"The crowd is punked up" I am 40 and I have heard the sex pistols and other punk bands but never heard "punked up" and I am going to bring it into my vocabulary. Ps. Love how trying to pause it is almost breaking your heart :p
I really think you should check out Death - Politicians In My Mind (or whatsitcalled). They were punk rockers before there was such thing. Same kind of energy but totally different music.
@@leonardshevlin7260 The Ramones had nothing of importance to say. They just played high school pop for nerds. Not saying the Pistols always knew what they were on about but at least their lives were shitty enough to matter.
i was . i fell in love with the pistols very young . i was born in england my sister use to listen to them , moved to oz got to 18 n became a punk rocker . today im 56 still love the sex pistols . and greenday , and the whole punk scene lol .
I agree,even back then I listen to the Ramones and they sound like Frank Sinatra to the Pistols,and people label the Ramones as Punk,they are Pop -Rock Punk at best.
Totally agree. I find it bizarre that a lot of today's music is so tame. When parents are listening to music that is more radical than their children, then something is wrong! LOL:)
As a 14 year old boy in London in 1976, this song pulled me into the Punk scene, to the consternation of my parents. It was a great time to be a teenager.
You’re such a decent and healthy guy, and so open mindedly wonder what the aggressive song is about while appreciating the amazing musical energy. You’re cool
These guys changed EVERYTHING! They weren't the first punk band, but they were the ones who took it to a whole 'nother level in the UK and beyond. Massively influential -- music was simply never the same after this. The entire "Never Mind the Bollocks" album is BRILLIANT, pure and simple.
I heard that they manipulated the charts to prefent that song from beeing nr. 1. Cause there was a law that nr. 1 at charts had to be broadcasted at bbc radio, and they wanted to keep that song out of the radio cause the queen had her 25y throne anniversary that year. 😂
Definitely their "God Save the Queen" song. That one caused a massive uproar in the UK because it was seen by many of the general public as an assault on Queen Elizabeth II and the monarchy.
The Sex Pistols and this song in particular was a total game changer single handedly wiping everything that went before. They only released one studio album before self-imploding but what a legacy. I highly recommend 'Pretty Vacant' not only because it's such a superb track but also demonstrates their song writing abilities and musicianship in one fell stroke
The UK was almost a failing state in the 70s, economic crises and rapid deindustrialisation, this was basically a “Fuck You” to the current uptight older generation
Not just the older generation, but was also sticking two fingers up to the elitist prog-rock music scene at the time, and to the music industry in general.
The UK of the 1970s was mired in economic depression and lack of social opportunity for anyone who was young. It was also an economically depressed time for older people as well, but the older generation mostly stuck to traditional values of having a stiff upper lip and all that kind of thing. The youth generation of the time basically was raising a middle finger to the World War II generation, you might simplify it by saying their parents and wanted to create something for themselves. At the time it seems, Anarchy was as good a choice as anyting. Especially given the ineffective governance of the authorities at the time. This is an extremely reductive and simplified version, but I hope it gives you some flavor of what was going on at the time in the UK.
This was powerful stuff when it first came out. Hugely influential. One of those rare moments when music was actually considered dangerous, alongside early Elvis and NWA's "Fu*k the Police." Scared the crap out of people. The Pistols and the Clash were the apotheosis of punk rock.
You have to remember before punk came along we were all dancing around to pretty little disco tunes. Then this loud noise, dirty clothes and the idea of sticking up the middle finger to the world came crashing in. That was the Anarchy - fighting back against the establishment. Punk music was never really taken seriously by the mainstream music industry. It was always thought of as a passing fad and the music was often criticised as being bad. But there was some really good music. The opening guitar riff to Pretty Vacant is sublime.
The UK in the 1970s was a depressing place: IRA bombs, riots, mass unemployment, crumbling industries, and mass exodus to other countries. Alot of working class people in the UK felt trapped, hopeless, and angry. Punk music was a reaction to all that was wrong about the UK and living under the strict class structure/rules imposed by the British establishment. You might want to try their other big song: 'God Save the Queen'. It was banned on UK radio but went to #1 any way.
@@yvonnesanders4308 Rod Stewart had the official No 1 that week. Independent record stores like Virgin and many more did not have their record sales counted that week by BMRB ensuring the Pistols were kept off the top.
Growing up in the seventies was great, far from depressing. And there was loads of work out there. You could leave a job in the morning and walk into another one in the afternoon. We had a great, fashion, music and nightlife. Yes Thatcher was destroying the unions, the mining industry and any others she could get her hands on but there was still lots of other industries that were booming at the time. If you think the seventies was depressing what the hell are the 2020’s? We were out having fun in the seventies. The young people of today are under house arrest. If you think it was all doom and gloom I can assure you, you are very wrong
The Pistols were far more than just a band. They were the first of their kind. Forget the New York Dolls and The Ramones, this was something completely different and completely English, the first (and best) English Punk band. These days it's common to hear Punk bands attacking their governments and Monarchy but in the 1970's it was unheard of and it got the Pistols put onto MI5's 'watch' list along with suspected terrorists and spies. They were playing in small London venues before The Clash or The Damned were even formed. Almost everything they did was a direct challenge to an out dated and unfair social and political landscape. They had their own live sound engineer who made sure all the early gigs were as loud and ferocious as possible. Look at the legacy they left behind after only two and a half years. To say you are blown away by Anarchy in the UK is only scratching the surface, but it's a good start.
I was seventeen when this came out and it was a complete rush. What a time to be alive. Punk rock never leaves you! We were going through some bad times back then with power cuts, strikes across the country, the winter of discontent and conflict in Northern Ireland which spread to the mainland. No wonder the younger generation were so angry. Thanks for sharing and great reaction.
"It's better to burn out than it is to rust" --Neil Young. Yep, The Sex Pistols came to burn it all down. Also check out "God Save The Queen", "Submission", "Pretty Vacant", "Holidays In The Sun", "Bodies" ....
Yeah they were against the monarchy, their single God Saves the Queen has the Sex Pistols logo over the Queens face, which is technically illegal to deface the monarch. Not that they would have ever been charged, although it did rile up the older generation.
Jayvee, as a lifelong fan of the Sex Pistols I can't tell you how much I enjoyed your genuine reaction Obviously you're not familiar with the details and technicalities of what was going on in the culture at the time, but you totally understand and felt the essence, intention and the feeling of the song and thats what counts. Will check out more of your vids
Johnny Rotten: “The old order was not working. The Labour Party had promised so much for the working classes but had done so little. There was no work, but they just all kept telling us to accept it and get on with it. I don’t know why some things happen, other than that they just should. And The Sex Pistols should have happened, and did.”
Every kid, knew he was a wrong un, love John Lydon, I was too young for the Sex pistols so was more into Public Image Ltd, sadly Johns wife has Alzheimer's & he's her sole carer.
I saw a photo of an old, fat, John Lydon hanging out a hotel window smoking a cigarette just a couple of weeks ago. He was wearing a red "Make America Great Again" t-shirt. Times change. So, apparently, do people. Whoda thunk?
@@johnLennon255 He was a friends with Pete Townshend from The Who, he is an interesting bloke John. Unfortunately going though a bad time as his wife has dementia, His band P.I.L. are an excellent Post Punk group. Anger is an Energy is excellent.
Just for clarity - the last lines of the song are "Get Pissed - Destroy" - I can't believe that was 45 years ago - but the streets were rocking - most of us took it for what it was - a legitimate complaint - and like you we enjoyed a good song and looked around at the life we were living - You should check out the Stranglers - Same period - bye the way I like that you're checking this material out - History is the key
Now THAT'S Punk. It's not that type like today where the "so-called" singer sounds like he's sick, projectile vomiting, and sounds like a demon possessed Cookie Monster.
YES! Ok, I thought I was the only one who described his sound as "demon possessed Cookie Monster"! What are the chances?! (Or did someone in media call him that & it stuck in some of our minds?)
@@karikells Nope, that's all me! No Media. My nephew is into that new so-called "punk." I told them in the past what punk was with well know groups. The Sex Pistols and Clash from England, The Ramones, and even Blondie started out as punk. The closest thing the punk we knew is Green Day.
I am sat here on my 61st birthday and I have just celebrated my 17th watching that. My Mam was mortified when I asked for "Never mind the bollocks" for my prezzy. Happy days.
No the first punk song that changed my life was the falls the classical. I was to young for the sex pistols. The classical was my first experience of punk
John Lydon is quite respectable now and lives in Los Angeles. Here in the UK in the 90's, he appeared on a tv advert for butter dressed as a country gent.
The lead singer's name was Johnny Rotten, last not his real name though, . My sister was a punk, I was a high & my brother Was a skin head (just for the fashion). The queen we have now, we had when this song came out Jay. 😎👌🎸
John Lydon aka Johnny Rotten. Should listen to his later band too. PIL - Public Image Limited. He's been happily married for a long time now and is actually very intelligent and articulate. Always like hearing his interviews these days.
@@gkitteringham He may well be intelligent but he is in no way articulate. Every interview with him ends up with him failing to explain his thoughts adequately or with any real clarity. He may be more lucid than he was back in the late 1970s but he still struggles to string two sentences together. He still seems to think that staring manically is a good way to make his point.
I was just a kid when they started. I remember the media's reaction of genuine horror at what was happening. Great stuff. And John Lydon grew up just down the road from me. I love this band.
The UK of the late 70s (when this song was released) was in turmoil. There were rolling power cuts due to strikes, mismanagement from the UK government with a growing gap between rich and poor and people were PISSED. Yeah, apart from the power cut thing, nothing has improved, only got worse.
As a 60's born first time around Punk I'm pleased to hear and see your reaction, the world needs punk today to give it a kick up the arse. There is a video somewhere out there of them doing a gig at a poor kids party, they supplied cakes and drinks for the kids. The 70's were a hard time to live in, it's sliding back to it today. We need a new Pistols.
The Pistols were that rarest of show business entities: the real thing. And that's why their music survives today, even though the band didn't. As Rotten said, "Only the fakes survive."
Do people seriously still believe that? They weren't "the real thing", whatever that might mean. Certainly not in the way The Clash or The Jam were the "real thing". They may have been working class but the Sex Pistols were a 100% artificial band, selling themselves on image and bluster. They were Malcolm McLaren's attempt to make some cash through shock and outrage tactics. He manufactured them. Remember - they didn't form organically as any other band does; three of them (Cook, Jones and Matlock) were already pretty experienced musicians (the original bass player Glen Matlock was fired by McLaren because he was "too professional" and replaced by laughable cartoon punk Sid Vicious). The Pistols were put together quite deliberately and carefully by their manager. Of course, the best of their music was great and remains so, but nevertheless they were, in effect, a more dangerous version of The Monkees. They were a money making project. As Rotten said , "Ever had the feeling you've been had?"
@@zargonthemagnificent330 Not 100% correct. Yes, the media hype and manipulation thing definitely happened, but this was after they were up and running for a bit and building a following on their own simply by playing their music. Original music they wrote. They wore some clothes from Malcolm's shop and he did some basic manager moves, but to say he totally created them and they weren't real deal is insulting. Who created John Lydon's style? His look? His words? His voice? Who wrote the songs? Who played them? Not Malcolm. Cook and Jones were beginners that had a band idea brewing and Malcolm assisted them. His shop was a hub to connect everyone and build a scene. Malcolm was an essential character. Yes, he had his own ideas and put many into action. Many were great and effective. Some were nonsense. The Great Rock and Roll Swindle is trash. He was probably only in it for the money. But The Pistols were truly the chemistry of the 4 original members that made an effort to create something and say something musically. A reaction to life around them. The media frenzy and image distortion came after the infamous Grundy TV incident. The band rolled with it. Things became a circus. Still, even with Sid in the band later on, they played great gigs and revolutionized popular music. The effects are still felt today.
I have 2 older brothers, the eldest was into Queen, ELO, Boomtown Rats etc, the younger one was into the Sex Pistols, The Buzzcocks etc. An 11 year old should not know all the lyrics to F****** in the Rigging, They are 7 and 5 years older than me. Our house was filled with music, some better than others. Quite liked the Sex Pistols though
Each and every song of their first album is the same: rough, catchy and full of energy. I use this entire album a lot in my jogging playlist, actually. Try their songs God Save the Queen or Holidays in the Sun. Big big scandal back then, especially their insults towards the British Queen. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was tough and conservative, she brought all the Trade Unions down. She has been hated a lot by the British punk rockers.
Punk arrived along with this song in 1977 as a reaction to the Queens Golden Jubilee and the appalling mess the Labour government were making of the country. Thatcher didn’t get into office until 1979.
Pretty much like what Nirvana was to grunge. The figure heads and the megaphone and wall breaker, but there were other bands that had a much longer and productive and successful career than Sex Pistols. The Jam, Clash, The Stranglers for example.
I was there man! Ha ha, Yep, had the album. I recommend Pretty Vacant by the Sex Pistols. A song that we played a lot, by another band was Stiff Little Fingers, Alternative Ulster. Babylon's Burning by The Ruts.
I second those recommendations, though might choose Suspect Device by SLF for something less subtle. ;-) SLF and The Ruts had more genuine social causes than the chaos that Talcy Malcy was trying to create around the Pistols (with the removal of the genuinely talented Glen Matlock to be replaced by the plonker Sid Vicious, thankfully too late to ruin the debut album).
My brother brought their album, when it first came out, now they are nowhere near my favourite band. However they were quite brilliant at making statements, and they hit a raw nerve with a lot of youths at the time.
You don't need anyone to explain it to you, you got it. Thanks for this, you reminded me how startling it was to hear it for the first time and I why I get pumped by it every time. My advice is buy the album, paint over the Kalvin Klein t shirt and form a punk band.
I was 17 when this came out. Incredibly important moment in music. Not for the exquisite musicality of the Pistols, but because it tore the wall down. Much of the music of the past 4 decades would never have happened without it. And you have to love Mr Lydon, a truly great British eccentric. Lives in Venice Beach these days. Was heavily featured in the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony to astonishment of everyone not in the UK!
I was 15 when this came out. It changed everything culturally in the UK. It wiped out the dinosaur bands like Floyd, Yes, Genesis, and a whole new wave of music was ushered in. But not just music. Hair went from long to short, trousers went from flares to straight legs, Fashion changed. TV became edgier. They didn't want anarchy. They just wanted to shock! and they did.Their records were banned, the police broke up gigs. Check out their next single "God Save the Queen" released to coincide with her silver jubilee celebrations in 77.
Are these the same "dinosaur" Bands like Yes,Floyd and Genesis that millions still listen to nearly 50 years later while a handful of former Punks still listen to JR while he is supporting Donald The Trump ? That is right right isn't it ?
Wiped out the Floyd? Oookay. This must be some strange usage of the words "wiped out" that I wasn't previously aware of. If by "wiped out" you mean "musical Gods who were, and still are, one of the biggest bands on the planet with muti platinum albums, the biggest grossing tours of the 80s and 90s and who created music for the ages that mires your soul in quasi religious ecstasy", then, yes, I agree with you, they were indeed "wiped out".
@@alisonanthony1228 If you're in the UK, and a big fan of 70s Yes, Floyd & Genesis, as I am, you'll know everything changed after 77. Genesis adapted and became a hugely successful pop band, Floyd, Yes, Sabbath, Purple, Zep never made a decent album since.
@@mrbrad4566 I am in the UK actually but disagree with your analysis. If you honestly don't think that Animals, The Wall, AMLOR, the Division Bell, In Through the Out Door or 90125 (just off the top of my head) were decent albums then there's nothing I could say that will convince you otherwise. I was 16 in 1977 and, for my friends and I, punk was nothing more than than a mildly amusing, throwaway moment in time. It ran its course in around 18 months or so and was fun while it lasted but that was it - like a party popper, loud and surprising for a moment but, ultimately, "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing". Sorry, but it just wasn't very important to us.
After the sanitised, big record studio music of the mid-70s, this was so energetic that it set the youth of the UK alight. Amazing reaction; thank you.
Awesome reaction. The way you reacted was truly the same way we reacted. The energy and anger of it all was contagious. I first started listening to Punk Rock in 1984. I was 16. By then it was called Hardcore and local music stores called us the second wave of punk rock kids. That was Kenosha, Wisconsin where a punk rock scene has been thriving since about 1980 still today. Thanks for posting this. Fun!
Haha. I have a distinct memory of my friend removing some stage diver’s foot from atop my head while I was up against the stage at a Ramones show like a lifetime ago. 💜🤣 Now that circle pit thing is a whole different deal. 🤣 Infest, now that show was a bit too much for me. They sounded great, but even smushed against the back wall I wasn’t safe. 🤣🤣
@@Jillyconjem I've been to a few gigs like that. I've tried telling myself it's all part of the experience but I'm getting too old for that shit but not the music so I've found myself listening from the footpath afew times 😂
@@jadecawdellsmith4009 It’s definitely caught up to me these last few years. A while back is gone to a three day festival where Radiohead headlined two of the nights. I met a friend up close the second night, but the first I just sat on a bench outside the venue with a beautiful view of the moon over the water and listened to the whole show that way. It was a lovely experience. I’m appreciating those experiences now. Although, seeing FLAG a few years ago just on the outskirts of the circle still was very cool. 💜
@@Jillyconjem I wish I'd done the same with Radiohead, instead I got caught up in the mosh pit & ended up with a boot to the head. Got rescued by security cos they could see I was concussed. Special treatment after that so not all bad.
I loved your reaction! And I totally get what you were feeling. It's what I felt the first time heard that song and what I feel every time I listen to it. It's addictive.
First vid of yours I’ve watched and you say you weren’t ready for this.. well, when I looked through your videos I wasn’t ready for the absolute sheer difference of genres and artist your going at. Looks like your going after every type, style out there and I think that is fantastic. 👌🏻 All the best, from Yorkshire 😀
Ahhh... One of my favorite bands along with The Dead Kennedys. (I used to be a punk rock myself). Very intelligent music. Raw and real. Love that garage-sound... The Sex Pistols were very anti-establishment. anarchy is mind games for the middle class," "It's a luxury. It can only be afforded in a democratic society, therefore kind of slightly f--king redundant. It also offers no answers. It's offering some kind of answer to a thing, rather than spitefully wanting to wreck everything for no reason at all, other than it doesn't suit you." All Punk-Rock music is very political against corporate greed, Republicans, etc...
@Gerald H I thought that title would have gone to Jello Biafra. But perhaps I'm wrong about his sexuality. What counts is their music & I totally love it! There was usually a msg or statement of some kind. Would love to hear a reaction to Pull My Strings. I've been asking for ages
@Gerald H They were not communists... LoL! You're watching too much (Fake-News-Fox). LoL The Dicks went through two incarnations in the 1980s, changing its lineup when Floyd moved from Austin to San Francisco in 1983. As a political band with Marxist lyrics during the Reagan era, they did not shy from controversy.
The situation back then is the same as it is now. Rich people hoarding all the resources and wealth for themselves and then gaslighting the rest of us. Voices of change or for change get rubbed out in the end but the song is still relevant today. Great reaction. Also you should listen to Pretty Vacant fantastic guitar riff at the intro. Also check out PIL, the band John Lydon formerly Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols formed back in the 1980s. Keep those reactions coming.
This was a 'piss-take' of anarchy, it's evident in the lyrics. John himself called it 'mind games for the middle classes'. Nobody sensible wants actual anarchy, but we have to be aware of encroaching authoritarianism.
@@andrewlaw People retrospectively began to call MC5 proto-punk in acknowledgement of their influence on the early punk bands. They were never considered a punk band during their initial run.
great to see someone from your generation listening and enjoying a different cultures past music reaction channels have found a new lease of life with past music long may it last, some awesome music to be heard bro, props man great reaction
Man you look like I felt when I first heard this song at 12 when I got the record in New Zealand I didn't know what to expect and it changed my life!!!I really enjoyed watching it!
They’re absolutely terrifying from the jump. It’s their special gift, and it’s SO hot. Always loved this song. There’s a reason they’re called the Sex Pistols.
This was one of the 1st punk rock songs I ever heard around 1980, listening through the door of my older brother's room. I was hooked and still love it 40 years later.
I love you man, and watching you getting in to 2 Tone and Ska has been genuinely wholesome... but describing Johnny Rotten as 'seems like he is fed up' is golden. I'm still chuckling.
God save the queen reaction ua-cam.com/video/yGNpbY5xxo4/v-deo.html
"The crowd is punked up"
I am 40 and I have heard the sex pistols and other punk bands but never heard "punked up" and I am going to bring it into my vocabulary.
Ps. Love how trying to pause it is almost breaking your heart :p
Try 'Neat Neat Neat' and 'New Rose' by the Damned
I really think you should check out Death - Politicians In My Mind (or whatsitcalled). They were punk rockers before there was such thing. Same kind of energy but totally different music.
Check out The Exploited please🤣🤣🤣👍👍👍
@ Death a black hard core rock band from Detroit
I don’t think anyone’s ever been ‘ready’ to hear this for the first time 😂👍
LMFAO! I know eh?!?!
i was 17 when it came out - and yes it was electric - no one was ready for it - although we wanted change
Probably true even for an American who had been listening to Ramones.
@@leonardshevlin7260 The Ramones had nothing of importance to say. They just played high school pop for nerds.
Not saying the Pistols always knew what they were on about but at least their lives were shitty enough to matter.
i was . i fell in love with the pistols very young . i was born in england my sister use to listen to them , moved to oz got to 18 n became a punk rocker . today im 56 still love the sex pistols . and greenday , and the whole punk scene lol .
Makes you realise how tame the current bands who call themselves punk are.
I agree,even back then I listen to the Ramones and they sound like Frank Sinatra to the Pistols,and people label the Ramones as Punk,they are Pop -Rock Punk at best.
"I am an Antichrist" that is a ficking strong way to start a song
Totally agree. I find it bizarre that a lot of today's music is so tame. When parents are listening to music that is more radical than their children, then something is wrong! LOL:)
left over crack
@@friendsinmyheadtv3890 I think it’s cute lol
As a 14 year old boy in London in 1976, this song pulled me into the Punk scene, to the consternation of my parents. It was a great time to be a teenager.
It was pretty vacant on top of the
Pops for me (remember
Seeing it like it was yesterday)
You’re kidding? Being brought up In a council estate in the 70s was fucking horrible. You’ve got rose tinted glasses on mate
I was 15..... This was our music....No one else's. Great time to be alive.
It sure was
@Marie Zee Winkler did you forgive her
You’re such a decent and healthy guy, and so open mindedly wonder what the aggressive song is about while appreciating the amazing musical energy. You’re cool
Totally agree Kent! (I’m from Kent funnily enough) Loving this guy and I’m subscribing for more! from a gnarled hardened old 50 yr old
He loves it all, great channel
Well said
Awesome to see youngers appreciating these old classics.
From an old punker.🏴☠️🔥
Agreed. Heard this album in my senior year of high school and it changed everything. I'm 62 now and still a rude girl with a punk heart. ;)
punker? you mean punk rocker surely, unless your a yank
These guys changed EVERYTHING! They weren't the first punk band, but they were the ones who took it to a whole 'nother level in the UK and beyond. Massively influential -- music was simply never the same after this. The entire "Never Mind the Bollocks" album is BRILLIANT, pure and simple.
Very, very true.
The first punk band to release a single were The Damned. New Rose.
@@mattcasson3238 Stranded by the Saints was released a month earlier than New Rose. There is no first punk song anyway
They weren't the ones who took it to another level!!! The Clash took it to another level.
I'd torture my ex husband of 22 years with that album ..love it still . if he pissed me off
"Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols" was the album and every song on it was a classic!
I still have the LP!
first Album i ever bought - a classic
The only track missing was "Satellite"
@@sharonsnail2954 And "Did you no wrong".
@@vandelbasil5898 True 👍👍👍
You should check out their song God Save The Queen, they caused ructions when they released that
I heard that they manipulated the charts to prefent that song from beeing nr. 1. Cause there was a law that nr. 1 at charts had to be broadcasted at bbc radio, and they wanted to keep that song out of the radio cause the queen had her 25y throne anniversary that year. 😂
I 2nd this!
Definitely their "God Save the Queen" song.
That one caused a massive uproar in the UK because it was seen by many of the general public as an assault on Queen Elizabeth II and the monarchy.
Agreed ... God Save the Queen ought to follow, to help provide context.
@geordiegirl40 ...I think you’re from my neck of the uk 🤔😄
"I am an anti-Christ, I am an anarchist.." One of the best first lines ever!
It's actually a shit line but it is funny.
@@seang3019 It’s provoking, and in terms of punk I’d say it qualifies as good.
@@profilen5181 maybe!!
@@profilen5181 actually I agree.
"Don't know what I want but I know how to get it" sounds like ANTIFA !
The Sex Pistols and this song in particular was a total game changer single handedly wiping everything that went before. They only released one studio album before self-imploding but what a legacy. I highly recommend 'Pretty Vacant' not only because it's such a superb track but also demonstrates their song writing abilities and musicianship in one fell stroke
Pretty Vacant, one of my favourites. Brilliant!
The UK was almost a failing state in the 70s, economic crises and rapid deindustrialisation, this was basically a “Fuck You” to the current uptight older generation
Not just the older generation, but was also sticking two fingers up to the elitist prog-rock music scene at the time, and to the music industry in general.
Bot much different to how it is now really...
@@leecoulson4224 Sure it is............the punks back then are now supporting socialism. :D lol
@@MrBottlecapBill true x sadly
.... and then the generation got old themself and voted ukip ... full cirlce right there :P
The UK of the 1970s was mired in economic depression and lack of social opportunity for anyone who was young. It was also an economically depressed time for older people as well, but the older generation mostly stuck to traditional values of having a stiff upper lip and all that kind of thing. The youth generation of the time basically was raising a middle finger to the World War II generation, you might simplify it by saying their parents and wanted to create something for themselves. At the time it seems, Anarchy was as good a choice as anyting. Especially given the ineffective governance of the authorities at the time. This is an extremely reductive and simplified version, but I hope it gives you some flavor of what was going on at the time in the UK.
They got Thatcher instead though, so...
@@richardkeating3575 No doubt. Not only that, Johnny Rotten is a trump supporter these days, or so I hear. Oh well...
lets not forget, the constant threat it could all vanish in a nuclear fireball at any moment
Think the sixties put a finger up to the rigid war generation, people of my parents age who were born in the early forties.
Ship building moved to South Korea, British Leyland went under. Strikes Riots an "no future".
This was powerful stuff when it first came out. Hugely influential. One of those rare moments when music was actually considered dangerous, alongside early Elvis and NWA's "Fu*k the Police." Scared the crap out of people. The Pistols and the Clash were the apotheosis of punk rock.
One band that impacted and shaped music around the world. Their influence is unmeasurable. Energy and lyrics from yesterday for today.
You have to remember before punk came along we were all dancing around to pretty little disco tunes. Then this loud noise, dirty clothes and the idea of sticking up the middle finger to the world came crashing in. That was the Anarchy - fighting back against the establishment. Punk music was never really taken seriously by the mainstream music industry. It was always thought of as a passing fad and the music was often criticised as being bad. But there was some really good music. The opening guitar riff to Pretty Vacant is sublime.
The UK in the 1970s was a depressing place: IRA bombs, riots, mass unemployment, crumbling industries, and mass exodus to other countries. Alot of working class people in the UK felt trapped, hopeless, and angry. Punk music was a reaction to all that was wrong about the UK and living under the strict class structure/rules imposed by the British establishment. You might want to try their other big song: 'God Save the Queen'. It was banned on UK radio but went to #1 any way.
The Troubles!
It went to number 2 because the BBC fiddled the charts by excluding Virgin sales.
That's right there was no no1 that week 😁
@@yvonnesanders4308 Rod Stewart had the official No 1 that week. Independent record stores like Virgin and many more did not have their record sales counted that week by BMRB ensuring the Pistols were kept off the top.
Growing up in the seventies was great, far from depressing. And there was loads of work out there. You could leave a job in the morning and walk into another one in the afternoon. We had a great, fashion, music and nightlife.
Yes Thatcher was destroying the unions, the mining industry and any others she could get her hands on but there was still lots of other industries that were booming at the time.
If you think the seventies was depressing what the hell are the 2020’s? We were out having fun in the seventies. The young people of today are under house arrest. If you think it was all doom and gloom I can assure you, you are very wrong
"Pretty Vacant" is another classic of theirs. Cheers from Down Under;)
Animal is about abortion shaming
Back in the day, my college radio station would play "Pretty Vacant" on the first day of exams every term.
Their best IMHO.
love it because rotten wanted to sing cunt on the radio so phrased it like that lol
"Bodies" unnerving and brilliant at the same time.
He doesn't want to destroy anarchy - anarchy is the destruction of the establishment.
I think that there was a missing comma ... "I wanna destroy, anarchy' hehe ...
I think he confused "anarchy" and "monarchy".
@@lennyg47 He want to destroy anarchy and he want God to save the queen. 🤓
@@lennyg47 Yeah, pretty sure he was confusing "anarchy" and "monarchy".
The Pistols were far more than just a band. They were the first of their kind. Forget the New York Dolls and The Ramones, this was something completely different and completely English, the first (and best) English Punk band. These days it's common to hear Punk bands attacking their governments and Monarchy but in the 1970's it was unheard of and it got the Pistols put onto MI5's 'watch' list along with suspected terrorists and spies. They were playing in small London venues before The Clash or The Damned were even formed. Almost everything they did was a direct challenge to an out dated and unfair social and political landscape. They had their own live sound engineer who made sure all the early gigs were as loud and ferocious as possible. Look at the legacy they left behind after only two and a half years. To say you are blown away by Anarchy in the UK is only scratching the surface, but it's a good start.
Stranglers🤷♂️
@@mickeymclaughlin3579 The Stranglers ? er, well.. what about them ?
I was seventeen when this came out and it was a complete rush. What a time to be alive. Punk rock never leaves you! We were going through some bad times back then with power cuts, strikes across the country, the winter of discontent and conflict in Northern Ireland which spread to the mainland. No wonder the younger generation were so angry. Thanks for sharing and great reaction.
Nothing's really changed!
"It's better to burn out than it is to rust" --Neil Young. Yep, The Sex Pistols came to burn it all down. Also check out "God Save The Queen", "Submission", "Pretty Vacant", "Holidays In The Sun", "Bodies" ....
I like that live version of 'No Fun'. Believe it was their last performance they did.
Yeah used to say legend of johnny rotten live
Bodies might be a bit "sweary" 🤣🤣
Friggin in the riggin and lonely boy
@@RYANDEOROCK Correct. They split after that performance in America.
Yeah they were against the monarchy, their single God Saves the Queen has the Sex Pistols logo over the Queens face, which is technically illegal to deface the monarch. Not that they would have ever been charged, although it did rile up the older generation.
He now loves the Queen...
Why would anyone be in favor of a monarchy?
@@docsavage8640 She is cheaper and she has no real power! Tourists love her too!
Try some Ian Dury and the Blockheads. They rose to fame around the same time. Early rap.
Definitely
Ian Dury & The Blockheads were fab. Their song Reasons to be Cheerful Part 3.
Yes! Hit me with your rhythm stick, Sex and Drugs and Rock & Roll, and my personal favourite: Wake up and make love with me.
Sweet Gene Vincent what a fantastic track by Ian Dury and the blockheads
Early rap total bollocks statement he was class not rap at all
This was a defining moment in musical history, the Sex Pistols are that important.
This song changed my life....honest! Steve Jones is such an underrated guitarist.
They were so ahead of their time!! They broke ground bringing punk rock into the 70's!! Sex Pistols🔥🎵❤✌
Jayvee, as a lifelong fan of the Sex Pistols I can't tell you how much I enjoyed your genuine reaction
Obviously you're not familiar with the details and technicalities of what was going on in the culture at the time, but you totally understand and felt the essence, intention and the feeling of the song and thats what counts.
Will check out more of your vids
Nearly 45 years old. Magnificent. Remember them as a 70s kid. They genuinely scared me, the establishment and even today for some its shocking.
1st time i heard this it hit me like a kick in the bollocks so i bought the album the next day. You mate are a breath of fresh air, love your channel.
Johnny Rotten: “The old order was not working. The Labour Party had promised so much for the working classes but had done so little. There was no work, but they just all kept telling us to accept it and get on with it. I don’t know why some things happen, other than that they just should. And The Sex Pistols should have happened, and did.”
I love that you're willing to go on an adventure with music. This is my stuff I grew up with
“So he wants to destroy the queen and stuff” well, on that note you should go check out their song “God Save the Queen!
when youre tied to your mother's apron, no one talks about castration--The Queen Is Dead (the Smiths) . it takes balls to record that ditty.
As a teenager, I used to walk down Kings Road and stop by Malcolm McClaren's Seditionary boutique.
Me too!
@@kathylye378 is that where Vivienne Westwood got her start?
Jade Cawdellsmith Yes she made clothes for Malcolm McLaren’s shop, they became a couple and I think had a son
@@kathylye378 Vivienne and Malcolm were together years before he had a stall or a shop. Their son was born in '67.
Love or hate him Johnny Rotten was a great frontman!Unique to say the least!
I am SO HAPPY you are reacting to the Pistols!!!! Thank you and do more please!!!!!! John Lydon is a savage!
And everyone just shot him down when he tried to ought saville, he knew the truth way back then
Every kid, knew he was a wrong un, love John Lydon, I was too young for the Sex pistols so was more into Public Image Ltd, sadly Johns wife has Alzheimer's & he's her sole carer.
🤘🏻😈🤘🏻
@@beverlybradley5485 looking after his 2 Grand children as well after his wife’s daughter died.
Gets a bad rep for a pretty decent bloke.
When I heard about Saville, Johnny’s comments were the first thing I thought of. If they’d only listened or cared.
Jonny Rotten is actually quite intelligent, and a good businessman.
Sure is.
I saw a photo of an old, fat, John Lydon hanging out a hotel window smoking a cigarette just a couple of weeks ago. He was wearing a red "Make America Great Again" t-shirt. Times change. So, apparently, do people. Whoda thunk?
@@TheOnlyAardvark nope
He was also on Judge Judy. It's completely surreal. Google it.
@@garyglaser4998 //ikr, i saw it.
An iconic pic of vocalist Johnny Rotten is with a T-shirt saying “I hate Pink Floyd”
And yet he liked them and oddly Marc Bolan. Funny how hype is
Rotten liked bolan? Lmao no way. I love both but never expected that from rotten
@@johnLennon255 He was a friends with Pete Townshend from The Who, he is an interesting bloke John.
Unfortunately going though a bad time as his wife has dementia,
His band P.I.L. are an excellent Post Punk group.
Anger is an Energy is excellent.
@@jaybot303functionerror4 I honestly thought most of the old rock dudes hated lydon
Anybody who tells the rock n roll hall of fame to fuck off can’t be that bad.....
The Pistols redefined a generation culturally, musically and brushed aside the established order
Just for clarity - the last lines of the song are "Get Pissed - Destroy" - I can't believe that was 45 years ago - but the streets were rocking - most of us took it for what it was - a legitimate complaint - and like you we enjoyed a good song and looked around at the life we were living - You should check out the Stranglers - Same period - bye the way I like that you're checking this material out - History is the key
I watched this and immediately realised how better times were then.
Have a listen to P.I.L. Public Image Ltd
John Lydon/Jonny Rotten
This is not a Live Song
Rise
Rise classic song
Album by pil is an amazing...album lol
Now THAT'S Punk. It's not that type like today where the "so-called" singer sounds like he's sick, projectile vomiting, and sounds like a demon possessed Cookie Monster.
YES! Ok, I thought I was the only one who described his sound as "demon possessed Cookie Monster"! What are the chances?! (Or did someone in media call him that & it stuck in some of our minds?)
@@karikells Nope, that's all me! No Media. My nephew is into that new so-called "punk." I told them in the past what punk was with well know groups. The Sex Pistols and Clash from England, The Ramones, and even Blondie started out as punk. The closest thing the punk we knew is Green Day.
Johnny Rotten does seem sick, thought.
Sid wasn’t fucking around. He was genuine.
Is that a Jim Sterling reference
The closest the US had to the Pistols was The Dead Kennedys. Check out 'Holiday In Cambodia"
I was a huge fan of DK as a teenager in the 80s in the UK. Of course Punk goes back to Iggy Pop in the 60s and others.
India by the Psychadelic furs is one of my faves
@@digger5521 that's a tune
obviously you never heard iggy and the stooges raw power album then ...btw came out in 1973 this came out in 77
@@shawnogan840 RAW POWER BY GOD AND THE STOOGES IGGY IS his STAGE NAME BUT HE IS GOD HIMSELF
I am sat here on my 61st birthday and I have just celebrated my 17th watching that. My Mam was mortified when I asked for "Never mind the bollocks" for my prezzy. Happy days.
The whole album Never mind the B*llocks was a gem.
This song, changed my life, back in the late 70s and annoyed my parents (as did other songs), they made one album and it still lives with me
No the first punk song that changed my life was the falls the classical. I was to young for the sex pistols. The classical was my first experience of punk
Sex Pistols was my first big concert, 2003 Molson Amphitheater (Budweiser now) Toronto..
I'm glad you liked this. The Punk scene from '79 to '85 was a blast!
Great reaction mate .. Just like when I heard them first .... enjoyed this video
I'm so glad you got around to checking this out Jay. I love the Pistols, the Ramones, the Clash, the Damned, etc.
John Lydon is quite respectable now and lives in Los Angeles. Here in the UK in the 90's, he appeared on a tv advert for butter dressed as a country gent.
I'd forgotten about that! The Morris team my dad was in dance in that ad.
Still at true punk at heart, He loves Donald Trump just to piss people off lol
The lead singer's name was Johnny Rotten, last not his real name though, . My sister was a punk, I was a high & my brother Was a skin head (just for the fashion). The queen we have now, we had when this song came out Jay. 😎👌🎸
The queen you have now, you have since the dinossaurs were on UK!
@@flaviuspoa exactly lol
John Lydon aka Johnny Rotten. Should listen to his later band too. PIL - Public Image Limited. He's been happily married for a long time now and is actually very intelligent and articulate. Always like hearing his interviews these days.
@@gkitteringham exactly, I did say last name wasn't real tho, forgot to put the real one lol.
@@gkitteringham He may well be intelligent but he is in no way articulate. Every interview with him ends up with him failing to explain his thoughts adequately or with any real clarity. He may be more lucid than he was back in the late 1970s but he still struggles to string two sentences together. He still seems to think that staring manically is a good way to make his point.
I was just a kid when they started. I remember the media's reaction of genuine horror at what was happening. Great stuff. And John Lydon grew up just down the road from me. I love this band.
Best first reaction video. Thank you
The UK of the late 70s (when this song was released) was in turmoil. There were rolling power cuts due to strikes, mismanagement from the UK government with a growing gap between rich and poor and people were PISSED. Yeah, apart from the power cut thing, nothing has improved, only got worse.
The Damned was my favourite UK punk band in the '70s but the Sex Pistols were the definition of raw energy in punk
I’ve seen The Damned in concert. They were great!
Yep, and the Damned are still going strong, seen 'em approx 15 times.
@@debbiesmith8248 Wow that's fab! Would have loved to see them back in the '70s, early '80s
@@ekadow, in the 80s for me. Eloise and Grimly fiendish. We were on the second row, in front of the band. It was quite a squash!
@@debbiesmith8248 Where was that? New Rose, Stab Your Back and Neat, Neat, Neat were my favourites. After that I was definitely a punk...!
My dad introduced me to the Sex Pistols when I was 8. Never looked back.
Hey Thanks JVTV, The older I get the more I like this. "God Save the Queen" is another catchy little number
Sex pistols best punk band ever!!! R.I.P Sid. Absolute icon ❤️🇬🇧
As a 60's born first time around Punk I'm pleased to hear and see your reaction, the world needs punk today to give it a kick up the arse. There is a video somewhere out there of them doing a gig at a poor kids party, they supplied cakes and drinks for the kids. The 70's were a hard time to live in, it's sliding back to it today. We need a new Pistols.
The Pistols were that rarest of show business entities: the real thing. And that's why their music survives today, even though the band didn't. As Rotten said, "Only the fakes survive."
One and done. More bands should do that.
Do people seriously still believe that? They weren't "the real thing", whatever that might mean. Certainly not in the way The Clash or The Jam were the "real thing". They may have been working class but the Sex Pistols were a 100% artificial band, selling themselves on image and bluster. They were Malcolm McLaren's attempt to make some cash through shock and outrage tactics. He manufactured them. Remember - they didn't form organically as any other band does; three of them (Cook, Jones and Matlock) were already pretty experienced musicians (the original bass player Glen Matlock was fired by McLaren because he was "too professional" and replaced by laughable cartoon punk Sid Vicious). The Pistols were put together quite deliberately and carefully by their manager. Of course, the best of their music was great and remains so, but nevertheless they were, in effect, a more dangerous version of The Monkees. They were a money making project. As Rotten said , "Ever had the feeling you've been had?"
@@zargonthemagnificent330 Not 100% correct. Yes, the media hype and manipulation thing definitely happened, but this was after they were up and running for a bit and building a following on their own simply by playing their music. Original music they wrote. They wore some clothes from Malcolm's shop and he did some basic manager moves, but to say he totally created them and they weren't real deal is insulting. Who created John Lydon's style? His look? His words? His voice? Who wrote the songs? Who played them? Not Malcolm. Cook and Jones were beginners that had a band idea brewing and Malcolm assisted them. His shop was a hub to connect everyone and build a scene. Malcolm was an essential character. Yes, he had his own ideas and put many into action. Many were great and effective. Some were nonsense. The Great Rock and Roll Swindle is trash. He was probably only in it for the money. But The Pistols were truly the chemistry of the 4 original members that made an effort to create something and say something musically. A reaction to life around them. The media frenzy and image distortion came after the infamous Grundy TV incident. The band rolled with it. Things became a circus. Still, even with Sid in the band later on, they played great gigs and revolutionized popular music. The effects are still felt today.
well, johnny survived, ...
I have 2 older brothers, the eldest was into Queen, ELO, Boomtown Rats etc, the younger one was into the Sex Pistols, The Buzzcocks etc. An 11 year old should not know all the lyrics to F****** in the Rigging, They are 7 and 5 years older than me. Our house was filled with music, some better than others. Quite liked the Sex Pistols though
I had older sisters who were into punk so I also knew those lyrics at that age! 😂
@@lowriebean8140 If only we had an idea of what we were singing about 😏
Boomtown Rats were punks too
This paints quite an image! Like something we might see in Derry Girls. :-D
@@lowriebean8140 my parents had some questionable babysitters so I got to see Dead Kennedy's when I was 9 & it changed me forever 🤯
British Punk and Iggy Pop with the Ramones brought a new sound to the sleepy world.
Love watching this guy reacting ..he is so genuine. This song was revolutionary for its time..
There is a movie about the bass player who died called Sid and Nancy. Epic
Gary Oldman sang in that movie too instead of just lip synching to Sid. I actually love his version of My Way better than Sid's
Each and every song of their first album is the same: rough, catchy and full of energy. I use this entire album a lot in my jogging playlist, actually.
Try their songs God Save the Queen or Holidays in the Sun.
Big big scandal back then, especially their insults towards the British Queen.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was tough and conservative, she brought all the Trade Unions down. She has been hated a lot by the British punk rockers.
Yes, they are fabulous on playlists for working out! Them, Rage Against The Machine & also The Ramones.
Punk arrived along with this song in 1977 as a reaction to the Queens Golden Jubilee and the appalling mess the Labour government were making of the country. Thatcher didn’t get into office until 1979.
That's because they don't understand economics
The sound and memories of me growing up in the 70s on a council estate
I WAS A kid in the 70s Growing up in Kodiak Alaska IN the 70s LIFE WAS VERY GOOD, I Miss the 70s BADLY
Pretty much like what Nirvana was to grunge. The figure heads and the megaphone and wall breaker, but there were other bands that had a much longer and productive and successful career than Sex Pistols. The Jam, Clash, The Stranglers for example.
Ahhhhh, good description!
I'm happy I got to see them on their 'Filthy Lucre' reunion tour in '96 with all 4 original members.
The Sex Pistols outraged the Uk. The were huge with their hits and their controversy. Love your vids, bro.
I was there man! Ha ha, Yep, had the album. I recommend Pretty Vacant by the Sex Pistols. A song that we played a lot, by another band was Stiff Little Fingers, Alternative Ulster. Babylon's Burning by The Ruts.
I second those recommendations, though might choose Suspect Device by SLF for something less subtle. ;-) SLF and The Ruts had more genuine social causes than the chaos that Talcy Malcy was trying to create around the Pistols (with the removal of the genuinely talented Glen Matlock to be replaced by the plonker Sid Vicious, thankfully too late to ruin the debut album).
Blitz was also great
i was 8 years old when this came out, and also got to see them at finsbury park when i was older, i will always be a punk, the goverment is so corrupt
My brother brought their album, when it first came out, now they are nowhere near my favourite band. However they were quite brilliant at making statements, and they hit a raw nerve with a lot of youths at the time.
You don't need anyone to explain it to you, you got it. Thanks for this, you reminded me how startling it was to hear it for the first time and I why I get pumped by it every time. My advice is buy the album, paint over the Kalvin Klein t shirt and form a punk band.
I was 17 when this came out. Incredibly important moment in music. Not for the exquisite musicality of the Pistols, but because it tore the wall down. Much of the music of the past 4 decades would never have happened without it. And you have to love Mr Lydon, a truly great British eccentric. Lives in Venice Beach these days. Was heavily featured in the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony to astonishment of everyone not in the UK!
I was 15 when this came out. It changed everything culturally in the UK. It wiped out the dinosaur bands like Floyd, Yes, Genesis, and a whole new wave of music was ushered in. But not just music. Hair went from long to short, trousers went from flares to straight legs, Fashion changed. TV became edgier. They didn't want anarchy. They just wanted to shock! and they did.Their records were banned, the police broke up gigs. Check out their next single "God Save the Queen" released to coincide with her silver jubilee celebrations in 77.
Are these the same "dinosaur" Bands like Yes,Floyd and Genesis that millions still listen to nearly 50 years later while a handful of former Punks still listen to JR while he is supporting Donald The Trump ?
That is right right isn't it ?
Wiped out the Floyd? Oookay. This must be some strange usage of the words "wiped out" that I wasn't previously aware of. If by "wiped out" you mean "musical Gods who were, and still are, one of the biggest bands on the planet with muti platinum albums, the biggest grossing tours of the 80s and 90s and who created music for the ages that mires your soul in quasi religious ecstasy", then, yes, I agree with you, they were indeed "wiped out".
@@alisonanthony1228 If you're in the UK, and a big fan of 70s Yes, Floyd & Genesis, as I am, you'll know everything changed after 77. Genesis adapted and became a hugely successful pop band, Floyd, Yes, Sabbath, Purple, Zep never made a decent album since.
@Barely Taupe Yes, I love early Floyd and Syd was a genius, but then I love every era of the Floyd 😍
@@mrbrad4566 I am in the UK actually but disagree with your analysis. If you honestly don't think that Animals, The Wall, AMLOR, the Division Bell, In Through the Out Door or 90125 (just off the top of my head) were decent albums then there's nothing I could say that will convince you otherwise. I was 16 in 1977 and, for my friends and I, punk was nothing more than than a mildly amusing, throwaway moment in time. It ran its course in around 18 months or so and was fun while it lasted but that was it - like a party popper, loud and surprising for a moment but, ultimately, "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing". Sorry, but it just wasn't very important to us.
Listen to Rise by public image limited. John lydon at his best
Poptones 👍
I'll second that!!! "Rise" is a good song to start with.
“Rise” and “Bad Life” 💜💜💜
Omg yes that is one of my driving songs.
I could be wrrrrrrrrong, I could be riiiiiiiight!
After the sanitised, big record studio music of the mid-70s, this was so energetic that it set the youth of the UK alight. Amazing reaction; thank you.
Awesome reaction. The way you reacted was truly the same way we reacted. The energy and anger of it all was contagious. I first started listening to Punk Rock in 1984. I was 16. By then it was called Hardcore and local music stores called us the second wave of punk rock kids. That was Kenosha, Wisconsin where a punk rock scene has been thriving since about 1980 still today. Thanks for posting this. Fun!
Take a listen to the Jam and of course...the Clash!!
So much great music to try out...!!!
I’m waiting for The Jam.
As an aging punk rocker, I totally dig that you're into this. You never forget your first time in the pit!
I've still got the scars
Haha. I have a distinct memory of my friend removing some stage diver’s foot from atop my head while I was up against the stage at a Ramones show like a lifetime ago. 💜🤣 Now that circle pit thing is a whole different deal. 🤣 Infest, now that show was a bit too much for me. They sounded great, but even smushed against the back wall I wasn’t safe. 🤣🤣
@@Jillyconjem I've been to a few gigs like that. I've tried telling myself it's all part of the experience but I'm getting too old for that shit but not the music so I've found myself listening from the footpath afew times 😂
@@jadecawdellsmith4009 It’s definitely caught up to me these last few years. A while back is gone to a three day festival where Radiohead headlined two of the nights. I met a friend up close the second night, but the first I just sat on a bench outside the venue with a beautiful view of the moon over the water and listened to the whole show that way. It was a lovely experience. I’m appreciating those experiences now. Although, seeing FLAG a few years ago just on the outskirts of the circle still was very cool. 💜
@@Jillyconjem I wish I'd done the same with Radiohead, instead I got caught up in the mosh pit & ended up with a boot to the head. Got rescued by security cos they could see I was concussed. Special treatment after that so not all bad.
God Save the Queen and Pretty Vacant! I mean you should just listen to all their songs. They only made one album, not too tall of a tast
I loved your reaction! And I totally get what you were feeling. It's what I felt the first time heard that song and what I feel every time I listen to it. It's addictive.
First vid of yours I’ve watched and you say you weren’t ready for this.. well, when I looked through your videos I wasn’t ready for the absolute sheer difference of genres and artist your going at. Looks like your going after every type, style out there and I think that is fantastic. 👌🏻 All the best, from Yorkshire 😀
I never got into this music but I am understanding the meaning now days.......
Ahhh... One of my favorite bands along with The Dead Kennedys. (I used to be a punk rock myself). Very intelligent music. Raw and real. Love that garage-sound...
The Sex Pistols were very anti-establishment. anarchy is mind games for the middle class," "It's a luxury. It can only be afforded in a democratic society, therefore kind of slightly f--king redundant. It also offers no answers. It's offering some kind of answer to a thing, rather than spitefully wanting to wreck everything for no reason at all, other than it doesn't suit you."
All Punk-Rock music is very political against corporate greed, Republicans, etc...
@Gerald H I thought that title would have gone to Jello Biafra. But perhaps I'm wrong about his sexuality. What counts is their music & I totally love it! There was usually a msg or statement of some kind. Would love to hear a reaction to Pull My Strings. I've been asking for ages
Ya silly tart reps and dems have the same banker backers
@Gerald H They were not communists... LoL! You're watching too much (Fake-News-Fox). LoL
The Dicks went through two incarnations in the 1980s, changing its lineup when Floyd moved from Austin to San Francisco in 1983. As a political band with Marxist lyrics during the Reagan era, they did not shy from controversy.
@@Day0One I've heard Jello talking about the benefits of a socialist society so yeah, not a commie but maybe a watered down one🤔
@@jadecawdellsmith4009 Socialist is not communist (Two completely different things). (socialist is like Sweden or Norway, ect...)
The situation back then is the same as it is now. Rich people hoarding all the resources and wealth for themselves and then gaslighting the rest of us. Voices of change or for change get rubbed out in the end but the song is still relevant today. Great reaction. Also you should listen to Pretty Vacant fantastic guitar riff at the intro. Also check out PIL, the band John Lydon formerly Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols formed back in the 1980s. Keep those reactions coming.
This is a song about the English class system and an Anti-Socialist song- the initial agencys, the council tenacies ( English projects ).
You did a really good job of grasping the essence and the message of the song, Jay.
This was a 'piss-take' of anarchy, it's evident in the lyrics. John himself called it 'mind games for the middle classes'. Nobody sensible wants actual anarchy, but we have to be aware of encroaching authoritarianism.
I mean he became a US citizen and voted for Trump in 2020 so :|
@@Samhalta Trump is punk as fuck.
@@HAUNTEDRECS Rrrright. Admiring authoritarian leaders such as Kim Jong Un is very punk indeed.
@@Samhalta Being an outspoken weirdo who shits on the media and is hated by the mainstream is pretty punk rock. Sorry.
@@HAUNTEDRECS Pretty sure most punk bands still hate Trump, but ok.
Try The MC5’s Kick Out the Jams if want some early punk.
MC5 pre-date punk rock. They were a strong influence on punk, but are considered garage rock.
well, if we talking old Detroit Hardcore, might as well do the Stooges too.
@@ThatOraLady RIP Ron and Scott
Again, American punk which was a different animal to UK punk.
@@andrewlaw People retrospectively began to call MC5 proto-punk in acknowledgement of their influence on the early punk bands. They were never considered a punk band during their initial run.
Check out a song called Another Girl, Another Planet by The Only Ones.
Omg I've not heard that song in forever! SO good
Great suggestion
Love that song.
Such a great song.
great to see someone from your generation
listening and enjoying a different cultures past music
reaction channels have found a new lease of life with past music
long may it last, some awesome music to be heard bro, props man great reaction
Man you look like I felt when I first heard this song at 12 when I got the record in New Zealand I didn't know what to expect and it changed my life!!!I really enjoyed watching it!
They’re absolutely terrifying from the jump. It’s their special gift, and it’s SO hot. Always loved this song. There’s a reason they’re called the Sex Pistols.
Forget about "Bodies" then 😎
Lol!
He isn't ready for Bodies. Very few people are.
My personal favourite , intensely socially political
Omg.....my absolute favorite Pistols song
@@SuperWorstEver 😳😂😂
All the songs on their (only) album are classics Then and now. My fav: Petty Vacant.👍
This was one of the 1st punk rock songs I ever heard around 1980, listening through the door of my older brother's room. I was hooked and still love it 40 years later.
I love you man, and watching you getting in to 2 Tone and Ska has been genuinely wholesome... but describing Johnny Rotten as 'seems like he is fed up' is golden. I'm still chuckling.