Case file Nº 003 1975–1978

Sex Pistols

The Sex Pistols existed as a recording band for roughly thirty months and produced one studio album. In that time they were dropped by EMI after a televised swearing incident, signed by A&M outside Buckingham Palace and dropped six days later, banned across Britain, and dissolved onstage. The litigation their brief existence generated has now run for over forty years — longer than most bands' entire careers.

Formed
1975
Origin
London, England
Genre
Punk rock
Status
Disbanded 1978 (litigation ongoing longer than the band existed)
Documented lineup changes
One founding bassist out, one non-playing bassist in
The file

No band has ever achieved a better ratio of chaos to catalogue. Formed in London in 1975 around manager Malcolm McLaren's boutique SEX, the Sex Pistols — Johnny Rotten (John Lydon), Steve Jones, Paul Cook and Glen Matlock — detonated British pop culture, recorded exactly one studio album, and disintegrated on a San Francisco stage in January 1978.

The band's history divides neatly into two eras: the thirty months of the band, and the forty-plus years of litigation about the band. Lydon sued McLaren for control of the band's affairs and won. Decades later, Jones and Cook sued Lydon over licensing for the Pistol television series and won. The Sex Pistols have now spent more than fifteen times as long in dispute as they spent as a functioning group — a statistic even they might find impressive.

A note on this file: the band's story includes the deaths of Nancy Spungen (1978) and Sid Vicious (1979), which we record factually and without sensation. The ridiculous parts of this dossier concern record labels, managers and money; the tragic parts are treated as what they are.

The thread

Timeline of unravelling

1975

Assembled in a clothes shop

Malcolm McLaren, proprietor of the King's Road boutique SEX, connects shop regulars Steve Jones and Paul Cook with bassist Glen Matlock and a green-haired Hawkwind-shirt-defacing auditionee named John Lydon, who mimes to a jukebox in the shop and is hired as Johnny Rotten.

Oct 1976

EMI signs the Pistols

After a year of increasingly notorious London gigs — including one where a thrown glass costs a fan an eye and gets the band banned from the 100 Club — EMI signs the Sex Pistols for £40,000. 'Anarchy in the U.K.' is released in November.

Dec 1976

The Bill Grundy interview

Filling in for Queen on Thames Television's early-evening Today programme, the band — goaded live on air by host Bill Grundy — swears repeatedly on teatime television. The next morning's tabloid front pages make them the most infamous band in Britain. Grundy's career never recovers; the band's is made.

Jan 1977

EMI drops the band

After weeks of pressure from shareholders, politicians and its own pressing-plant workers (who refused to handle the single), EMI terminates the contract. The band keeps the £40,000. They will later immortalize the transaction in a song titled, straightforwardly, 'EMI.'

Feb 1977

Glen Matlock is out; Sid Vicious is in

Founding bassist and principal melodic writer Glen Matlock departs — fired or resigned depending on who is asked, with McLaren gleefully telegraphing the most insulting version to the press. His replacement, Lydon's friend Sid Vicious, has the ideal look and, by every account including his bandmates', cannot play bass.

Mar 1977

A&M: signed outside the Palace, dropped in six days

The band signs to A&M Records at a staged ceremony outside Buckingham Palace. Within a week — following a chaotic celebration at A&M's offices and mounting internal objections — A&M terminates the deal and destroys most copies of the pressed 'God Save the Queen' single. The band keeps this advance too: £75,000 for six days' work.

May–Jun 1977

God Save the Queen vs the Silver Jubilee

Now on Virgin, the band releases 'God Save the Queen' into the Queen's Silver Jubilee. Banned by the BBC and major retailers, it reaches No. 2 on the official chart amid persistent, never-resolved allegations the chart was managed to keep it from No. 1. A Jubilee-week boat party on the Thames ends with police boarding and McLaren among those arrested on the dock.

Oct 1977

Never Mind the Bollocks — and a court case about the word 'bollocks'

The band's only studio album is released; a Nottingham record shop is prosecuted for displaying the title. The defence produces a linguistics expert who traces 'bollocks' to clerical usage; the case is dismissed. The album goes to No. 1.

Jan 1978

The US tour and the Winterland collapse

McLaren routes the band's first US tour through southern venues seemingly optimized for confrontation. By the San Francisco finale at Winterland, Vicious is in freefall and the band barely functional. Rotten closes the show asking the crowd whether they ever get the feeling they've been cheated, drops the mic, and quits. The Sex Pistols are over after one album.

1978–79

The Swindle era and two deaths

McLaren carries on with the Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle film and records featuring, among others, train robber Ronnie Biggs. In October 1978 Nancy Spungen is found dead in the New York hotel room she shared with Vicious, who is charged with her murder. He dies of an overdose in February 1979 while on bail, before any trial. Both deaths are recorded here as fact; the case was never adjudicated.

1979–86

Lydon sues McLaren — and wins everything

Lydon sues McLaren and his company Glitterbest for control of the band's name, affairs and unpaid earnings. The litigation grinds on for seven years; in 1986 the ex-members and Vicious's estate win control of the band's assets and the Swindle proceeds. The receiver's findings on Glitterbest's accounting are, to put it mildly, unflattering to McLaren.

1996

The Filthy Lucre reunion

The original lineup — Matlock restored on bass — reunites for a world tour named, with total honesty, Filthy Lucre. At the announcement press conference the band cheerfully confirms they still can't stand each other and are doing it for the money. It is possibly the most truthful press conference in rock history.

2006

Declining the Hall of Fame, rudely

Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the band refuses to attend, publishing a handwritten note comparing the institution to a stain and dismissing the museum wholesale. The Hall inducts them anyway, reading the note aloud.

2021

Jones and Cook sue Lydon — and win

When Lydon refuses to license Sex Pistols recordings for Danny Boyle's Pistol series, Jones and Cook sue to enforce a 1998 band agreement providing for majority rule on licensing. The High Court rules against Lydon. The Sex Pistols' final classic-era battle is decided, like everything else, in court.

2024–25

The Pistols tour without Rotten

Jones, Cook and Matlock tour as Sex Pistols with Frank Carter on vocals, to strong reviews and predictable commentary from Lydon. The thread, at this point, is being maintained purely out of habit.

Personnel ledger

Who held the thread

Johnny Rotten (John Lydon)Vocals · 1975–78Quit onstage at Winterland; sued McLaren for seven years and won; lost the 2021 licensing case to his own bandmates 2–1.
Steve JonesGuitar · 1975–78Whose memoir cheerfully documents that much of the band's early gear was stolen, including from a Bowie show. Co-plaintiff in the 2021 case.
Paul CookDrums · 1975–78The band's most consistently functional member, a low bar cleared with distinction. Co-plaintiff in 2021.
Glen MatlockBass · 1975–77, reunionsCo-wrote most of the classic songs, then was briefed out of the band via McLaren's press machine. Returned for every reunion — the money being, after all, filthy but real.
Sid ViciousBass · 1977–78Hired for image over ability, by universal testimony including his own band's. Died in February 1979 at 21, while on bail. Treated in this file as a casualty of the story, not a punchline.
Malcolm McLarenManager · 1975–79Marketed chaos as strategy and claimed the whole thing was his art project; the 1986 judgment on Glitterbest's finances suggested the art project's accounting was the boldest work of all. Died 2010.
Where the thread lies now

The Sex Pistols' legacy is bifurcated with unusual neatness: culturally, they are among the most influential bands ever, having detonated punk into the mainstream in a single year; legally, they are a cautionary syllabus. The Lydon–McLaren case became a foundational precedent in artist–manager disputes, and the 2021 Jones/Cook v Lydon ruling is now cited in disputes over band-partnership majority rule.

Lydon continues with Public Image Ltd and remains, in interviews, magnificently unreconciled to everyone. Jones hosted the beloved radio show Jonesy's Jukebox. Matlock plays with everybody, including — history's little joke — Blondie. The band that lasted thirty months has now been generating income, and invoices from solicitors, for half a century.

Exhibits

Further reading & official links

External links are provided for reference. The Threads is not affiliated with any linked site, artist, or organization, and does not control external content. Facts above are drawn from widely published reporting, interviews, court records, and band autobiographies; see our legal notice for our corrections policy.