Why am I posting this? To be honest, I'm not sure. I suppose everyone should already be aware of the Sex Pistols and Malcolm McLaren's influence on pop culture. They weren't playing anything new and they didn't play it necessarily better than The Who or the Small Faces. But punk rock went public with these Brit snots, and it was clear to everyone. I was captivated by the Sex Pistols long before I had heard of The Sonics or The Ramones. It was just a picture of Paul Cook wearing the iconic "I HATE PINK FLOYD" t-shirt that first caught my eye. I mean, I REALLY hated Pink Floyd when I was young, there was a time at school that almost everyone around me had "The Wall" patches on their denim jackets. I still do hate 'em, actually, except for the Syd years - but that's another story. All these Pistols recordings remind me of my younger self, who was completely captivated by Rotten's snarl, Jones' fierce guitar assault (which I later discovered he had stolen from Johnny Thunders, who in turn had stolen it from Chuck Berry) and the savage railroad backbeat of Cook and Matlock, who were doing their best to keep the train on tracks. And poor Sid... Oh mate, I love him! I don't care if he wasn't able to play a few notes, he was such a figure! I still think of him as a great punk vocalist, he did an excellent job with these Eddie Cochran songs and I wish he had recorded more with Jerry Nolan and the rest of the New York City wild bunch, properly. (There are lots of no-fi bootlegs that support this opinion).
Pistols were probably everything a young lad always wanted from a rock 'n' roll band: Anger, confusion, a sheer force with a bratty desire to piss everyone off! The Neanderthal iconoclasts and the street preachers. I don't care if this band/project was originally created in a fashion boutique (or not), because it worked perfectly as a cultural strength. And it still works, which makes me think that I'm right about what I'm thinking and typing right now to you. I don't care if John Lydon was always a Tory cunt, beacuse he's the Dr Jekyll of this story. The Mr Hyde persona of Johnny Rotten, who spontaneously begins to take control without filtering his words, is what's left of him worth. Even ol' Neil sang about it by juxtaposing Elvis, who had just recently deceased with Johnny Rotten who was 'born' right after.
Once again, I haven't put together the kind of compilation most people might be expecting. In any case, the Pistols haven't left behind a massive body of work, despite the countless compilations that exist. However, I chose the ones that I definitely consider to be their best. Believe it or not, the first time I heard "Never Mind the Bollocks", I wasn't hooked by 'Anarchy in the UK' or 'God Save the Queen', but by 'Bodies' ('Screaming bloody fucking mess!'). To this very day my fave Pistols song along with 'New York'. The opening harsh guitar noise is just a feint and it has an inhuman roar. As the first chord begins to fade, Rotten bursts: "She was a girl from Birmingham, she just had an abortion" and a short while later, there is another fake stop/start, during which he loses completely his temper: "FUCK this and FUCK that, FUCK it all and FUCK the fucking brat!". In terms of fierceness, performance and delivery, there's no other song that comes any close in rock'n'roll history.
Did I say 'New York'? The aim of this rambling, immature and bigoted diatribe was therefore clear: a direct attack on the New York Dolls, implying that they were American middle-class kids trying to imitate British monsters like the Rolling Stones. The response given by Johnny Thunders on 'London Boys' (with Jones and Cook playing in) was, of course, just as delightful! I've included a rough demo recording of 'Belsen Was a Gas', which captures the rare event of Sid Vicious playing a whole song without interruption. As it turns out, he wasn't that bad on bass after all! There are also a fair number of songs from the 'Swindle' era, which I found to be underrated, such as the eponymous one, with the amazing vocal delivery by Edward Tudor-Pole, backed by hooligan Chelsea FC like chants (by Cook and Jones?). The blasphemous lyrics ("Hiya boys, I'm the chosen one, can't you fucking see? I'm a jealous god and I want everything and I love you with a knife") are 100% in the Sex Pistols habit. Other highlights include the fantastic rendition of the traditional seafaring and hilarious drinking song 'Friggin’ in the Riggin', the glam-punk thugness of 'Black Leather' from the Ex-Pistols period, and the lost Jones/Cook power pop jewel 'Lonely Boy'. I don't want to bore you with further details, but the whole thing I've cooked up is a mixture of rough mixes, outtakes, remastered tracks and original well-known takes, all put together as a lethal cocktail.
The Sex Pistols self-destructed with self-awareness and played an essential role as sufferers on the unholy altar of rock'n'roll's resurrection. They challenged every aspect and principle of mainstream music thereby inspiring countless bands to follow in their footsteps. Their confrontational and nihilistic public image, coupled with their socio-political lyrics, continues to set the tone for punk bands to this day. In the end, the Pistols created undeniably essential rock'n'roll music (as Lord Chuckster said first) that has stood the test of time and still sounds just as thrilling and powerful.
