Public Image Ltd.
Metal Box (1979)
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    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Albatross    
      2.  
      Memories    
      3.  
      Swan Lake    
      4.  
      Poptones    
      5.  
      Careering    
      6.  
      No Birds    
      7.  
      Graveyard    
      8.  
      The Suit    
      9.  
      Bad Baby    
      10.  
      Socialist    
      11.  
      Chant    
      12.  
      Radio 4    
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      Public Image Ltd.
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      Public Image Ltd.


      The original 1978 line-up. Left to right: Jim Walker, Keith Levene, Jah Wobble and John Lydon
      Background information
      Also known as PiL
      Origin London, England
      Genre(s) Post-punk
      Alternative dance
      Years active 1978–1992 (indefinite hiatus)
      Label(s) Virgin
      Warner Bros.
      Elektra
      Associated
      acts Sex Pistols
      The Damage Manual
      The Clash
      Former members
      John Lydon
      Jah Wobble
      Keith Levene
      Martin Atkins
      Allan Dias
      Richard Dudanski
      John McGeoch
      Jim Walker
      Bruce Smith
      Pete Jones
      Public Image Ltd. (PiL) are an English band formed in 1978 by vocalist John Lydon (ex-Sex Pistols), ex-Clash guitarist Keith Levene, and bassist Jah Wobble. PiL are often regarded as one of the most challenging and innovative bands of the post-punk period. Though PiL has been inactive since 1992, Lydon (the band's only constant member) considers the group to be "on hiatus" rather than broken up.

      Contents [hide]
      1 History
      1.1 Early career
      1.2 First album
      1.3 Metal Box
      1.4 Flowers of Romance
      1.5 This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get
      1.6 Album/Compact Disc/Cassette
      1.7 Late career
      2 Members and related people
      3 Discography
      3.1 Studio albums
      3.2 Live, compilation, bootleg and other albums
      3.3 Singles
      4 References
      5 Further reading
      6 External links



      [edit] History

      [edit] Early career
      Following the Sex Pistols' breakup in 1978, Lydon spent three weeks in Jamaica with Virgin Records head Richard Branson, in which Lydon assisted Branson in scouting for emerging reggae musicians. Branson also flew American band Devo to Jamaica, with an aim to installing Lydon as lead singer in the band. Devo declined the offer.[1]

      Upon returning to England, Lydon approached Jah Wobble (né John Wardle) about forming a band together. The pair had been friends since attending the same school in the early 1970s, and had sometimes played music together during the final days of the Sex Pistols. Both had similarly broad musical tastes, and were avid fans of reggae and world music. Lydon assumed, much as he had with Sid Vicious, that Wobble would learn to play bass guitar as he went. While that had proven a fatal assumption with Vicious (Lydon cites his musical inability as a prime reason for the Pistols' breakup), Wobble would prove to be a natural talent. Lydon also approached guitarist Keith Levene (né Julian Keith Levene), with whom he had toured in mid-1976, while Levene was a member of The Clash. Lydon and Levene had both considered themselves outsiders even within their own bands. Jim Walker (né James Donat Walker), a Canadian student newly arrived in the UK, was recruited on drums, after answering an ad placed in Melody Maker.

      PiL began rehearsing together in May 1978, though the band was still unnamed. In July 1978, Lydon officially named the band "Public Image" (the "Ltd." was not added until several months later), after the 1968 Muriel Spark novel, The Public Image.[2]

      PiL debuted in October 1978 with "Public Image", a song written while Lydon was still a member of Sex Pistols.[3] The single was well received and reached number 9 in the UK charts, and performed well on import in the US.


      [edit] First album
      Music sample:
      "Public Image"


      "Public Image"
      Problems listening to the file? See media help.
      In preparing their debut album, Public Image, the band spent their recording budget well before the record was completed. The members have since admitted that a significant amount was spent on drugs.[citation needed] As a result, the final album comprised eight tracks of varying sound quality, half of which were written and recorded in a rush after the money had run out. Wobble had also beaten up producer Bill Price's assistant engineer (Price, with John Leckie, had secured the tight sound of the "Public Image" single), inciting Price to ban the group from their preferred Wessex Studios.

      The album was considered groundbreaking on its release in December 1978. Grounded in heavy dub reggae, Wobble's bass tone was called "impossibly deep" by contemporary reviews. Levene's sharp guitar sound, played on an aluminium Veleno guitar, was widely imitated, most notably by The Edge of U2,[4] and Geordie Walker of Killing Joke. Lydon's vocals were more tuneless and incantatory than in the Sex Pistols, gesturing toward the avant-garde territory of such artists as Yoko Ono. Despite being widely criticised in the UK press for being self indulgent and not rock n' roll[citation needed], the first album sold well in the UK and Europe, reaching number 22 in the UK charts.

      The single "Public Image" was widely seen as diatribe against Malcolm McLaren and his perceived manipulation of Lydon during his career with the Sex Pistols. The closing track "Fodderstompf", heavily influenced by dub, comprises nearly eight minutes of a circular bass riff, played over a Lydon/Levene double act lampooning public outrage, love songs and teenage apathy. The track culminates with the sound of a fire extinguisher being let off in the recording studio. Subsequently, the first album was renamed as First Issue.

      Disgusted that the album had compromised everything he had come to the UK to achieve – that is, record accessible music for a youthful audience – Jim Walker walked out in early 1979.


      [edit] Metal Box
      Music sample:
      "Memories"


      "Memories"
      Problems listening to the file? See media help.
      1979's Metal Box was a more focused effort. In addition to the drugs and disorganization that were the normal condition of the band, Jim Walker had quit from general disillusionment, making way for a series of drummers. Auditions were later held at Rollerball Studios in Tooley Street London Bridge. David Humphrey was their second drummer who went on to record two tracks for Metal Box at Manor Studios in Oxford, namely "Swan Lake" and "Albatross." "Death Disco" a/k/a "Swan Lake" was released as a single in 1979 and reached no 20 in the charts. David left following other commitments. In one case Wobble set fire to Karl Burns (formerly and latterly of The Fall). Following sessions took place in which a star-struck young drummer would show up for an 'audition' and discover himself in the middle of a recording session with the tape rolling.[citation needed]

      Metal Box was originally released as three untitled 45 rpm 12-inch records packaged in a metal film canister (it was later reissued as a double LP set, Second Edition), and features the band's trademark hypnotic dub reggae bass lines, glassy, arpeggiated guitar, and bleak, paranoid, stream of consciousness vocals. Metal Box is starker than First Issue, more spread out and uncompromising, and scattered with bits of ambient synthesizer.

      One critic wrote, "they sounded nothing like the Pistols or anyone else at the time.".[5] In fact, although radically different from other British and American rock groups, PiL was heavily influenced by German experimental rock, or Krautrock, especially by Can, Neu!, and the sonic aesthetic of producer Conny Plank. PiL's strong dub influence and abrasive sound, however, set them apart. Hallmarks of the genre include minimalism, classically-inspired ambient or atonal leanings, via Stockhausen, and an abandonment of traditional song form in favour of long, slowly-unfolding compositions.

      Kate Bush attempted to pursue a similar sound to that of Metal Box, some of Wobble's "impossibly deep" bass equipment: he used a 1970s or equivalent Fender Jazz Bass through all-tube Ampeg SVT amplifier, speakers faced toward a solid wall, and microphones arranged to pick up the ambient sound.[citation needed] Most of Wobble's live or television appearances with PiL, however, (including the American Bandstand show and clips on the Old Grey Whistle Test) featured him playing an Ampeg AMB-1 "Scroll" bass, which he still uses on occasion. Wobble also usually played while seated in a chair, leading to speculation that he was physically handicapped and/or he was too pickled to both stand and play at once.[citation needed]

      The U.S. teenage dance show American Bandstand, hosted by Dick Clark, was not normally a venue for such music. In 1980, PiL appeared on the show miming to "Poptones" and "Careering" from Metal Box. Lydon harassed the cameramen and made no effort to conceal that fact he was lip-synching. The studio audience made a valiant but futile attempt to dance and stay in character, ruined by Lydon's good-humoured incitements to storm the stage. Chaos broke out and the show ended with the audience dancing with band members, band members goofing on their instruments, and Lydon chatting with fans while "Careering" played on.

      A U.S. tour led to several cancelled dates and more chaos, this time between the band and their U.S. label, Warner Brothers (PiL was on Virgin in the UK).

      In 2006, San Francisco-based vinyl reissue label 4 Men With Beards reissued the album as a triple 12" inside a metal box, making it the first time the original packaging was available in North America as a domestic release.

      PiL's elusiveness lent the band a certain mystique, but to those close to PiL's operations, they were known as "the laziest band in the world"[citation needed] -- rehearsing infrequently, rarely gigging (the original band only played five UK shows), and recording only when forced into the studio by record executives.[citation needed] (One such executive called PiL "a well-oiled machine that burns money and generates pot smoke and excuses."[citation needed]) When Jim Walker joined, he started spending time at Lydon's apartment, and noticed that Levene would often call from wherever he lived -- presumably miles away, since he never saw him. One evening, moments after a phone exchange, he was astonished to see Levene walk in the door: he had been living in the flat downstairs the whole time, but had never bothered to come up before.[citation needed]

      Wobble had been releasing solo singles since 1978, and had long been unhappy with the band's lack of ambition. He began using PiL basslines as backing tracks to his solo work, on the premise that nobody else in the band seemed likely to mind. However, when Levene became aware of this, matters came to a head.[citation needed]

      Lydon had always been difficult to work with[citation needed], but Levene had begun to challenge him, reportedly acting increasingly grandiose and delusional, and becoming increasingly remote from the world due to an increasing heroin habit. When these personalities collided, Wobble lost the battle. While claims differ as to whether he quit or was fired, the split was decisive. Upon Wobble's departure, the band continued as a bassless trio.

      A show at the Ritz, in New York, was a turning point. The band's musical core had by then been stripped down to Lydon and Levene (drummer Martin Atkins had recently departed), and PiL had begun to relocate to New York, partly because MI5 was conducting an harassment campaign -- later admitted -- against the band's headquarters, the London flat that Lydon bought with his Sex Pistols royalties. (A similar campaign would chase Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV frontman Genesis P. Orridge out of Britain in the early '90s.) Levene had also begun to rethink PiL's formerly-ironic claims to be a 'corporation' and an 'art collective'. While friends of the band including filmmaker Jeanette Lee had long been 'full members' of PiL (original drummer Jim Walker was only 'voted off the board' in 1980), no creative works besides the records had ever ensued. For the Ritz gig however, Levene decided that PiL would reorganize as an improvisational multimedia troupe -- working, as usual, without planning or rehearsals.

      PiL appeared at the Ritz playing from behind a projection screen. (Drummer Sam Ulano had been recruited for the gig from a bar -- the 60-year-old jazz player had never heard the band before). While something reminiscent of, but clearly different from PiL, improvised behind the screen, PiL records were played simultaneously through the PA. Lydon taunted the audience, who expected to hear familiar material (or at least see the band), and a melée erupted in which the audience pelted the stage with bottles and pulled on a tarp spread under the band, toppling equipment. The promoters cleared the hall and cancelled the next night's show, and a local media furor ignited in New York.

      An appearance a short time later on NBC's The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder had Lydon and Snyder insulting each other on-air.[6] The band soon returned to London.


      [edit] Flowers of Romance
      Martin Atkins, who had initially joined at the tail end of the Metal Box sessions (most tracks on that album were played by Richard Dudanski, formerly of The 101ers), was re-recruited to drum on Flowers of Romance, an album considered much stranger and more difficult than the already strange Metal Box. Levene had by then largely abandoned guitar in favour of synthesizer, picking up a technique that was unique, although perhaps owing a debt to Allen Ravenstine of Pere Ubu. Atkins' propulsive marching band-style drumming and Lydon's increasing lyrical abstraction made this LP a difficult listen for rock fans, and contemporary reviews expressed great confusion. The record consists mostly of drums, vocals, musique concrète, and tape loops, with only gestures toward bass (played by Levene) and keyboards. Its drum sound was widely copied, notably by Phil Collins.[7]


      [edit] This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get
      Atkins, like Levene and Lydon, was a control freak, but Levene had the disadvantage of having repeatedly fired Atkins over apparent trifles, and of being incapacitated on heroin much of the time -- so when conflict arose again, Levene was the one to go. An aborted fourth album recorded in 1982, was later released by Levene as Commercial Zone. The album included contributions from bass player Pete Jones. Lydon and Atkins claim Levene stole the master tapes. Atkins stayed on through a disastrous live album, Live in Tokyo -- in which PiL consisted of him, Lydon, and a band of New Jersey wedding musicians -- and left in 1985, following the release of This Is What You Want, This Is What You Get. The band was moving towards a more commercial pop music and dance music direction, and while many new fans found PiL, little of their original audience (or sound) remained.


      [edit] Album/Compact Disc/Cassette
      PiL's 1986 release was simply entitled Album, Compact Disc, or Cassette, depending on the format. The cover's blue typeface and spartan design parodied generic brands; promotional photos featured Lydon in a "generic blue" suit surrounded by generic foods and drinking generic beer. Produced by Bill Laswell (despite Lydon-fuelled faction and disunion) and with many of Laswell's usual rotating cast of musicians, it also featured guitar solos by Steve Vai, considered by Vai himself to be some of his best work. Jonas Hellborg, solo bassist and at the time, member of John McLaughlin's reformed band, The Mahavishnu Orchestra, played bass on the album. Legendary Cream drummer Ginger Baker also played on the album. Controversy reared again, with claims that the album cover and title concept had been stolen from the San Francisco noise/punk band, Flipper, contemporaries of PiL, whose album, Album, featured a similarly unadorned sleeve. Flipper retaliated by naming their next album, Public Flipper Limited. Neil Perry gave Album a positive review in the NME: "This is a wonderful, stunning and equally confusing record, and working on the theory that you'd never expect to hear the Lydon sneer backed by prime metal riffing, that's exactly what you get. Not everywhere, of course, as proved by the haunting "Rise." And "Ease", by the way, with its shock-horror two minutes plus guitar solo, is quite beautiful...In short, Lydon and PiL are still breaking barriers. The man has extracted the false phallus from rock's trouser front and is smashing it over our heads."[8]

      In the liner notes of PiL's Plastic Box compilation (1999), John Lydon remarked that "In some ways Album was almost like a solo album. I worked alone with a new bunch of people. Obviously the most important person was Bill Laswell. But it was during the recording of this album in New York that Miles Davis came into the studio while I was singing, stood behind me and started playing. Later he said that I sang like he played the trumpet, which is still the best thing anyone's ever said to me. To be complimented by the likes of him was special. Funnily enough we didn't use him..."[9]


      [edit] Late career
      In 1986, Lydon recruited former Magazine and Siouxsie & the Banshees guitarist John McGeoch, world music multi-instrumentalist (and former Damned guitarist) Lu Edmunds, bass guitarist Allan Dias, and former The Pop Group and The Slits drummer Bruce Smith. As the years went on, PiL's line-up grew steadier as the sound of the albums drifted toward dance culture and drum-oriented pop music. Edmunds left due to tinnitus in 1988, and Smith left in 1990.

      PiL released Happy? in 1987, and during the spring of 1988 performed throughout the United States as part of INXS' Kick tour. The album was less well received by critics than its immediate predecessor, but still produced the classic single "Seattle". In 1989, PiL toured with New Order and The Sugarcubes as "The Monsters of Alternative Rock," an arrangement of disparate alternative bands that predated the Lollapalooza festival by two years. PiL's ninth album, 9, appeared earlier that year.

      The band's last album to date, 1992's That What Is Not, included a sample from the Sex Pistols' song God Save the Queen in which the young Lydon's voice is heard chanting the words, "No future, no future..." Lydon disbanded the group a year later after Virgin records refused to pay for the tour supporting the album and Lydon had to pay for it out of his own pocket. The band's last concert was performed on September 18, 1992 with the lineup of Lydon, McGeoch, Ted Chau (guitar, keyboards), Mike Joyce of The Smiths (drums), and Russell Webb (bass).

      Lydon released a solo album, Psycho's Path, in 1997. He considers PiL to be "on hiatus," and has spoken of writing a book on his years with the group.


      [edit] Members and related people
      Main article: Public Image Ltd. band members

      [edit] Discography

      [edit] Studio albums
      First Issue (1978 UK #22)
      Metal Box (1979 UK #18 - US #171)
      Flowers of Romance (1981 UK #11 - US #114)
      This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get (1984 UK #56)
      Album (1986 UK #14 - US #115)
      Happy? (1987 UK #40 - US #169)
      9 (1989 UK #36 - US #106)
      That What Is Not (1992 UK #46)

      [edit] Live, compilation, bootleg and other albums
      All chart positions are UK.

      Second Edition (repackaging of Metal Box) - 1979
      Paris au Printemps (live) - 1980 #61
      Live in Tokyo (live) - 1983 #28
      Commercial Zone (bootleg) - 1983
      The Greatest Hits, So Far (compilation) - 1990 #20
      Box (box set) - 1990
      Plastic Box (box set) -1999
      Public Image/Second Edition (two-in-one) - 2003

      [edit] Singles
      All chart positions are UK.

      "Public Image" - 1978 #9
      "Death Disco" - 1979 #20
      "Memories" - 1979 #60
      "Flowers of Romance" - 1981 #24
      "This Is Not a Love Song" - 1983 #5
      "Bad Life" - 1984 #71
      "Rise" - 1986 #11
      "Home" - 1986 #75
      "Seattle" - 1987 #47
      "The Body" - 1987 #100
      "Disappointed" - 1989 #38
      "Warrior" - 1989
      "Don't Ask Me" - 1990 #22
      "Cruel" - 1992 #49
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