This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2017) |
The Ex Pistols were an English punk rock band from London, England formed in 1979 by former Sex Pistols producer Dave Goodman. Goodman put the group together after his services were substituted for those of other producers on the Sex Pistols album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols.[citation needed]
Ex Pistols | |
---|---|
Origin | London, England |
Genres | Punk rock |
Years active | 1979–1992 |
Labels | Virgin Records VAP Mandala Records |
Past members | Dave Spiers Alan Lee Dave Slave Bryson Graham Dave Goodman |
The Ex Pistols existed as a sound-alike band meant to mislead fans due to the similar music, name, and artwork, until 1992 when the Sex Pistols successfully sued Dave Goodman and he was no longer allowed to use the name.[citation needed]
Music
editThe first Ex Pistols release "Land of Hope and Glory" was a punk rock version of the old English classic "Land of Hope and Glory" by Edward Elgar. Not only did it confuse fans but it also caused legal trouble between Dave Goodman and the publisher of the original piece, Boosey & Hawkes.[citation needed]
The next recordings would appear on numerous Sex Pistols compilation albums including the songs "Schools Are Prisons" and "Revolution in the Classroom".[citation needed]
The band re-appeared in 1988 with an album released in Japan, The Swindle Continues. The album was made up of the band performing Ex and Sex Pistols tracks.[citation needed] It came in the form of a double picture disc collectable LP, and was also released in plain vinyl form (and later, CD).[citation needed]
In 1992 their tracks surfaced again on a limited promo album, Deny. The album consisted entirely of original Ex Pistols tracks, and was never merchandised but instead given to fans of the Sex Pistols or left in Virgin stores with a "Free" sticker.[citation needed]
A short while before he died, Dave Goodman released an album, Denial of a Good Man via his website, featuring remixed versions of some songs from the Deny LP, a video to the song "Don't Fear", and a version of "Anarchy in the UK" by the Sex Pistols with rewritten lyrics, named "Wedding Day".[citation needed]
Sex Pistols lawsuit
editWhile Glen Matlock played on two songs from the Deny LP and co-wrote "Happy Families", John Lydon was not so forthcoming.[citation needed] After winning the rights to the Sex Pistols music and documentation from Malcolm McLaren and Glitterbest, he was outraged by Dave Goodman using the band's name and image to promote what Lydon called "inferior recordings" to cash in on their name and tarnish the Sex Pistols' reputation, and for using their photographs and likenesses on the Ex Pistols' records without permission.[citation needed] This includes the "Land of Hope and Glory" 7" single (which has the Sex Pistols' figures on the disk, albeit with their faces crossed out), the "Revolution In The Classroom" single and The Swindle Continues.[citation needed] The image on the sleeve of the Deny LP is not actually Johnny, rather Ex Pistols associate Tony Barber (of the Buzzcocks), who resembles John Lydon.[citation needed]
After a lawsuit ensued, Dave Goodman was banned from producing any more records made to look or sound like Sex Pistols recordings. The Ex Pistols next album, Denial Of A Good Man, was put on indefinite hold and the band changed their name to Dave Goodman & Friends.[citation needed] After that they re-released one more single entitled "Justifiable Homicide" (originally released in August 1978 and made commercially available and available for download on Dave Goodman's website) and recorded and released a music video for "Don't Fear", segments of which were featured on the Chaos! The Ex Pistols' Secret History DVD. All the manufactured Denial Of A Good Man CDs were sold through Dave's website.[citation needed]
Dave Goodman and Kim Thraves owned a rehearsal studio with 4-track recording facilities where the Sex Pistols recorded some early demos.[citation needed] Goodman owned a PA system and became the Sex Pistols regular live sound engineer until 1977.[citation needed] Goodman produced the recordings that formed the Spunk album.[citation needed] Goodman's collection of very poor live sound recordings of the Sex Pistols have been released as Live Worldwide (Konexion Records, Belgium) and other titles.[citation needed] Some of these titles contain live Sex Pistols recordings interspersed with recordings of the Ex Pistols making it appear that these tracks were performed by the Sex Pistols.[citation needed]
Band members
editPseudonyms used on the releases were
- Rotten Johnny (parody of Johnny Rotten)
- Pull Cock (parody of Paul Cook)
- Steal Jones (parody of Steve Jones)
- Posh Pen Bollocks (parody of Glen Matlock)
Actual musicians were
- Dave Slave - vocals[citation needed]
- Alan Lee - guitar, vocals[citation needed]
- Dave Goodman - bass guitar, vocals[citation needed]
- Bryson Graham - drums[citation needed]
- Del Bartle - guitar[citation needed]
- Andy Boreman - drums[citation needed]
- Dave MacIntosh - drums[citation needed]
- Kevin Murphy - drums[citation needed]
- Dave Rose - keyboards[citation needed]
Discography
editYear | Title | Format | Label | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | "Land of Hope and Glory" | 12" Single | Virginia Records | France |
"Land of Hope and Glory" | 7" Single | Virginia Records | UK | |
1988 | The Swindle Continues | 12" Double LP | VAP | Japan |
1989 | Revolution in the Classroom | 7" Single | S.T.P. Records | UK |
1992 | Deny LP | 12" Promo LP | Mandala Records | UK |
2000 | Denial of a Good Man | Promo CD | Vagina | UK |
"Land of Hope and Glory" reached No. 2 on the UK Indie Chart.[1]
References
edit- ^ "Indie Hits "E"". 9 April 2001. Archived from the original on 9 April 2001. Retrieved 31 May 2020.