In honor of Julien Temple's great new film "The Filth And The Fury"
(www.filthandfury.com)...
1. MALCOLM McLAREN
Never before in the long and illustrious annals of popular music history has
a man been handed so much raw talent atop a potentially platinous platter at
such an opportune time and location as when Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen
Matlock, fresh from hiring a new frontperson named Johnny Rotten, strolled
into London’s cleverly named Sex Shoppe in 10/75 and asked its proprietor,
suede-o bohemian entrepreneur Malcolm McLaren, if he’d be interested in
helping them invent punk rock, revolutionize - or, failing that, destroy -
the music business, and earn a million pounds (of Dollars) in the process.
And never before has a man so swiftly and slyly enacted his master plan and
seen it bear fruit in greater abundances than even he, in his wildest Col.
Ahmet Loog Epstein fantasies, would have believed possible (within a mere
twenty-three months, the Pistols swept from crashing obscure British art
college balls to bumping Linda Ronstadt off the hallowed cover of the Rolling
Stone)… and Never Before, and hopefully Never Again, has such a superfluity
of potential and promise - not to mention profit - been so thoroughly and
effectively botched, blundered, and bludgeoned. For, thanks to Malcolm
McLaren’s brilliant mismanagement, the Sex Pistols, an act of unlimited wit,
fire and socio-musical import, are recalled today as little more than the
great rock’n’roll swindle Sid Vicious played in before he set his hotel room
on fire, sliced open his girlfriend, and joined Elvis and Kurt in that big
cabaret revue in the sky.
2. GLEN MATLOCK
Unceremoniously hoofed from the band on the virtual eve of their anti-success
for professing admiration for the wrong people (Paul McCartney) in the wrong
place (the pages of Melody Maker) at the wrong time (1976), the Pistols, in
one fool swipe, lost not only their most accomplished musician (well, not
that that mattered much: after all, his replacement was Mr. Vicious, fresh
from the Dee Dee Ramone "hunt-and-plonk" school of bass playing) but their
one true resident songsmith (yes, it was GLEN who cooked up some of the
Seventies' catchiest guitar hooks; ie: "Pretty Vacant" and "God Save
Whats'ername"). Relatively unperturbed, Glen took his talents elsewhere
(Iggy Pop, and cult faves The Rich Kids) while the new and "improved"
Pistols resorted to dismembering old Eddie Cochran tunes and warbling cute
lil' ditties about the Holocaust with some Great Train Robber.
3. VIRGIN RECORDS
In refusing to press enough copies of "Anarchy In The U.K." to allow the
Pistols' debut disc to creep any higher than #12 in the British charts, EMI
Records actually (though probably unwittingly) helped establish the band at
this most crucial stage of their tragically brief career as not only the
Euro-youths' latest cause-celebre, but Fleet Street's most potent front-page
fodder since Beatlemania itself. Then, with characteristic ineptness,
Malcolm trotted his cultural icons elsewhere: inanely into the open arms of
Virgin Records, at the time widely known - and ridiculed - as the graveyard
of such synthesized Sixties casualties as Mike "Tubular Balls" Oldfield.
Under Virgin's laughably feather-brained wings, the emphasis was quickly
placed more on Amusement than Anarchy, and the band was now forced to attack
the airwaves with such duds as "Friggin' in the Riggin'", "Rock Around The
Clock" and, in a rare display of Virgin forthrighteousness, "Some Product".
(NB: said discs now populate your local pop shop's delete zone... right
alongside Mike Oldfield's).
4. WARNER BROS. RECORDS
No doubt experiencing sudden pangs of guilt in the midst of their
post-"Rumours" coke'n'caviar indulgences, in nostalgic remembrance of their
label's maverick infancy when record contracts were bravely being handed out
to the likes of Wild Man Fischer and The Fugs, Warner Bros. decided to test
out the new waves of 1977 by arranging a distribution deal with Seymour
Stein's legendary Sire label (who in turn had such bright hopes as the
Ramones and Talking Heads under contract). However, soon growing discontent
with simply marketing Seymour's signings, Warners set out to land a punk act
of their very own Stateside, and spent untold amounts of Fleetwood Mac
royalties to graft Malcolm's boys to the dotted line in October of '77. No
sooner had WB issued "Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The Sex Pistols" than
they found John, Paul, Steve and Sid on their virtual doorstep as it were,
about to embark on that ill-fated first, and last, American tour. Now, to
say Warner Bros. had absolutely NO IDEA how to handle, let alone capitalize
upon, the Pistols' arrival on the U.S. scene is akin to accusing John Lydon
of having certain flaws in his personality... to say nothing of his dental
work (for example, it's been alleged Warners hired former CIA goons to
roadie the band's tour). Nevertheless, despite a decade of non-promotion,
"Bollocks" was finally awarded Gold Record status in 1987... and Warners
went on to reap additional billions from Seymour Stein's signings (ie:
Madonna).
5. ROGER EBERT
It's a hitherto closely-guarded secret that the roly-poly film critic known
and loathed by millions of media junkies across America was, 'way back in the
Summer of Hate, nothing but a mild-mannered scribe for the Chicago Sun-Times
who by some incidious twist of faith was hired by director Russ Meyer
("Super Vixens", "Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls") to script the Sex
Pistols' eagerly-awaited silver screen debut, "Who Killed Bambi". ("Remember,
without me, there wouldn't be any mention of Bambi in this movie", boasted
Ebert to Rolling Stain). Yet despite both a healthy budget (courtesy of
Warners' film division) and truly inspired casting (Marianne Faithfull as
Sid's mother), the movie never made it past the rough-cut stage, denying not
only the Blank Generation of a "Hard Day's Night" they could call their own,
but theatre-goers the world over a larger-than-life Technipallor dose of
charisma Rotten & Vicious-style. "Who Killed Bambi" appeared years later in
wholly bastardized form (on VHS and laser) as "The Great Rock'n'Roll
Swindle", Meyer quickly high-tailed it onto the pages of FilmThreat magazine,
Marianne Faithfull carries on despite, in several ways, a fate worse than
Sid's... and Roger Ebert continues to throw his ever-increasing weight
around the entertainment industry.
6. THE I.N.S.
At 11:30 PM on the night of December 11, 1977 every North American who still
believed rock’n’roll had some spit left in it was tuned to their local NBC-TV
affiliate, anxiously awaiting the Sex Pistols' long-rumoured appearance on
"Saturday Night Live": a television event which promised to equal, if not
surpass, Elvis and them Fabs' Ed Sullivision barnstorms of decades previous.
Alas, it was not to be, for several days before The Great Event That
Couldn't, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, lamely citing several
Cook and Jones criminal offenses (nothing serious, mind you... just the
usual r'n'r roster of B and E's, concealed weapon and
assault-with-a-Fender-bass charges) ruthlessly denied both Malcolm and his
anti-Beatles permission to enter the Big Apple. That is, until after the
comparatively meek and mild Elvis Costello had replaced the Pistols on the
"SNL" in question. Perchance it's simply Nixonian paranoia running away with
me again (excuse me, I think my pen's tapped...), but this seems to me to be
but the first of several high-level attempts to squash the horror known as
p-u-n-k-r-o-c-k by the post-Watergate White House. Read on.
7. JIMMY CARTER
Unlike British Prime Minister Harold Wilson, who shrewdly rode to Downing
Street beneath the coat-tails of four fellow Liverpudlians in 1964, Jimmy
Carter was not so willing to embrace the latest pop/rock peculiarities in
order to secure a power base amongst his nation's young. Quite to the
contrary, at a closed-door pow-wow with the recording industry elite in 1978,
the peanut-farming President reportedly suggested to a gaggle of America's
leading radio programmers and promo honchos, in a most sinisterly Agnewesque
fashion, that, quote, "Boys, we really don't want this new wave music now, DO
WE". As a sorrowful result, the Pistols' stylus-shaking debut LP soon
vanished from the airwaves and salesracks of the land, only to be replaced by
the safe, sterile, sickly-slick sounds of, amongst far too many others...
8. THE CARS
This late but wisely little-lamented combo epitomized America's squeaky-clean
response to the Pistols’ furor: They looked, and sounded, about as menacing as
Pat Boone had twenty years before (when he too helped rid the USA of
"dangerous new sounds" by musically castrating the likes of "Tutti Frutti").
Ironically, it was Pat's eldest daughter Debby whose thoroughly wretched "You
Light Up My Life" held a 439-week stranglehold atop Billboard's Hot 100 at
the very moment such classics as "Bodies" and "I'm A Lazy Sod" languished
unheard in some obscure Greenwich Village import bin.
9. THE BEE GEES
And while America was being force-fed such pablum as "My Best Friend's Girl"
and "Heart of Glass" under the guise of New Wave, those Brothers Gibb,
designer chest-wigs intact, were busy dominating both the AM and FM dials
with their eunuch blend of down-under falsettos and bubbleyum R'n'B. Their
glory days already far behind them, these once-imaginative Aussie
chart-toppers pioneered the utterly detestable genre known and loved to this
day as Soundtrack Rock, thanks to such full-length promotional vehicles as
"Saturday Night Fever" and (pause for blanching) "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts
Club Band". The veritable upchuck of billion-sellers which resulted left
precious little room in your home entertainment center for Messrs. Vicious,
Rotten, Cook and Jones.
10. JOHN "SID VICIOUS" BEVERLEY, 1957 - 1979
R.I.P(unk): "No Future" indeed!
(C) 2000 - Gary "Pig" Gold