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Friday, October 13, 2023

Sex Pistols and The Clash Lanch 1976

 

Sex Pistols and The Clash Lanch 1976

By Pete Clemons




Punk rock and, arguably more so the punk rockers, were despised when the genre initially broke through in the UK during 1976. The bands and their music were condemned before anyone had barely heard them. Initial front page headlines from the red tops didn't help either. But gradually the scene was accepted to the point where, today, it has almost legendary status.

Saturday 17th December 1977 saw The Sex Pistols, by then described as 'the most controversial rock band of recent years, play Mr. George's nightclub.

It was the second time in a year that the band had played the city. Just 12 months earlier Lanchester Polytechnic had hosted their appearance as part of the 1976 Arts Festival. The Pistols had been supported by The Clash and had been booed off the stage, declared racist and fascist and paid a mere £50.

In complete contrast the 1977 visit saw the group have an entirely different welcome. The Pistols played for just under an hour and a packed house went bananas over Anarchy, Pretty Vacant, EMI and other goodies presented.

Going back to November 1976 and punk rock artists the Sex Pistols left their entertainments fixture at Lanchester Polytechnic without full payment after an impromptu meeting of union officers at the concert heard complaints about the group's stage act.

Lanchester followed the NUS (National Union of Students), then, national policy which recommended colleges not to invite people with racist or fascist views onto campuses, and it was decided that the Sex Pistols act had included racist and fascist references.

The Sex Pistols and supporting punk rock outfit, The Clash, had been booked for £475 but were actually paid £50. Lanchester union officials then sought legal advice about their rights on further payment, and are to inform the NUS entertainments office in London about the group and the type of act they presented.

Attendees of the concert reported to union officials that it had been 'fairly obscene'. At one point the audience booed Sex Pistols after their version of 'Substitute', which the group's lead singer countered with familiar Anglo-Saxon invective,

To balance the views it was also reported that nobody saw anything 'blatant'. It is simply, and widely accepted that the band were fascist. Reasons like 'I came away with the impression that they were because they were so populist'.

Further reasoning within the unions report included that - It comes out of the experience of unemployment, bad housing, sleeping rough and being anti-establishment. They are not working class, more drop-outs. But their support is working class. They see themselves as mediums of these frustrations, they see their role as a political role, using the channel of popular music because other channels are being closed.

It went on – the support band, The Clash, started off the concert with a song the lyrics of which could be seen as inflammatory. The Clash were also described as 'Incoherent, inarticulate and not inter-viewable' while Sex Pistols were 'more eloquent and forthcoming'. The bass guitarist of Sex Pistols, in reply to the suggestion that the group could use their power over young people to do something about racism, replied: "Yeah, I agree with you. I'm not racist'.

However, George Melly, author, ex-film critic of the Observer and 1950s blues singer attended the concert, and asserted that: 'They are fascist'.

Meanwhile, during 1977 at Warwick University, a headline in a campus missal declared 'Yes it could have been true!. The Sex Pistols could have played here. The entertainments team were offered the band for the Xmas Party provided the gig was unannounced. After accepting those conditions the band were booked.

A major scoop indeed but then problems started. For reasons unknown all the bands tour dates were put forward a week which scuppered arrangements at Warwick.

It was then that the decision was made to switch to Mr. George in Coventry city centre. So near yet so far.

Warwick did, however, have it on good authority that if the entertainments team were offered The Sex Pistols again they will accept them if conditions are acceptable. Of course, that never came to fruition.

Hype or not The Sex Pistols still continue to excite and that's why they're the band they are and why they continue to enjoy legendary status.



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