LONDON - The seminal album of British punk rock
celebrates its 25th birthday on Monday and shows no sign of
growing old gracefully.
On October 28, 1977, the Sex Pistols unleashed their debut
album, "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols," on an
unsuspecting world.
It shot straight to the top of the album charts and stayed
there for an astonishing 47 weeks.
Everything about the album was designed to shock, from its
provocative title, its 12 short, explosive songs and its garish
pink and yellow pop art album cover.
The names of the tracks were printed on the album sleeve in
wonky black type, making them look like classic anonymous
ransom demands cobbled together from letters cut out of
newspapers.
Aggressively marketed by Richard Branson's Virgin Records,
it quickly became the defining album of punk. The faces of the
band's frontman Johnny Rotten and bassist Sid Vicious leered
out at television viewers across the land.
"The Sex Pistols were a turning point for us, the band we
had been looking for," Branson later wrote in his
autobiography.
"(They) generated more newspaper cuttings than anything
else in 1977 apart from the (Queen's) Silver Jubilee itself.
Their notoriety was practically a tangible asset."
THE DREADED "B" WORD
The album even spawned a court case.
A week after its release, a policewoman spotted a window
display in a record shop which consisted of a dozen Sex Pistols
posters and album covers, all with the "B" word prominently
displayed.
She marched into the shop, ordered the display to be
dismantled and arrested the manager, who was charged under the
Indecent Advertising Act.
The case, heard in the central city of Nottingham later
that month, revolved around the alleged indecency of the word
bollocks -- British slang for testicles.
The decisive evidence came from James Kingsley, a professor
of English at Nottingham University and a former priest, who
successfully argued that the word was accepted slang and had
been in use for centuries.
He explained that a bollock was an Anglo-Saxon word meaning
"small ball." Bollocks was also 18th century slang for
clergymen, owing to their reputation for talking nonsense, or,
in common parlance, a load of old balls.
Kingsley won the day, the shop manager was acquitted and
the Pistols' notoriety was assured.
"GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"
Two tracks, above all, stood out from the album -- "God
Save the Queen" and "Anarchy in the UK."
The first, a crude tirade against Queen Elizabeth and her
family, was punk's riposte to the outpouring of monarchist
fervor which had swept the nation months earlier during the
queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations.
"God Save the Queen, the fascist regime," the track begins.
"God Save the Queen, she ain't no human being... and our
figurehead is not what she seems."
The Pistols marked the track's release as a single by
steaming up the River Thames on a boat, mooring outside the
House of Commons and playing it at full blast from the deck.
The album's other key track, "Anarchy in the UK," opens
with Rotten's menacing laugh, followed by his braying voice.
"I am an antichrist, I am an anarchist," he sings,
stretching the norms of English rhyme to breaking point.
It wasn't subtle but it struck a chord with restless young
Britons, fed up with the feel-good disco tracks and saccharine
ballads which dominated the charts at the time.
A quarter of a century on, "Never Mind the Bollocks" has
lost a lot of its shock appeal.
Measured against albums released by rap and hip-hop artists
today, it barely merits a "parental guidance" sticker to warn
parents of its explicit lyrics. But the album, along with the
heroin-induced death of Vicious in 1979 and his girlfriend
Nancy a year earlier, have ensured the lurid fascination with
the Pistols has endured.
"God Save the Queen" was re-released earlier this year to
coincide with the Golden Jubilee and a Hollywood director has
mooted a film about the life of the band members.
"Never Mind the Bollocks" is 25. God forbid it should ever
slip into quiet, middle-aged respectability.