lunch.
- Released: 1989
- Genre: Post-Punk, Pre Riot Grrrl
- Total Running Time: 47:20
- Original Catalog: SYNC89 04791-CD REI-35ST US
- Digital Catalog: SYN89 04791-DD REI-35STSE US*
- ISRC: PM-SYN-89-04791
Themes: Rebellious, Snarky, Defiant, Funky, Disgust, Regret, Rowdy, Cheeky, Mutinous, Frustration, Riotous, Thirsty, Revolutionary, Aggressive, Mischievous, Angsty
*2019 30th Anniversary Remastered
About the album
Rebels of Lunch (1989) is the debut—and detonative—album by Skimpy Piranhas, an all-girl punk band that turned cafeteria chaos into full-blown rebellion. Across its 16 tracks and 47 minutes, the record is a radical tapestry of adolescent mischief, food fights, and high school anarchy. With styles blending punk, new wave, alternative, garage rock, and even glam metal, the album is both a sonic slap and a lyrical laugh in the face of authority.
Kicking off with the hard-stomping opener “Monday Mayhem,” the Piranhas throw listeners into the deep end of hallway rebellions and lunch tray uprisings. From there, it’s a headlong sprint through cafeteria-core absurdity: “Menu Malaise” turns school lunches into satire, while “Cornbread Song” becomes a metaphor for exploitation, mixing punk rage with orthodontic bite (literally—they all had braces during recording). The title track, “Rebels of Lunch,” condenses the band’s ethos into two minutes of food-fight fury and righteous noise.
Mid-album bangers like “Skimpy Piranhas” and “Toxic Taco Tuesday” fuse snarling riffs with theatrical flair, celebrating underdogs and calling out cafeteria crimes with bratty precision. On “Pie Are Not Square,” they rail against rectangular pizza with spoken-word sass and geometry puns, proving no detail of school life is too small to punkify. But the band isn’t all laughs—tracks like “Where’s Jenny?” bring unexpected emotional weight, telling a haunting story of a missing girl and systemic neglect.
The album peaks in its final stretch, from the chili-fueled revolt of “Fire Alarm Friday” to the snarling defiance of “Don’t Sit With Us,” with its iconic opening guitar riff and riot-queen energy. And then there’s “Backseat Crew,” the closer—a raw, cinematic anthem to misfit sisterhood and school bus mutiny that ends the record not with closure, but with tires screeching toward freedom.
Rebels of Lunch is more than an album—it’s a manifesto. A raucous, gum-snapping, Jell-O-hurling celebration of youth in revolt. It’s punk with cafeteria trays, eyeliner, and teeth wired with defiance. Skimpy Piranhas didn’t just make a record—they started a lunchroom revolution.




