Punk is often portrayed as an aggressive movement started by a small group of people who were disenfranchised with the world in which they grew up in. They were unimpressed and unmoved by the music, fashion and ideals of the day. So they forged ahead with their own culture that reflected and voiced these issues, and subsequently prospered in a climate that rewarded creativity and productivity above all else.

In reality, it is not that simple. Marketing strategies and major record companies undeniably helped push the scene forward, as it grew into a worldwide commodity from the mid 1970s onwards. It was capitalised on, having come from a place in many circumstances that was ill-fitting of the backstory that was generated around the punk scene at the time. As critic Patrick West stated, “Government and corporations have always controlled art, and it’s naïve to think that this was a new phenomenon. One of the best things that punk did was to draw our attention to this historical norm so starkly.”

All of this is not to dismiss punk rock’s importance in the history of music though. It may have been short-lived and manufactured at times, but it remains a fluid genre to this day, a key influencer on the music that was created for decades to come – music that brought about the rise of the independent music maker and the independent youth. It broke the status quo within the music industry that had dictated the taste of the youth for too long, and opened up a new set of rules that generations in the future would come to live by…

Bill Grundy was yesterday suspended by Thames Television for two weeks after being accused of ‘sloppy journalism’. Mr Grundy later responded, ‘all I was trying to do was prove that these louts were a foul-mouthed set of yobs.”

This extract from the Guardian in 1976 refers to the now infamous appearance of the Sex Pistols on the Today Show, which was hosted by Grundy himself. It was a first taste for many of the upcoming onslaught that ‘punk’ would bring to England, and indeed worldwide. In it, the host exchanged barbs with guitarist Steve Jones where he dared him to say something “outrageous.” Jones replied by ranting at Grundy and showering him with expletives. Before the incident, punk existed on the margins, safely kept underground and away from the masses. It was still a year before the Pistols’ released their debut, but they were now firmly in the public consciousness.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtHPhVhJ7Rs

If any band has become a poster for the punks, it is the Sex Pistols. They arrived with an image of bad behaviour, intolerance for the government, a leering hatred for the so called establishment, and a severe case of injustice. A great example of this is from their TV appearance where they utilised the reputation they had in the underground and strengthened their image as non-conformists live on the BBC for the whole nation to see.

To understand why this appearance had such a profound impact on the public though, is to first recognise the merits of the “shock effect.” Neil Eriksen in his case study entitled “Popular Culture and Revolutionary Theory: Understanding Punk Rock” wrote,

“A song serves to generate leisure effects by creating an avenue for escape into apathy and fantasy. But a song can also have another effect; it can serve to orient the listener to a ‘critical response … in the sense that he or she will be provoked into thinking and questioning by it.’ One way that such critical orientation can be affected is through the shock effect of jolting the audience out of the more passive habitual response.”

This is primarily what punk rock sought to do both through its actual music and its image. The Sex Pistols (also see GG Allin for a more explicit case) played on it constantly to antagonise their audiences, all the while building up a cult following. The band, however, were not exactly as they seemed. As has now been very well documented, they were an extension of manager Malcolm McLaren’s vision, whose day job was selling “fetishistic clothing daubed with slogans” from his London store SEX, along with legendary designer Vivienne Westwood. In a way, the band were a vehicle for this as they captured the imagination of the disaffected youth, ready for something new and wild. Sid Vicious, the bassist who couldn’t actually play bass, was the most obvious component of it all. He was purely in the band due to his aesthetic and attitude, helping to propel and sell the image of the ‘punk’ to everyone else.

Barely two years later, the band came to a screeching halt after just one album. Frontman Johnny Rotten famously addressed the crowd during their final gig in San Francisco. “Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?” he asked wearily. It was perhaps a pondering of his own fate as well as that of his audience’s.

Punk rock is generally considered to have arrived sometime around the mid 1970s. Earlier bands like MC5 and Iggy and the Stooges had elements of punk in them, but it wasn’t until the likes of the Ramones and Sex Pistols emerged that the scene really began to take off. As observed by an article from CNN, “while ’70s rock gods like Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd filled their songs with ever expanding guitar solos, The Ramones packed 14 songs in under 30 minutes.” And it was this immediacy that proved to be so enticing for some as short and sharp blasts of music became preferred.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K56soYl0U1w

There are varying beliefs on what punk rock and its surrounding scene actually was and what it brought to the people who listened to it. According to Stuart Home in his piece “Cranked Up Really High“, “What punk did do was tap into a reservoir of social discontent and create an explosion of anger and energy. Punk wasn’t offering a solution… It was pure sensation, it had nothing to offer beyond a sense of escape from the taboo of speaking about the slimy reality of life as the social fabric came apart.” Meanwhile, Tim Patterson was quick to dismiss it in his 1977 article entitled “Punk Rock Reflects Cultural Decay” where he described it as a “social disease… It is a part of the manipulation business and… the crudest cultural hoax in decades.” Regardless of its term though it unquestionably ignited a certain part of youth culture and drove them to find their own voices within society.

Time Magazine touched on this when it stated that, “Punk began with a feeling of frustration and rage and turned it into an idea that could be acted upon. Employing deconstruction and self-starter empowerment — the DIY ethic — it liberated a generation to create its own culture.”

The arrival of punk both in the UK and in America took the music industry by surprise as it quickly imposed its will. The number of small record labels that started up during the early stages of punk’s rise was impressive, but was in part due to major record companies not being able to adapt in the face of change. Punk capitalised on this and took advantage of large record companies being blind sighted as they shovelled their money into new recording technologies, while believing they still controlled the popular and youth cultures. Kevin Dunn points out that this “meant that older studio equipment and studios suddenly became available for independent music producers and companies to either buy or rent at affordable costs.”

The Buzzcocks became the makers of the first British homemade record directly as a result of this. Their Spiral Scratch EP was made after the band borrowed $1,000 from their families to record and release it. As a result of this newfound opportunity, many small labels began to distribute their own albums through independent retailers. An expanding business was quickly established as fans came to rely on these lesser known labels to get them onto the up and coming punk bands from around their area. Punk music essentially creating a separate branch of recording, pressing and distributing away from the major music companies. It wasn’t only in the UK that this was occurring though, as around the world people involved in punk music saw the opportunities that were suddenly available in the music industry. “Often grounded by local DIY record labels that had been inspired by the initial outpouring of U.K. punk labels- the Los Angeles punk scene from 1977–79 embraced the DIY ethos too.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPG6Ak5FASk

In order to initially attract customers to their products, small labels devised marketing strategies that allowed them to operate with a profit. Fan newsletters were drafted up that people could subscribe to in advance and they were then sent a number of limited edition records that were marked as ‘exclusives’. “The do-it-yourself aspect of the production and packaging spoke for itself. We created ideas for affordable products which set the pace for imitators, like the clear plastic-bag 45 sleeves and the multi-colour silkscreened picture disc,” small label owner David Brown recalled.

However, what started out as a small community soon grew into an untapped commodity. The small labels were thriving in the punk rock scene and major labels finally cottoned on to its marketability and earning potential. A new market was available to them that was almost entirely related to the youth of the decade. Major labels began to sign up every punk band they thought they could make money from. The Sex Pistols were the first signed in the UK, contracting with EMI in 1976.

As Dunn noted, “by 1978, most of the best known U.K. punk bands had been signed by major record labels. Generation X and Stiff Little Fingers went to Chrysalis, the Vibrators signed with CBS, Siouxsie and the Banshees and Sham 69 signed to Polydor, the Undertones and the Rezillos went to WEA. While the flag-bearer of the DIY record label movement, the Buzzcocks, signed to United Artists.”

Major labels then took the initial marketing tools devised by small labels to attract buyers and multiplied it by 1,000. Gimmicks suddenly became the new norm on how to release and sell punk rock records. “Limited editions, coloured vinyl, picture bags, 6 inch singles, 12 inch singles, 10 inch albums, 45 rpm ‘albums’, scratch ‘n’ sniff sleeves etc. etc. was the sign of punk rock,” according to Home. “It proved of supreme importance to the corporate entertainment industry as an exercise in marketing research and development.” And in many ways this compromised the integrity of not only the band but also the music which they were making. What had started out as a small-time thing became just another cog in the music industry machine.

“They said we’d be artistically free, when we signed that bit of paper. They meant, let’s make a lot of money, and worry about it later.”The Clash Complete Control lyrics.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JeTw_p_WglY

The punk rock movement displaced heavy rock that had begun to sink into indulgence by the midway point of the decade. It was an adrenaline shot that aimed to destroy everything in sight. A dirty and aggressive reaction by a group of youths who were sick of all that had become before them. The bands played on the societal pressures and problems of the time after they had initially captured the public’s imagination. In the case of most English bands, it was a working class response to oppression and unemployment.

But from the start it had conflictions within its main framework. In most cases, by the end of the decade major labels controlled bands and had them signed to lucrative contracts, which took them out of the situations that they seemed to draw on at their inceptions. Some bands were simply a product of ulterior motives, while others jumped on the popularity of the scene just in order to make money. Until,in the end, it seemed to be a manufactured movement that was controlled with a vice-like grip by major companies just like all that had gone before them.

Despite this though, punk rock is still responsible for a number of high points in music history. It spawned historic places like CBGB’s in New York where the punk scene first exploded with bands like Johnny Thunders and the Heartbreakers and the Ramones making it their home. While it also influenced the next wave of musicians in the post punk genre that spawned bands like Joy Division and The Cure. Most importantly though, punk rock made it seem like just about anybody was capable of being in a band. It brought in the first batch of independent music makers and distributors that broke the monopoly of major labels. With the effects of which are still being felt three decades later.

Image: CBC/AP

Few records in history can claim to have impacted the world as much as the music industry like the Sex Pistols and their one and only studio album Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols.

Released in 1977 in the first wave of punk, it was unprecedented in anything that came before it, quite literally the scuzziest, grimiest, loudest and crudest music on record and it sparked an absolute white hot inferno of outrage across a Britain in the middle of a socioeconomic nightmare. Challenging the over-starched status quo and giving a sneering middle finger to sensible British establishment in a way nobody else had ever dared to.

Fast forward to about 2004, where a 14-year-old Australian kid in a rural town of just 6000 people picks up a copy of Never Mind The Bollocks for the first time and falls in love with it. Despite it being over three decades later and despite (then) knowing nothing about the social and political backdrop that album was created upon, it utterly hooked me and changed the way I looked at music forever.

It was my first punk record.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aAyrhlomON0

It wasn’t the first punk record by any means, that distinction belongs to the Ramones and their self-titled debut album in 1976 that first kicked the door down for bands to thrash their instruments to within an inch of their lives and make the unholy racket known in part as punk. The other part was the lifestyle: gritty, grimy, nihilistic and aggressive. Word crossed the English channel fast, via the Sex Pistols eventual manager Malcolm McLaren, who had been in New York City and became enraptured with the burgeoning punk scene there. Never Mind The Bollocks saw the Sex Pistols take everything the Ramones had paved the way doing and ramped it up to 11.

They were a gang. Steve Jones (guitar) and Paul Cook (drums) the founding members, first playing on instruments they had stolen. John Lydon, or as he came to be immortalised, Johnny Rotten, was found on the streets of London sporting green hair and the now infamous safety pin-riddled Pink Floyd t-shirt with ‘I Hate’ scrawled above the band’s name (I still can’t bring myself to like Pink Floyd to this day because of how badass I thought that was). Bassist and eventual real life Shakespearean tragedy Sid Vicious was the last to join the eventual Never Mind The Bollocks lineup, in true punk fashion replacing original bassist Glen Matlock despite having what basically amounted to zero aptitude for the instrument.

The band had already caused a stir across Great Britain before a record had even been released, appearing on television drunk and dropping shits and fucks in an era and a country where even saying ‘pants’ on television was frowned upon (probably), and all but bringing the hard-working people at EMI, the label who signed them, to the brink of a nervous breakdown as well as being banned from playing live just about everywhere. Nothing could have prepared them for the shitstorm Never Mind The Bollocks would unleash though.

From the very first song Holidays In The Sun, opening with the uber-aggressive sound of stomping jackboots, the metaphorical noise of the first wave of British punks coming marching in heralded by a frantic gutter riff and. Rotten shocks out of the gate, declaring he’d rather go to ‘the new Belsen‘, a concentration camp, than a holiday in the sun. It’s a sarcastic look at post-war Britain, the Sex Pistols definitively sneering they’d rather climb over the Wall and be in shitty East Germany than in what present day London had turned into for them.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ah1JM9mf60

Bodies is even more confronting, a snarling narrative of ‘a girl from Birmingham‘ and her abortions. Graphic and profane lyrical content as well as the repeatedly shouted line ‘I’m not an animal‘ lead many to presume this was an anti-abortion song, though Rotten would claim the opposite in later years.

No Feelings was by far my favourite as a snotty, angsty teenager. Damn near every teenager is as selfish as it fucking gets and I was oftentimes a right piece of shit. It was a no-brainer then that a song whose chorus howls about not feeling a thing for anybody else (‘except for myself’) would be my absolute anthem. So was Pretty Vacant, perhaps the all-time song for teenage apathy.

Even with Bodies repeating the word fuck and vividly describing the Pistols idea of abortion and Holidays In The Sun comparing post-war East Germany with London, it might have been what now seems mildly irreverent but back then caused a near uproar in God Save The Queen. With its symbol a Union Jack behind a picture of Queen Elizabeth II with her eyes and mouth blacked out, the song split Britain into the appalled and the electrified.

The BBC refused to acknowledge it, let alone even play it. This didn’t stop it from rocketing up the charts as a disenfranchised generation of youths latched onto the unquestionable ‘fuck you’ the Sex Pistols had spat at the feet of the monarchy. When it only reached number two there were claims of it being rigged to prevent such a shocking song climbing all the way to number one.

How many other bands in history can say the government actively tried to stop them making music before they incited riots? The only two I can think of are the Sex Pistols and N.W.A.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yqrAPOZxgzU

The establishments fears of a punk uprising would only be heightened by another incendiary song and perhaps the most famous to come from Never Mind The Bollocks in the gleeful Anarchy In The UK. You can almost hear the collective jimmies being rustled in higher society from Rotten’s opening snarl ‘I am an antichrist, I am an anarchist’ to comparing the UK to the M.P.L.A., the U.D.A. and the I.R.A. in the space of a breath while the rest of the Pistols get positively violent on their instruments behind him. It feels dangerous, the pissed off threat of an entire fed-up generation.

The entire album was a screeching, hissing, spitting absolutely primal rebuttal to shitty circumstances and served as the raised fist of the downtrodden and the marginalised. It raised thousands if not millions of British youths on safety pins and shredded clothes and, despite their government’s desperate attempts to prevent it from ever happening, showed that regular people could stand up and challenge authority.

The Ramones may have been the first punk band but the Sex Pistols were the first punk band who lived and breathed punk as a lifestyle. It was what Green Day tried so hard and failed so spectacularly to replicate on American Idiot. That was what I thought was ‘punk’ as a clueless kid. To first hear the Sex Pistols by comparison then at 14, when the only ‘punk’ bands I’d ever known until that point were all whining about the girls who’d broken up with them and the home towns they wanted to leave, it was a total revelation. This was a band that was legitimately pissed off and had every right to be, not just fawning in the studio over first world problems. This was real, and my raging adolescent hormones latched onto the raw anger and the unforgiving sarcasm of Never Mind The Bollocks, despite never knowing just how lucky I had it.

I walked around with a permanent sneer, trying to emulate Johnny Rotten. I spiked my hair to unspeakable lengths and painted my fingernails black trying to look like Sid Vicious. I was a tragic, but at the time I felt like I had been just as marginalised as the Sex Pistols and their peers had been in late-70s Britain. Stupid, I know, but to a 14-year-old kid who doesn’t know a thing, the Sex Pistols and their music were cocaine. I bought a bright yellow Never Mind The Bollocks t-shirt and wore it to school on a casual dress day, daring any of the teachers to challenge me about it. The only one who noticed asked, slightly bemused, where I’d gotten it from before giving me a knowing smile. He had been a punk once too.

The Sex Pistols were also my gateway to countless other bands I still listen to today. The Clash, The Buzzcocks, The Dead Kennedys and of course the Ramones. Their filthy, furious brand of rock and roll sounded like it had been recorded through layers of shit and piss and bile and blood and it still had a profound influence on so many bands who followed them. Artists like Kurt CobainBlack FlagThe Stone Roses, Social Distortion, even Noel Gallagher who doesn’t like anything acknowledged how good Never Mind The Bollocks is. Every punk band that came after them owes them a debt.

It all went to shit for the Pistols in the years after, and Sid Vicious’ downward spiral into addiction has been well-documented, but the mark they left on popular music with the atom bomb that was Never Mind The Bollocks still won’t rub off.

The mark they left on me will never rub off.

Image: New Statesman.

The British Library will be running a massive exhibition on punk to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the movement.

According to The Guardian, the exhibition, starting in May, will focus on the years 1976-78 when punk first rose to prominence in the public eye.

Curator Andy Linehan stated, “We’re looking at the initial burst and the impact it had – punk’s legacy… We’ve always collected the counter-culture as well as the culture.”

The exhibition will showcase a huge array of archival print, audio, visual and collectables associated with the movement, including an unreleased, A&M version of the Sex Pistols historic single God Save The Queen.

The exhibition will also feature a collection of fashion items from the era, including articles of clothing from the Sex clothing store in Chelsea, run by fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, largely credited with bringing the visual element of punk into the mainstream culture of Britain.

 

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Image: Next

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Image: Worlds End Shop

Speaking of the era, Linehan recalled that “There were undercurrents of tension and danger but it did seem new and exciting, and immediate and in-your-face. And to a teenager, that’s all good.”

“It’s bringing a lot of stuff back for me, and hopefully people coming to the exhibition will experience that as well, and also people who weren’t around at the time .”

Other vintage items on display at the exhibition will include the Sex Pistols and The Clash joint tour posters (all but three of the gigs were cancelled), original editions of the punk fanzine Sniffin’ Glue and unreleased photos from some of the earliest recorded punk gigs.

Just for fun, here is a moment that ultimately summed up the era- Sex Pistols frontman Johnny Rotten swearing live on afternoon TV in Britain and causing outrage around the world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LtHPhVhJ7Rs

View all the details for the exhibition here.

Image: SkatePunk

 

No, this is not a pisstake. Unfortunately, its also not all that surprising. I kind of wish it was at least one of those things, because this is some serious bullshit bollocks. In an effort to “shake up U.K banking”, major empire Virgin have enlisted perhaps one of the most iconic symbols of anti-establishment propaganda: the artwork from Sex Pistols 1977 record Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols.

Okay, so, Sex Pistols might have been somewhat of a manufactured brand band, but they yielded incredible influence and the message, for all intents and purposes, was there. Anarchy. Anti-consumerism. Alcohol. Swear words. You know the deal. In a venture headed by Richard Branson (who signed the band to Virgin Records the same year their only record was released), Virgin Money have come out with three new Sex Pistols-themed credit cards.

It’s really not all that surprising considering this gem of a butter TV ad featuring John “Johnny Rotten” Lydon. Commenting on his decision to step into the consumer-driven advertising space, Lydon covered his arse by stating that if he could help British industry in any way, then he was going to do it. Interesting then, that the ad slogan is “It’s not about Great Britain. It’s about great butter.”

I digress. Some (including Branson himself) have commented on the fact that the advertising for the cards has already prompted calls for censored versions, while others (including Virgin Money chief executive Jayne-Anne Gadhia) have suggested that that the idea is a bit risky all together given the Sex Pistols’ reputation. I would argue its risky because who the hell is going to take anyone who whips out a Sex Pistols credit card for anything other than a wannabe fool? Please. Just. Stop.

The three options for the cards, should you really want one include a landscape and portrait version of the album artwork as well as a second design featuring the Union Jack and Sex Pistols imagery. If (had I the option) I was going to “bring a bit of rebellion” to my financial situation, as Virgin have suggested consumers do with their new credit cards, I think I’d stick to not paying my bills in time.