Deftones' bassist a poetic wordsmith Chi Cheng will speak to the beat of his literary muse at Press Club By Chris Macias -- Bee Pop Music Critic Chi Cheng thrives at 3 a.m. It's the time for the Deftones' bassist to spin Mahler on the stereo, uncork some wine and start scribbling poems. So much for the beastly bass player seen on stage. Cheng's the kind of rock star who likes to curl up with Carl Jung's "Man and His Symbols" on the tour bus. And when a tasty royalty check comes through, say for the Deftones' million-selling "White Pony" album, Cheng will splurge by buying Charles Bukowski's rare manuscripts. "I'm the biggest nerd of the band," he says. More like the Deftones' resident beatnik. Cheng will read some of his poetry Monday at the Press Club, adding a literary slant to a show that features alternative-rock from Daycare and Mark Curry. The reading is one way for Cheng to keep busy during this bit of downtime in the Deftones' recording schedule. But cranking out poems has felt just as fulfilling to Cheng as rocking out with the band. "These other guys I grew up playing with, like (Sonny Mayugba of Daycare) and Mark Curry, they were just naturally great musicians," says Cheng, in between sips of scotch at the Swiss Buda Bar, one of his favorite watering holes. "I always had to struggle to just keep up with these cats. Writing was always more natural to me. I've always been a poet that's been in a band, versus being a band guy that wants to be a poet." Cheng started chasing his literary muse back in the late 1980s, when he was a high school student in Stockton. He attended California State University, Sacramento, to study creative writing and art, until headbanging with the Deftones became a full-time gig. Cheng's poetry doesn't wax about dream fulfillment or sunny matters like winning a Grammy award. His poems are raw and boozy ruminations that are far too edgy to be reprinted in a family newspaper. The blue language and NC-17 scenarios are even too much for his family. "I've sometimes had to uninvite people," he says. "My mom won't let anyone in the family go." Cheng's poetry essentially deals with anxieties faced by rock stars and regular folk alike: love gone wrong, death, spiritual crises. One of his current poems is a three-part word salad called "The Ghost in the Headlights." "The first part is about my brother's death," Cheng explains. "The second is about Jesus coming back to earth, and the third part is about the general eroticism in my life right now. "I write about universal pain," he adds. "Tragedy is more of a muse for me than anything else. When I'm in a good mood, which is a lot of the time, I don't feel like wasting my short duration of me being in a good mood on trying to capture it in words." Some of Cheng's dense and moody themes aren't too far from the Deftones' own musical heaviness. But Cheng doesn't operate as a wordsmith within the Deftones, nor does he want to. All Deftones lyrics are written solely by singer Chino Moreno. "(Moreno's) such a good lyricist that I leave it in his court," says Cheng. "Early on, I wrote some of the lyrics, and it was cool. We'd write a little bit together. And then he just matured so much. I don't think he would feel genuine singing someone else's lyrics. It has to be his vision, and I respect that." Cheng's looking forward to upping his profile on the poetry scene. He released a CD of spoken-word poetry in 2000 ("The Bamboo Parachute") and has two more CDs of poetry coming soon. Cheng also was invited recently to read at a poetry festival in the Netherlands. But he sure can't beat that day job with the Deftones. "Writing is the truest form of art because you know you can't ever succeed and make money at it," says Cheng. "So you just write for the sake of writing. And I love that about writing. That's why I'm so unapologetic in my poetry and continue to push the boundaries." www.deftonesworld.com --------------------------------------------------------------------------------