Benefit concert to aid police
Young Chang
Citizen Joe started out as Average Joe. A few years into
performing locally, fans started telling the musicians that they were
anything but. So Kurtiss Lystne, co-founder of the band and a Costa
Mesa police officer, renamed the band Citizen Joe.
On Wednesday, the group will do its part as citizens in paying
tribute to the one-year anniversary of Sept. 11. At a fund-raiser
concert titled “Benefit the Blue” at the Harp Inn, the four-member
Citizen Joe will perform three hours of original music as a police
officer’s hat from the Costa Mesa Police Department gets passed
around the bar for donations. All proceeds will be sent to the World
Trade Center Police Disaster Relief Fund.
“If that disaster happened here, I know the East Coast officers
would also chip in over here,” said Lystne, a 10-year veteran of the
police department. “This is our way of giving back a little to
them... It’s a big family and we want to keep it together.”
Pete Heyward, bassist for the group, has been in contact with a
New York City police officer heading up that fund. In the past year
he has learned that varying degrees of lung damage have been detected
in officers who helped in the recovery efforts at Ground Zero.
“They need lung research and lung testing for up to 10 years to
keep that in check,” Heyward said. “So it’s an ongoing financial
burden for everybody.”
Citizen Joe will also display a 220-pound, 10-by-22 inch steel
beam that was once part of the Towers and has been making its way
around the country for remembrance purposes.
John Lyons, owner of the Harp Inn, said hosting the beam and the
band is his way of doing “a positive thing after the negativity of
the day.”
Lystne added that serving through music really doesn’t feel any
different from what he does all the time as a police officer anyway.
“We constantly give to the community by serving the community and,
of course, in many different ways whether it’s helping, rescuing,
solving problems,” said the 43-year-old guitarist and mandolin player
for Citizen Joe.
The music of the Costa Mesa-based band, founded by Lystne and his
brother Glen in the early ‘90s, has been compared to the sounds of
Toad the Wed Sprocket and Crowded House, Heyward said. The group has
performed at popular venues including the Coach House, the Galaxy and
at the House of Blues in both Anaheim and Los Angeles.
The local attention bandmates have received has been unexpected.
“We had called ourselves Average Joe basically because we weren’t
trying to draw any spotlight on us,” Lystne said. “We wanted to write
music that was suitable for the Average Joe.”
Today the band performs regularly at Orange County venues.
On the program for their Harp engagement is a song titled “William
B. Nolde,” named after and about the last American soldier killed in
the Vietnam War.
“It’s a tribute to him and his family and to our country that we
have people out there fighting for our freedom,” Lystne said.
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