Music Review: Classic Albums: Never Mind The Bollocks Here's The Sex Pistols - Page 3

Johnny, on the other hand thought that Mortimer's defense had been brilliant and it was an important matter of freedom of speech and expression. At that point in the interview he got the old familiar evil glint in his eye and turned to the camera and said, "so fuck you" and laughed. He hasn't changed a bit.

One of the other interesting things about this DVD is it debunks the theory the band was inept musically. While it was true Vicious couldn’t play his bass when he joined the band (and who knows if he ever learnt how) the rest of the band was better than competent by the time they got into the studio. While Paul and Steve admit they were no great shakes when they first started, when the band was given proper rehearsal facilities by MacLaren, they began to gel.

Both the producer and the recording engineer say, Chris Spedding was probably one of the most surprised people in England when it was passed around that he played all the guitar on Never Mind The Bollocks. They laughed and said you know you think we might have noticed him if were here. Steve did all the guitar work. The guitar sound on the album was produced by having Steve overdub his guitar with subtle differences each time to give it the depth to make it sound like a guitar army.

It's a common technique but it also requires a great deal of technical skill on the part of the guitar player, and a willingness to be patient, as he had to be able to play the same part over and over again without changing a note or a beat. Couple that with Steve also laying down the bass as previously mentioned and you realize he knew his way around his guitar, thank you very much.

Steve describes Johnny sitting huddled in the corner of the studio with paper and pen writing out song lyrics while around him everybody else was doing their thing. Johnny talks about how he liked to play with language and stretch words through pronunciation to make them work together: hence anar"K"ist and Anti Christ.

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Article Author: Richard Marcus

Richard Marcus is the author of the forthcoming book What Will Happen In Eragon IV? and has had his work published in print and on line all over the world. The not so long-haired Canadian iconoclast writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees …

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  • 1 - JC Mosquito

    May 21, 2007 at 12:59 am

    "The act of creating music is not that of a person with no faith or hope for the future, no matter what people say."

    Brilliant, Mr. Marcus - and if this revelation is yours, make sure posterity remembers to attach your name to it.

    This is the key to the whole thing, isn't it? It was never about nihilism - not even pre-punk godfathers the Stooges were despondent - the whole thing was about the joyful noise.

    Thanx for sharing your insight.

    Skeeter.

  • 2 - Marty Thau

    May 21, 2007 at 1:57 am

    Nice article. However one thing needs correction -- punk had its origins in New York's east village in '74.

  • 3 - Christopher Rose

    May 21, 2007 at 2:24 am

    "Never Mind The Bollocks" is indeed one of the great albums of all time and the Sex Pistols almost the perfect band.

  • 4 - zingzing

    May 21, 2007 at 1:35 pm

    the sex pistols were an interesting group, but let's be honest about things... nevermind the bollocks kind of sucks. there's only really 4 or 5 songs on it that completely work, and most of those were the early singles. plenty of other punk bands put out better albums, and john lydon put out much better stuff himself. but still, for all intents and purposes, the sex pistols were the quintessential british punk group.

    and marty... as much as you would like to believe that punk started in your 'hood in 1974, that would be really bad history.

    but richard... you make many good points in this peice, but this one betrays you: "The Pistols appear to have had a career in spite of [MacLaren], not because of him. He seems to have seen them as a toy he could play with and a means of creating a stir and being flamboyant..."

    it may be true that maclaren was more interested in his own self than he was in the music, but it is also 100% true that the sex pistols would have been nothing without him. he created the atmosphere for them to meet, he gave them the practice space, he got them all their shows, he talked to the media, he was the one spitting out situationist slogans all over the place. without the media, what were the pistols, and without maclaren, how would the pistols have ever attracted the media?

    maclaren is a crucial part of the sex pistols story. yes, he was an asshole. but who wasn't? glen matlock? the guy was a whiner. now name me another person in the group who wasn't completely looking after his own interests...

    save johnny rotten, i think maclaren is the most important part of the sex pistols story... which, in itself, is far more interesting than the actual music. (other than anarchy, and god save... which are really good songs...)

  • 5 - JC Mosquito

    May 21, 2007 at 6:34 pm

    Bollocks kind of sucks!?! Compared to what at the time?

    Y'know zing - you might even be right (you often are about this stuff). Personally, I'd sooner listen to almost any of the American punks before the Pistols' first and last effort. But Bollocks is more than just a record - it's the hammer that broke rock and roll as it had come to be known by the late 70's.

  • 6 - zingzing

    May 21, 2007 at 8:28 pm

    yeah, that's what i'm trying to say. bollocks is more important than it is listenable. but it wasn't really the album that did it anyway, it was those first three singles. the album was a bit of an afterthought in some ways...

    as for albums that were better...
    television-marquee moon, richard hell and the voidoids-blank generation, ramones-ramones, clash-clash, buzzcocks-spiral scratch, wire-pink flag... it goes on and on. that's just the more popular stuff, and that doesn't take into account that '78 and '79 were much more interesting than '76 and '77.

  • 7 - JC Mosquito

    May 21, 2007 at 10:07 pm

    Marquee Moon might be the best album of the late 70's, period. And the best thing about MM was it was the acid test for good taste. I used to tell people that Tom Verlaine was as good a gutarist as Hendrix or Page, and after playing the title track, if they didn't get it, you knew they never would get it.

    But the unbelievers would just shrug at Television - but EVERYBODY had someting to say about Bollocks. And speaking of guitars,one of the most potent, concise guitar solos of ALL TIME is the 4 note assault in the bridge of God Save the Queen - reminded be of McCartneys' four noter in Back in the USSR of all things, except with more firepower.

  • 8 - Christopher Rose

    May 22, 2007 at 3:45 am

    zing, I'm not sure how an album can be both important and unlistenable, though I agree the singles were all so perfect.

    Skeeter, Marquee Moon is one of the best albums ever! I still get goosebumps and shivers up and down my spine when I listen to it. Shame nothing else Television did ever got close to it though - talk about one hit wonders!

  • 9 - JC Mosquito

    May 22, 2007 at 10:20 am

    ".. important and unlistenable..." I once read a review that called Smells Like Teen Spirit "...as inspiring as it is unintelliglble," which I thought was a perfect description.

    CR: The reissue of Marquee Moon is even more excellent, with one of the bonus tracks being a nearly as good alternate version of the title track, and the original version of Little Johnny Jewel. And no matter what anyone says, I thought Television's second album Adventure was nearly as good, with a couple of the tracks topping even some from MM. Just get a copy of the ROIR cassette of Televison, and you got pretty much all there is from the band from that era.

  • 10 - zingzing

    May 22, 2007 at 2:32 pm

    ahh, chris, i didn't say bollocks is "both important and unlistenable," i said it is "more important than it is listenable." there's a difference. i think it's vastly more important than the actual quality of the album merits. but that's the thing.

    MM is some great shit, but i would say wire's chair's missing is the best album of the late 70s. although maybe talking heads' more songs about building and food or pere ubu's dub housing are better. not sure. i flip-flop all the time.

    also, jc, the guitars on god save are fucking fantastic, ain't they? such a rush...

  • 11 - JC Mosquito

    May 22, 2007 at 7:07 pm

    All I can say is, if I was Chris Spedding, I would've taken all the credit ;)

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